Multitechnique characterization of lapis lazuli for provenance study
A. Lo Giudice, A. Re, S. Calusi, L. Giuntini, M. Massi, P. Olivero, G., Pratesi, M. Albonico, E. Conz

TL;DR
This study employs multi-technique, non-destructive methods including ionoluminescence and ion beam analysis to identify the provenance of Lapis Lazuli, aiding in trade route reconstruction and provenance verification.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic, multi-technique approach combining luminescence and microanalysis to determine Lapis Lazuli sources non-destructively.
Findings
Criteria for provenance identification established for four main sources.
Luminescence properties vary according to geological origin.
Multi-technique characterization improves provenance accuracy.
Abstract
Lapis Lazuli is one of the oldest precious stone, being used for glyptic as early as 7000 years ago: jewels, amulets, seals and inlays are examples of objects produced using this material. Only few sources of Lapis Lazuli exist in the world due to the low probability of geological conditions in which it can form, so that the possibility to associate the raw material to man-made objects helps to reconstruct trade routes. Since art objects produced using Lapis Lazuli are valuable, only non-destructive investigations can be carried out to identify the provenance of the raw materials. Ionoluminescence (IL) is a good candidate for this task. Similarly to cathodoluminescence (CL), IL consists in the collection of luminescence spectra induced by MeV ion (usually protons) irradiation. The main advantage of IL consists in the possibility of working in air while measuring simultaneously the…
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