Analyzing the Heterogeneous Hierarchy of Cultural Heritage Materials: Analytical Imaging

Annu Rev Anal Chem (Palo Alto Calif). 2017 Jun 12;10(1):247-270. doi: 10.1146/annurev-anchem-071015-041500.

Abstract

Objects of cultural heritage significance are created using a wide variety of materials, or mixtures of materials, and often exhibit heterogeneity on multiple length scales. The effective study of these complex constructions thus requires the use of a suite of complementary analytical technologies. Moreover, because of the importance and irreplaceability of most cultural heritage objects, researchers favor analytical techniques that can be employed noninvasively, i.e., without having to remove any material for analysis. As such, analytical imaging has emerged as an important approach for the study of cultural heritage. Imaging technologies commonly employed, from the macroscale through the micro- to nanoscale, are discussed with respect to how the information obtained helps us understand artists' materials and methods, the cultures in which the objects were created, how the objects may have changed over time, and importantly, how we may develop strategies for their preservation.

Keywords: conservation science; cultural heritage; multiscale; noninvasive analysis; spectroscopic imaging; technical art history.