2-7 September 2018
Australian National Maritime Museum
Australia/Sydney timezone

Offical or Illegal? Tomographic analysis of plated silver coins from Ancient Greece.

4 Sep 2018, 09:00
20m
Lighthouse Gallery (Australian National Maritime Museum)

Lighthouse Gallery

Australian National Maritime Museum

2 Murray Street, Sydney NSW 2000
Oral Cultural Heritage & Archaeology Speaker Sessions and Seminars

Speakers

Scott Olsen (ANSTO)Dr Ken Sheedy (Macquarie University)

Description

The first coins were made of electrum and were minted during the 7th century BC in Lydia (Asia Minor). Plated electrum coins began to appear soon after, and these have usually been identified as privately manufactured 'fakes'. But it is possible that they were in fact produced in the state's own mint. The art of plating coins required a very high skill level. Attaching a thin piece of electrum over another metal (silver was the preferred core at this time) required a high degree of metallurgical knowledge and practical skills. The Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering has been involved in a study with the Australian Centre for Ancient Numismatic Studies at Macquarie University since 2014. A number of plated coins have been studied using a combination of Neutron Tomography, Diffraction and Texture Measurement, as well as SEM and X-Ray Tomography. Our study also includes later ancient silver that can now been shown to be plated. The project has explored the thickness of the plating layer, porosity in the metals, and the presence of intermediate layers. Silver plating layers of 0.4mm are common and gold leaf layers of less than 0.1mm over a silver core have been studied.

Primary authors

Scott Olsen (ANSTO) Filomena Salvemini (ACNS-ANSTO) Dr Vladimir Luzin (Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering, ANSTO, Australia) Anton Maksimenko (Australian Synchrotron) Dr Ken Sheedy (Macquarie University) Dr Joel Davis (ANSTO)

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