Distribution and Chemical Speciation of Arsenic in Ancient Human Hair Using Synchrotron Radiation
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2014Metadata
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Kakoulli, Ioanna
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Distribution and Chemical Speciation of Arsenic in Ancient Human Hair Using Synchrotron Radiation
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Abstract
Pre-Columbian populations that inhabited the
Tarapacá mid river valley in the Atacama Desert in Chile
during the Middle Horizon and Late Intermediate Period (AD
500−1450) show patterns of chronic poisoning due to
exposure to geogenic arsenic. Exposure of these people to
arsenic was assessed using synchrotron-based elemental X-ray
fluorescence mapping, X-ray absorption spectroscopy, X-ray
diffraction and Fourier transform infrared spectromicroscopy
measurements on ancient human hair. These combined
techniques of high sensitivity and specificity enabled the
discrimination between endogenous and exogenous processes
that has been an analytical challenge for archeological studies
and criminal investigations in which hair is used as a proxy of
premortem metabolism. The high concentration of arsenic mainly in the form of inorganic As(III) and As(V) detected in the hair
suggests chronic arsenicism through ingestion of As-polluted water rather than external contamination by the deposition of heavy
metals due to metallophilic soil microbes or diffusion of arsenic from the soil. A decrease in arsenic concentration from the
proximal to the distal end of the hair shaft analyzed may indicate a change in the diet due to mobility, though chemical or
microbiologically induced processes during burial cannot be entirely ruled out.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
Consejo de Monumentos Nacionales de Chile for
site access and permissions for sampling and analysis and Ran
Boytner and Maria Cecilia Lozada codirectors of the Tarapacá
Valley Archaeological Project for providing information on the
archaeology and ethnography of the area. The operations of the
Advanced Light Source at Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory are supported by the Director, Office of Science,
Office of Basic Energy Sciences, U.S. Department of Energy
under contract number DE-AC02-05CH11231. FEGVPSEMEDS
analysis was conducted at the Molecular and Nano
Archaeology Laboratory at UCLA on the FEI Nova NanoSEM
230 purchased with NSF award no. 0813649. Travel funding to
the synchrotron facility was provided by the Senate Faculty
Awards at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA).
Physical microsamples used for the analysis and analytical data
are stored and accessed through the Molecular and Nano
Archaeology Laboratory, UCLA.
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Anal. Chem. 2014, 86, 521−526
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