2021
DOI: 10.3390/heritage4030137
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Unexpected Findings in 16th Century Wall Paintings: Identification of Aragonite and Unusual Pigments

Abstract: Sixteenth century wall paintings were analyzed from a church in an advanced state of decay in the Apennines of central Italy, now a remote area but once located along the salt routes from the Po Valley to the Ligurian Sea. Infrared spectroscopy (FTIR-ATR), X-ray diffraction (XRD) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with a microprobe were used to identify the painting materials, as input for possible future restoration. Together with the pigments traditionally used for wall painting, such as ochre, ultramari… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…Pigments in wall paintings are also the main subject treated by Rampazzi et al in their investigation on 16th-century Italian wall paintings [2]. In addition to summarising evidence of a traditional palette of inorganic pigments, such as red and yellow ochres, ultramarine blue, bianco Sangiovanni, cinnabar/vermilion and azurite, other pigments, such as clinochlore, Brunswick green and ultramarine yellow were detected in the upper layers of samples that also showed complex stratigraphy.…”
Section: Sotiropoulou Et Al's Reviewmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Pigments in wall paintings are also the main subject treated by Rampazzi et al in their investigation on 16th-century Italian wall paintings [2]. In addition to summarising evidence of a traditional palette of inorganic pigments, such as red and yellow ochres, ultramarine blue, bianco Sangiovanni, cinnabar/vermilion and azurite, other pigments, such as clinochlore, Brunswick green and ultramarine yellow were detected in the upper layers of samples that also showed complex stratigraphy.…”
Section: Sotiropoulou Et Al's Reviewmentioning
confidence: 93%