Title
MORPHOLOGY, COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE OF THE FIBERS OF A CHIMU CULTURE TEXTILE
Other title
MORFOLOGÍA, COMPOSICIÓN Y ESTRUCTURA DE LAS FIBRAS DE UN TEXTIL DE LA CULTURA CHIMÚ
Date Issued
05 January 2022
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Publisher(s)
Universidad Nacional de Colombia
Abstract
In this work, we studied the microfibers of a textile (T-shirt) of the Chimú culture. This culture developed on the northern coast of Peru. To determine the raw material and structural quality of the microfibers, the results of the Chimú textile were compared with the corresponding results for the microfibers of cotton from the northern coast of Peru (native cotton). Scanning electron microscopy images revealed that the Chimú textile yarns are composed of a set of interwoven microfibers. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy and pulsed laser-induced plasma spectroscopy techniques allowed the identification of characteristic cellulose atoms in the microfibers of Chimú textile and native cotton. Only for the Chimú textile, these spectroscopic techniques allowed the identification of atoms corresponding to natural dyes and powder residues. Attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy identified the same molecular bonds for the microfibers of Chimú textile and native cotton. For the microfibers of Chimú textile and native cotton, the X-ray diffractograms showed peaks characteristic of the cellulose Iβ polymorphism of monoclinic P21 structure. The raw material of the Chimú textile is cotton and the microfibers of this material show significant structural stability.
Start page
39
End page
53
Volume
2022
Issue
64
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Arqueología Historia
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85127656804
Source
Momento
ISSN of the container
01214470
Sponsor(s)
The authors thank the Museum of Natural and Cultural History of the Antenor Orrego Private University (UPAO), for providing us with the Chimú textile sample for the study, and the staff of the Multidisciplinary Research Laboratory (LABINM) of the UPAO. W. Aldama-Reyna acknowledges the financial support of the Project CONCYTEC-World Bank “Study of application of laser techniques for cleaning and restoration of archaeological assets and the use of X-ray diffraction to identify crystallographic components that affect the wall paintings on the Coast North of Peru” through its executing unit ProCiencia (contract N◦ 07-2018-FONDECYT-BM-IADT-MU).
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus