AI Article Synopsis

  • During European prehistory, hilltop enclosures known as 'vitrified forts' were formed when the stone walls were exposed to high temperatures that partially melted the stones, resulting in glassy surfaces.
  • The vitrification process involved the melting and sintering of the wall materials, influenced by factors like temperature, stone size, and the local geology, which ultimately determined how effectively the walls vitrified.
  • The study reveals that while smaller aggregates benefited from strengthening through vitrification, larger blocks may have been weakened, suggesting that attempting to enhance wall stability through this method was not effective in areas with tough local stone.

Article Abstract

During European prehistory, hilltop enclosures made from polydisperse particle-and-block stone walling were exposed to temperatures sufficient to partially melt the constituent stonework, leading to the preservation of glassy walls called 'vitrified forts'. During vitrification, the granular wall rocks partially melt, sinter viscously and densify, reducing inter-particle porosity. This process is strongly dependent on the solidus temperature, the particle sizes, the temperature-dependence of the viscosity of the evolving liquid phase, as well as the distribution and longevity of heat. Examination of the sintering behaviour of 45 European examples reveals that it is the raw building material that governs the vitrification efficiency. As Iron Age forts were commonly constructed from local stone, we conclude that local geology directly influenced the degree to which buildings were vitrified in the Iron Age. Additionally, we find that vitrification is accompanied by a bulk material strengthening of the aggregates of small sizes, and a partial weakening of larger blocks. We discuss these findings in the context of the debate surrounding the motive of the wall-builders. We conclude that if wall stability by bulk strengthening was the desired effect, then vitrification represents an Iron Age technology that failed to be effective in regions of refractory local geology.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5227690PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep40028DOI Listing

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