Publications

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Conference Paper
Figueiredo, Ondina M., Teresa Pereira Silva, João Pedro Veiga, Isabel M. Prudêncio, Isabel M. Dias, Maria Antónia Matos, and Alexandre Manuel Pais. "Blue pigments in XVI-XVII century glazes: a comparative study between portuguese faiences and contemporary chinese porcelains manufactured for portuguese market." 18th International Materials Research Congress & 2nd Latin-American Symposium Physics & Chemistry Methods in Archeology, Art and Cultural Heritage Conservation, LASMAC-IMRS2009, August 16-20, 2009. 2009. Abstract
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Dias, MI, Ondina M. Figueiredo, Antónia M. Matos, A. Pais, Maria Isabel Prudêncio, Teresa Pereira Silva, Christopher Ian Burbidge, A. L. Rodrigues, and João Pedro Veiga. "Datação, autenticidade, materiais e pigmentos. Estudos laboratoriais sobre faiança portuguesa e porcelana chinesa produzida para o mercado português, séculos XVI a XVIII." IX Congresso Ibérico de Arqueometria (CIA). 2011. Abstract
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Figueiredo, Ondina M., Teresa Pereira Silva, João Pedro Veiga, and Isabel M. Dias. "Speciation state of cobalt in blue glazes: a XAFS study on XVI cent. chinese blue-&-white porcelains." EMRS 2009 Spring Meeting, Symposium R-X-Ray Techniques for Advanced Materials, Nanostructures and Thin Films from Laboratory Sources to Synchronotron Radiation, June 8-12, 2009. 2009. Abstract
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Journal Article
Figueiredo, MO, TP Silva, JP Veiga, AMD Diogo, and L. Trindade. "Archaeology of Lisbon Old City: ceramic crucibles from pre-XVIIIth century metallurgical foundries." Applied Physics a-Materials Science & Processing. 79 (2004): 327-329. Abstract
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Figueiredo, MO, Pereira T. da Silva, JP Veiga, Leal C. Gomes, and V. De Andrade. "The blue colouring of beryls from Licungo, Mozambique: an X-ray absorption spectroscopy study at the iron K-edge." Mineralogical Magazine. 72 (2008): 175-178. Abstract
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Figueiredo, MO, T. Pereira da Silva, JP Veiga, C. Leal Gomes, and V. De Andrade. "The blue colouring of beryls from Licungo, Mozambique: an X-ray absorption spectroscopy study at the iron K-edge." Mineralogical Magazine. 72 (2008): 175-178. Abstract
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Figueiredo, Ondina M., Teresa Pereira Silva, João Pedro Veiga, Maria Isabel Prudêncio, Maria Isabel Dias, MA Matos, and AM Pais. "Blue pigments in XVI-XVII century glazes: a comparative study between Portuguese faiences and Chinese porcelains." Selected Papers Archaeological and Arts Issues in Materials Science, Univ. Nac. Autónoma de México, 2010 (2010). Abstract
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Coutinho, M. L., JP Veiga, L. C. Alves, J. Mirão, L. Dias, A. M. Lima, V. S. Muralha, and MF Macedo. "Characterization of the glaze and in-glaze pigments of the nineteenth-century relief tiles from the Pena National Palace, Sintra, Portugal." Applied Physics A: Materials Science and Processing. 122.7 (2016): 1-10. Abstract

© 2016, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.The glaze and in-glaze pigments of the historical nineteenth-century glazed tiles from the Pena National Palace (Sintra, Portugal) were characterized using a multi-analytical approach. Chemical composition and microstructural characterization were ascertained by µ-PIXE, µ-Raman, optical microscopy and VP-SEM–EDS. The manufacturing technique and colour palette in these tiles were found to be close to the ceramic pigments used in traditional majolica. The blue and purple colours derive from cobalt oxide and manganese oxide, respectively. A mixture of Pb–Sn–Sb yellow with cobalt oxide and iron oxide was used for green and dark yellow, respectively, while grey tonalities consist of a complex mixture of cobalt oxide, manganese oxide and Pb–Sn–Sb yellow in different proportions. Results obtained allowed the determination of the oxides and elements used in pigments as well as production techniques, resorting to traditional majolica manufacture, although the tiles were produced by the end of the nineteenth century.

Meunier, Emmanuelle, Filipa Dias, João Fonte, Alexandre Lima, Alexandra Rodrigues, Carlo Bottaini, Rui JC Silva, João P. Veiga, Manuel F. C. Pereira, and Elin Figueiredo. "Later prehistoric tin mining in the Ervedosa mine (Vinhais, Portugal): evidence and context." 15.4 (2023): 43. AbstractWebsite

This paper presents a comprehensive study of the evidence for ancient tin mining at the Ervedosa mine (Vinhais, Portugal). The geological context of the site indicates a rich cassiterite (SnO2) deposit, which was subject to mining in the twentieth century. Some ancient mining and ore processing stone tools were recovered during the twentieth century mining operations, namely one hammer, one pounder, one flat anvil and five small tools used both as pounders and crushing anvils, evidencing prehistoric mining activities. XRF and SEM–EDS chemical analyses were performed on primary and secondary cassiterite samples from the mining site, demonstrating the abundance and chemical heterogeneity of the tin (Sn) ores. The stone tools can be ascribed to Bronze Age or, at the latest, Early Iron Age (2nd millennium to the first half of 1st millennium BCE) by comparison with similar tools from other Iberian and European archaeological contexts. High-resolution photogrammetric 3D models of the tools are made available in this study. The historical descriptions of the findings and the research made on the technical archives about the mine allowed correlating the tools to mining in a primary context, focused on rich quartz veins in granitic or greisen bedrock, rather than mining in a secondary context. XRF and SEM–EDS analyses performed on the stone material and on surface adherences support their identification as specific types of hard rocks, such as granite, amphibolite and quartzite, and allowed the detection of Sn-rich adherent particles, confirming their use for Sn-material processing. The potential relation between the cassiterite resources and the local later prehistoric (Bronze Age to Early Iron Age) settlement pattern is also discussed. The results raise awareness and provide relevant data about the existence of tin mining in primary contexts during later prehistoric times in the NW Iberian Peninsula.

da Teresa Pereira, Silva, Figueiredo Maria-Ondina, Oliveira de Daniel, Veiga João Pedro, and Batista Maria João. "Molybdenite as a Rhenium Carrier: First Results of a Spectroscopic Approach Using Synchrotron Radiation." Journal of Minerals and Materials Characterization and Engineering. 2013 (2013). Abstract
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Monteiro, Regina C. C., Andreia A. S. Lopes, Maria M. A. Lima, Joao P. Veiga, Rui JC Silva, Carlos J. Dias, Erika J. R. Davim, and Maria H. V. Fernandes. "Sintering, Crystallization, and Dielectric Behavior of Barium Zinc Borosilicate GlassesuEffect of Barium Oxide Substitution for Zinc Oxide." Journal of the American Ceramic Society. 95 (2012): 3144-3150. Abstract
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Figueiredo, Elin, Alexandra Rodrigues, João Fonte, Emmanuelle Meunier, Filipa Dias, Alexandre Lima, José Alberto Gonçalves, Luís Gonçalves-Seco, Filipe Gonçalves, Manuel F. C. Pereira, Rui JC Silva, and João P. Veiga. "Tin and Bronze Production at the Outeiro de Baltar Hillfort (NW Iberia)." Minerals. 12 (2022). AbstractWebsite

Findings of Iron Age metallurgical activities related to tin metal and mining are very rare. In the present work, we present a detailed study of the Outeiro de Baltar hillfort, dated to the Late Iron Age/Early Roman period, located in a place where 20th century tin mining work took place. Elemental and microstructural analysis by portable, micro and wavelength dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (pXRF, micro-XRF and WDXRF) and scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersion spectrometer (SEM-EDS) showed that metallurgical debris found at the archaeological site is related to tin smelting and binary and ternary bronze productions. Analysis of the artefacts of diverse typologies found at the site showed that a variety of metals and alloys were in circulation and use. Samples of tin ores (cassiterite) from the region were analyzed for comparison with an archaeological tin slag from the site. The analytical results point to the production of tin metal using local cassiterite and the production of bronze by directly adding cassiterite into a smelting process. Furthermore, data of remote sensing (airborne Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) and historical aerial imagery) and Geographical Information System (GIS) mapping were combined with archival mining documentation and maps to retrieve a landscape context for the site. The study showed that the place of the Outeiro de Baltar hillfort (NW Iberia) was mined periodically over time.