Preface
Апстракт
The dust that a building is transformed into when it becomes a ruin holds precious traces of the past. The hands of an archaeologist will search through it patiently, and find a necklace bead of a woman that lived in it. The hands of an architect will virtually transform the dust into a mortar, brick, or stone. The first profession sees through the unbuilt. The second one builds from it. However, both perform their work by communicating with the sciences.
Throughout history, various components were chosen, measured, and mixed into one of the most complex building composites ever - mortar, whose re-creation is of invaluable importance for architectural conservation. Geologists and chemists will best tell us about its composition. However, sometimes, while excavating a ruined wall, an archaeologist finds a mortar trowel, accidentally left by the past builder. Is this a more valuable trace for revealing the creation of a wall than the binder/aggregate ratio of the mortar used? Can we pic...k it up and imagine the hands that combined colourful aggregate grains with the earth, gypsum, lime, or cement?
Кључне речи:
MoDeCo2000 / mortarsИзвор:
1st International Conference with Workshop - Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes, Book of Abstracts, Viminacium, Serbia, June, 27th – July, 01st, 2022, 2022, 9-11Издавач:
- Belgrade: Institute of Archaeology
Финансирање / пројекти:
- MoDeCo2000 - Mortar Design for Conservation - Danube Roman Frontier 2000 Years After (RS-ScienceFundRS-Promis-6067004)
Институција/група
Археолошки институт / Institute of ArchaeologyTY - CONF AU - Nikolić, Emilija AU - Jovičić, Mladen PY - 2022 UR - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/848 AB - The dust that a building is transformed into when it becomes a ruin holds precious traces of the past. The hands of an archaeologist will search through it patiently, and find a necklace bead of a woman that lived in it. The hands of an architect will virtually transform the dust into a mortar, brick, or stone. The first profession sees through the unbuilt. The second one builds from it. However, both perform their work by communicating with the sciences. Throughout history, various components were chosen, measured, and mixed into one of the most complex building composites ever - mortar, whose re-creation is of invaluable importance for architectural conservation. Geologists and chemists will best tell us about its composition. However, sometimes, while excavating a ruined wall, an archaeologist finds a mortar trowel, accidentally left by the past builder. Is this a more valuable trace for revealing the creation of a wall than the binder/aggregate ratio of the mortar used? Can we pick it up and imagine the hands that combined colourful aggregate grains with the earth, gypsum, lime, or cement? PB - Belgrade: Institute of Archaeology C3 - 1st International Conference with Workshop - Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes, Book of Abstracts, Viminacium, Serbia, June, 27th – July, 01st, 2022 T1 - Preface EP - 11 SP - 9 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_848 ER -
@conference{ author = "Nikolić, Emilija and Jovičić, Mladen", year = "2022", abstract = "The dust that a building is transformed into when it becomes a ruin holds precious traces of the past. The hands of an archaeologist will search through it patiently, and find a necklace bead of a woman that lived in it. The hands of an architect will virtually transform the dust into a mortar, brick, or stone. The first profession sees through the unbuilt. The second one builds from it. However, both perform their work by communicating with the sciences. Throughout history, various components were chosen, measured, and mixed into one of the most complex building composites ever - mortar, whose re-creation is of invaluable importance for architectural conservation. Geologists and chemists will best tell us about its composition. However, sometimes, while excavating a ruined wall, an archaeologist finds a mortar trowel, accidentally left by the past builder. Is this a more valuable trace for revealing the creation of a wall than the binder/aggregate ratio of the mortar used? Can we pick it up and imagine the hands that combined colourful aggregate grains with the earth, gypsum, lime, or cement?", publisher = "Belgrade: Institute of Archaeology", journal = "1st International Conference with Workshop - Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes, Book of Abstracts, Viminacium, Serbia, June, 27th – July, 01st, 2022", title = "Preface", pages = "11-9", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_848" }
Nikolić, E.,& Jovičić, M.. (2022). Preface. in 1st International Conference with Workshop - Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes, Book of Abstracts, Viminacium, Serbia, June, 27th – July, 01st, 2022 Belgrade: Institute of Archaeology., 9-11. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_848
Nikolić E, Jovičić M. Preface. in 1st International Conference with Workshop - Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes, Book of Abstracts, Viminacium, Serbia, June, 27th – July, 01st, 2022. 2022;:9-11. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_848 .
Nikolić, Emilija, Jovičić, Mladen, "Preface" in 1st International Conference with Workshop - Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes, Book of Abstracts, Viminacium, Serbia, June, 27th – July, 01st, 2022 (2022):9-11, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_848 .