Deterioration and preservation of organic materials on the seabed

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Abstract

Easily degradable organic materials can be preserved astonishingly well in underwater environments. This applies, for instance, to the seabed of the relatively cold and brackish Waters of the Baltic Sea as well as the warmer and much more salty Mediterranean Sea. We provide an overview of the many kinds of biodeterioration processes in water-saturated sediments, with special attention to wood and the activity of organisms that can both rapidly and totally
degrade organic materials. The main reason that well-preserved archaeological artefacts do, nevertheless, exist in abundance in buried and stagnant water environments is a lack of oxygen, which prevents biological activity.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationOceans of Archaeology
EditorsAnders Fischer, Lisbeth Pedersen
Number of pages7
Place of PublicationAarhus
PublisherJutland Archaeological Society
Publication date2018
Pages136-143
Article number3
Chapter4
ISBN (Print) 978-87-93423-18-3
Publication statusPublished - 2018
SeriesJysk Arkaeologisk Selskab. Skrifter
Volume101
ISSN0107-2854

Keywords

  • Deterioration
  • Underwater
  • Cultural heritage
  • Martine archaeology
  • Preservation

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