K. Romanus, W. Van Neer, E. Marinova, K. Verbeke, A. Luypaerts, S. Accardo, I. Hermans, P. Jacobs, D. De Vos, and M. Waelkens (2008)
Brassicaceae seed oil identified as illuminant in Nilotic shells from a first millennium AD Coptic church in Bawit, Egypt
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, 390:783-793.
Burned greasy deposits were found inside shells
of the large Nile bivalve Chambardia rubens, excavated in
an eight- to tenth- century AD church of the Coptic
monastery of Bawit, Egypt, and supposedly used as oil
lamps. The residues were subjected to a combination of
chromatographic residue analysis techniques. The rather
high concentrations of unsaturated fatty acids, as analysed
by gas chromatography (GC) in the methylated extract,
suggest the presence of a vegetal oil. Analysis of the stable
carbon isotopes (δ13C values) of the methyl esters also
favoured plants over animals as the lipid source. In the
search for biomarkers by GC coupled to mass spectrometry
on a silylated extract, a range of diacids together with high
concentrations of 13,14-dihydroxydocosanoate and 11,12-
dihydroxyeicosanoate were found. These compounds are
oxidation products of erucic acid and gondoic acid, which
are abundantly present in seeds of Brassicaceae plants.
Liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry
analysis showed low concentrations of unaltered triglycerides,
but revealed sizeable amounts of triglycerides with at
least one dihydroxylated acyl chain. The unusual preservation
of dihydroxylated triglycerides and α,ω-dicarboxylic
acids can be related to the dry preservation conditions.
Analysis of the stereoisomers of the dihydroxylated fatty
acids allows one to determine whether oxidation took place
during burning of the fuel or afterwards. The results prove
that the oil of rapeseed (Brassica napus L.) or radish
(Raphanus sativus L.) was used as illuminant in early
Islamic Egypt, and that not only ceramic lamps but also
mollusk shells were used as fuel containers.
Peer Review, International Redaction Board, Impact Factor
IF 2011 = 3,778
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