Enrique Vega
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Enrique Vega.
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2013
Mohamed Rachid Tchalala; Mustapha Ait Ali; Hanna Enriquez; Abdelkader Kara; Abdessadek Lachgar; Said Yagoubi; E. Foy; Enrique Vega; Azzedine Bendounan; Mathieu G. Silly; Fausto Sirotti; Serge Nitshe; Damien Chaudanson; Haik Jamgotchian; B. Aufray; Andrew J. Mayne; Gérald Dujardin; Hamid Oughaddou
In this paper, we report the direct chemical synthesis of silicon sheets in gram-scale quantities by chemical exfoliation of pre-processed calcium disilicide (CaSi2). We have used a combination of x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy and energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy to characterize the obtained silicon sheets. We found that the clean and crystalline silicon sheets show a two-dimensional hexagonal graphitic structure.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Stéphanie Leroy; Mitch Hendrickson; Emmanuelle Delqué-Količ; Enrique Vega; Philippe Dillmann
Architecture represents key evidence of dynastic practice and change in the archaeological world. Chronologies for many important buildings and sequences, including the iconic temples of medieval Angkor in Cambodia, are based solely on indirect associations from inscriptions and architectural styles. The Baphuon temple, one of the last major buildings in Angkor without textual or scientifically-derived chronological evidence, is crucial both for the context and date of its construction and the period when its western façade was modified into a unique, gigantic Reclining Buddha. Its construction was part of a major dynastic change and florescence of the Hindu-Mahayana Buddhist state and the modification is the key evidence of Theravada Buddhist power after Angkors decline in the 15th century. Using a newly-developed approach based on AMS radiocarbon dating to directly date four iron crampons integrated into the structure we present the first direct evidence for the history of the Baphuon. Comprehensive study of ferrous elements shows that both construction and modification were critically earlier than expected. The Baphuon can now be considered as the major temple associated with the imperial reformations and territorial consolidation of Suryavarman I (1010–1050 AD) for whom no previous building to legitimize his reign could be identified. The Theravada Buddhist modification is a hundred years prior to the conventional 16th century estimation and is not associated with renewed use of Angkor. Instead it relates to the enigmatic Ayutthayan occupation of Angkor in the 1430s and 40s during a major period of climatic instability. Accurately dating iron with relatively low carbon content is a decisive step to test long-standing assumptions about architectural histories and political processes for states that incorporated iron into buildings (e.g., Ancient Greece, medieval India). Furthermore, this new approach has the potential to revise chronologies related to iron consumption practices since the origins of ferrous metallurgy three millennia ago.
Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences | 2018
Thomas Oliver Pryce; Kalayar Myat Myat Htwe; M Georgakopoulou; Tiffany Martin; Enrique Vega; Thilo Rehren; Tin Tin Win; Thu Thu Win; Peter Petchey; Jitlada Innanchai; Baptiste Pradier
Myanmar has been notably underrepresented in recent studies of archaeometallurgy in Southeast Asia, despite its richness in both mineral and cultural resources and its potentially central role in long-distance exchange networks linking India, China and peninsular neighbours. Here, we present original analytical data on copper-base artefacts from several Bronze Age and Iron Age sites in Myanmar. Observed microstructures range from as-cast, worked, to fully annealed; compositions include leaded copper, low-tin to high-tin bronzes, and arsenical copper/bronze. Lead isotope analyses indicate that the metal originates from different geological sources, including several that match the lead isotope signatures of known prehistoric copper mines in Thailand and Laos. These archaeometallurgical data, including evidence for secondary copper-base production, more than double those currently available for Myanmar and document the presence of multiple local alloying and working traditions, perhaps chronologically differentiated, as well as identifying possible links to primary mineral sources across the region. Overall, this adds significant new information to the emerging picture of Southeast Asian prehistoric metallurgy at the crossroads of several major ancient cultures.
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2014
Alexandre Disser; Philippe Dillmann; C. Bourgain; Maxime L'Héritier; Enrique Vega; S. Bauvais; Marc Leroy
ArchéoSciences, revue d'Archéométrie | 2002
Enrique Vega; Philippe Dillmann; Philippe Fluzin
Les nouvelles de l'archéologie | 2015
Philippe Dillmann; Stéphanie Leroy; Alexandre Disser; Sylvain Bauvais; Enrique Vega; Philippe Fluzin
Revue archéologique de l'Est | 2003
Radomír Pleiner; Philippe Fluzin; Michel Mangin; M. Billon; Philippe Dillmann; Enrique Vega; Elisabeth Rabeisen
Helvetia archaeologica | 2002
Philippe Dillmann; Delphine Neff; Enrique Vega; Philippe Fluzin
The 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2018
Stéphanie Leroy; Mitch Hendrickson; Emmanuelle Delqué-Količ; Enrique Vega; Philippe Dillmann
The 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2018
Mitch Hendrickson; Stéphanie Leroy; Quan Hua; Kaseka Phon; Enrique Vega