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Dive into the research topics where Gregorio Dal Sasso is active.

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Featured researches published by Gregorio Dal Sasso.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Long-distance connections in the Copper Age: New evidence from the Alpine Iceman’s copper axe

Gilberto Artioli; Ivana Angelini; Günther Kaufmann; Caterina Canovaro; Gregorio Dal Sasso; Igor M. Villa

25 years after the discovery in the Ötztal Italian Alps, the 5,300-year-old mummy keeps providing key information on human biological and medical conditions, aspects of everyday life and societal organization in the Copper Age. The hand axe found with the body of the Alpine Iceman is one of the rare copper objects that is firmly dated to the early Copper Age because of the radiocarbon dating of the axe wooden shaft. Here we report the measurement of the lead isotope ratios of the copper blade. The results unambiguously indicate that the source of the metal is the ore-rich area of Southern Tuscany, despite ample evidence that Alpine copper ore sources were known and exploited at the time. The experimental results are discussed within the framework of all the available coeval archaeometallurgical data in Central-Southern Europe: they show that the Alps were a neat cultural barrier separating distinct metal circuits. The direct evidence of raw metal or object movement between Central Italy and the Alps is surprising and provides a new perspective on long-distance relocation of goods and relationships between the early Copper Age cultures in the area. The result is in line with the recent investigations re-evaluating the timing and extent of copper production in Central Italy in the 4th millennium BC.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Late Pleistocene/Early Holocene evidence of prostatic stones at Al Khiday cemetery, Central Sudan.

Donatella Usai; Lara Maritan; Gregorio Dal Sasso; Gilberto Artioli; Sandro Salvatori; Tina Jakob; Tiziana Salviato

The recovery of three stone-like ovoid objects within the burial of a pre-Mesolithic (Late Pleistocene/Early Holocene) individual at Al Khiday cemetery (Central Sudan) raises the question of the nature and origin of these objects. The position in which the objects were found in relation to the human skeleton suggested a pathological condition affecting the individual, possibly urinary bladder, kidney stones or gallstones. To solve this issue, a multi-analytical approach, consisting of tomographic, microstructural and compositional analyses, was therefore performed. Based on their microstructure and mineralogical composition, consisting of hydroxylapatite and whitlockite, the investigated stones were identified as primary (endogenous) prostatic calculi. In addition, the occurrence of bacterial imprints also indicates on-going infectious processes in the individual. This discovery of the earliest known case of lithiasis extends the appearance of prostatic stones into the Late Pleistocene/Early Holocene, a disease which therefore can no longer be considered exclusive to the modern era, but which also affected prehistoric individuals, whose lifestyle and diet were significantly different to our own.


Talanta | 2018

Raman hyperspectral imaging as an effective and highly informative tool to study the diagenetic alteration of fossil bones

Gregorio Dal Sasso; Ivana Angelini; Lara Maritan; Gilberto Artioli

Retrieving the pristine chemical or isotopic composition of archaeological bones is of great interest for many studies aiming to reconstruct the past life of ancient populations (i.e. diet, mobility, palaeoenvironment, age). However, from the death of the individual onwards, bones undergo several taphonomic and diagenetic processes that cause the alteration of their microstructure and composition. A detailed study on bone diagenesis has the double purpose to assess the preservation state of archaeological bones and to understand the alteration pathways, thus providing evidence that may contribute to evaluate the reliability of the retrieved information. On these bases, this research aims to explore the effectiveness of Raman hyperspectral imaging to detect types, extent and spatial distribution of diagenetic alteration at the micro-scale level. An early-Holocene bone sample from the Al Khiday cemetery (Khartoum, Sudan) was here analysed. Parameters related to the collagen content, bioapatite crystallinity and structural carbonate content, and to the occurrence of secondary mineral phases were calculated from Raman spectra. The acquired data provided spatially-resolved information on both the preservation state of bone constituents and the diagenetic processes occurring during burial. Given the minimal sample preparation, the easy and fast data acquisition and the improvement of system configurations, micro-Raman spectroscopy can be extensively applied as a screening method on a large set of samples in order to characterise the preservation state of archaeological bones. This technique can be effectively applied to identify suitable and well preserved portions of the analysed sample on which perform further analyses.


Scientific Reports | 2018

A universal curve of apatite crystallinity for the assessment of bone integrity and preservation

Gregorio Dal Sasso; Yotam Asscher; Ivana Angelini; L. Nodari; Gilberto Artioli

The reliable determination of bioapatite crystallinity is of great practical interest, as a proxy to the physico-chemical and microstructural properties, and ultimately, to the integrity of bone materials. Bioapatite crystallinity is used to diagnose pathologies in modern calcified tissues as well as to assess the preservation state of fossil bones. To date, infrared spectroscopy is one of the most applied techniques for bone characterisation and the derived infrared splitting factor (IRSF) has been widely used to practically assess bioapatite crystallinity. Here we thoroughly discuss and revise the use of the IRSF parameter and its meaning as a crystallinity indicator, based on extensive measurements of fresh and fossil bones, virtually covering the known range of crystallinity degree of bioapatite. A novel way to calculate and use the infrared peak width as a suitable measurement of true apatite crystallinity is proposed, and validated by combined measurement of the same samples through X-ray diffraction. The non-linear correlation between the infrared peak width and the derived ISRF is explained. As shown, the infrared peak width at 604 cm−1 can be effectively used to assess both the average crystallite size and structural carbonate content of bioapatite, thus establishing a universal calibration curve of practical use.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Correction: Long-distance connections in the Copper Age: New evidence from the Alpine Iceman's copper axe

Gilberto Artioli; Ivana Angelini; Günther Kaufmann; Caterina Canovaro; Gregorio Dal Sasso; Igor M. Villa

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0179263.].


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2014

Bone diagenesis at the micro-scale: Bone alteration patterns during multiple burial phases at Al Khiday (Khartoum, Sudan) between the Early Holocene and the II century AD

Gregorio Dal Sasso; Lara Maritan; Donatella Usai; Ivana Angelini; Gilberto Artioli


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2014

Discriminating pottery production by image analysis: a case study of Mesolithic and Neolithic pottery from Al Khiday (Khartoum, Sudan)

Gregorio Dal Sasso; Lara Maritan; Sandro Salvatori; Claudio Mazzoli; Gilberto Artioli


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2016

Bone diagenesis variability among multiple burial phases at Al Khiday (Sudan) investigated by ATR-FTIR spectroscopy

Gregorio Dal Sasso; Matthieu Lebon; Ivana Angelini; Lara Maritan; Donatella Usai; Gilberto Artioli


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2018

Fish and salt: The successful recipe of White Nile Mesolithic hunter-gatherer-fishers

Lara Maritan; Paola Iacumin; Andrea Zerboni; Giampiero Venturelli; Gregorio Dal Sasso; Veerle Linseele; Sahra Talamo; Sandro Salvatori; Donatella Usai


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2018

Radiocarbon dating reveals the timing of formation and development of pedogenic calcium carbonate concretions in Central Sudan during the Holocene

Gregorio Dal Sasso; Andrea Zerboni; Lara Maritan; Ivana Angelini; Donatella Usai; Gilberto Artioli

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Donatella Usai

Sapienza University of Rome

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