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Marina Van Bos

Researcher at Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage

Publications -  12
Citations -  126

Marina Van Bos is an academic researcher from Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage. The author has contributed to research in topics: Infrared & Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications receiving 107 citations.

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In situ investigations of vault paintings in the Antwerp cathedral.

TL;DR: For both paintings the presence of the strong Raman scatterer calcite (CaCO(3)) resulted in a difficult identification of the pigments by Raman spectroscopy.
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Micro-analytical identification of the components of varnishes from South Italian historical musical instruments by PLM, ESEM–EDX, microFTIR, GC–MS, and Py–GC–MS

TL;DR: A multi-analytical investigation was carried out to study varnish micro-samples from historical stringed musical instruments from the collection of the “Vincenzo Bellini” Conservatory in Palermo (Italy) as mentioned in this paper.
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Baroque Stucco Marble Decorations. I. Preparation of Laboratory Replicas and Establishment of Criteria for Analytical Evaluation of Organic Materials

TL;DR: In this article, a series of stucco marble samples were prepared in the laboratory and all ingredients were selected and treated according to the data found in the literature, including amino acid analysis by high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and fatty acid analysis using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC-MS).
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Light, shadows and surface characteristics : the multispectral Portable Light Dome

TL;DR: A multispectral, multidirectional, portable and dome-shaped acquisition system that documents and measures the 3D surface structure of objects, re-visualises underdrawings, faded pigments and inscriptions, and examines the MS results in combination with the actual relief characteristics of the physical object.
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Micro-X-Ray Fluorescence and the Old Masters: Non-destructive in situ characterisation of the varnish of historical Low Countries stringed musical instruments

TL;DR: In this article, the surfaces of nine historical Low Countries stringed musical instruments from the collection of the Musical Instruments Museum in Brussels were non-destructively analysed by in situ micro-X-Ray fluorescence spectroscopy in dispersive mode.