M
Mohamed Traoré
Researcher at University of Santiago de Compostela
Publications - 12
Citations - 309
Mohamed Traoré is an academic researcher from University of Santiago de Compostela. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 8 publications receiving 185 citations. Previous affiliations of Mohamed Traoré include École Normale Supérieure & University of Lorraine.
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Application of FTIR spectroscopy to the characterization of archeological wood
TL;DR: Molecular characterization by analytical pyrolysis of selected samples from each wood type confirmed the interpretation of the mechanisms behind the variability in wood composition obtained by the FTIR-ATR.
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Differentiation between pine woods according to species and growing location using FTIR-ATR
TL;DR: Results show that FTIR-ATR in combination with multivariate statistics can be a useful tool for species identification and provenancing for pine wood samples of unknown origin.
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Potential of pyrolysis-GC–MS molecular fingerprint as a proxy of Modern Age Iberian shipwreck wood preservation
TL;DR: In this paper, principal component analysis (PCA) was performed on pyrolysis data of sound woods and shipwreck woods of Pinus sp. and Quercus sp., to identify the impact of diagenesis on pyrotelysis fingerprints.
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Tree-ring chronologies, stable strontium isotopes and biochemical compounds: Towards reference datasets to provenance Iberian shipwreck timbers
Marta Domínguez-Delmás,Sara A. Rich,Sara A. Rich,Mohamed Traoré,Mohamed Traoré,Fadi Hajj,Anne Poszwa,Linar Akhmetzyanov,Ignacio García-González,Groenendijk Peter E,Groenendijk Peter E +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, a set of oak and pine tree-ring chronologies have been developed from living trees covering the past 500 and 800 years, respectively, and have served to confirm the provenance of the wood used in an 18th-century Spanish ship of the Royal Navy.
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Chemometric tools for identification of wood from different oak species and their potential for provenancing of Iberian shipwrecks (16th-18th centuries AD)
TL;DR: In this article, Fourier Transform Infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (Py-GC-MS) were used for provenance studies of archaeological wood.