Bone permittivity and its effect on using ground-penetrating radar

Author:

Schneider Blair B.1ORCID,Tsoflias Georgios2ORCID,Steeples Don W.2,Mandel Rolfe3,Hofman Jack4

Affiliation:

1. The University of Kansas, Center for Teaching Excellence, Lawrence, Kansas, USA..

2. The University of Kansas, Department of Geology, Lawrence, Kansas, USA..

3. The University of Kansas, Kansas Geological Survey, Lawrence, Kansas, USA..

4. The University of Kansas, Department of Anthropology, Lawrence, Kansas, USA.E-mail: .

Abstract

Ground-penetrating radar (GPR) is a powerful tool that is still being developed for archaeological investigations. We investigated the dielectric properties of mammoth bone and bone from modern bison, cow, deer, and elk as a proxy for applying GPR for detecting prehistoric animal remains. Sample dielectric properties (relative permittivity, loss factor, and loss-tangent values) were measured with an impedance analyzer over frequencies ranging from 10 MHz to 1 GHz. Bone-sample porosity, bulk density, water saturation, and volumetric water content of the specimens were also measured. The measured sample-relative permittivity values were then compared with modeled relative permittivity values using common dielectric-mixing models to determine which parameters control the best-fit predictions of relative permittivity of animal bone. We observe statistically significant dielectric-property differences among different animal fauna, as well as variation as a function of frequency. In addition, we determine that the relative permittivity values of 8–9 for similar minerals, such as apatite, are not suitable as a proxy for predicting animal bone properties. We estimate new relative permittivity values of 3–5 for dry animal bone minerals in the frequency range of 100–1000 MHz using these common dielectric-mixing models. We postulate that differences in bone microstructure contribute to dielectric-property variability.

Publisher

Society of Exploration Geophysicists

Subject

Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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