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Scented Trails: Amber as Aromatic in Medieval China
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 April 2013
Extract
Amber has been known since antiquity in Europe, made into pendants, and used for perfume containers in large quantities since the first millennium bce. It is a naturally occurring fossilized tree (a certain kind of northern pine) resin, composed primarily of carbon-hydrogen-oxygen (C10H16O). It is rather soft (Mohs hardness 2.0–2.5), hence easy to carve, and possesses a resinous luster when polished. Its colours range from transparent to translucent deep orange-red to brown and sometimes a more opaque yellow. Solid amber has no smell, but when powdered it gives off an agreeable aroma. When warmed or burned it has a characteristic pinewood fragrance. It softens at about 150°C and, if heated above 200°C, it will break down to give an “oil of amber” and a black residue. In his Historia naturalis (XXXVII), Pliny the Elder considers its scent when heated to be the most reliable proof of real amber.
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- Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 2013