Spectroscopic analysis of artifacts from the American Civil War ironclad, USS Monitor, has
been undertaken in order to determine the present state of degradation of the objects, and to identify
foreign compounds that will require removal during the stages of conservation. Metallic artifacts
consisting of wrought iron from the rotating gun turret have been studied by a variety of analytical
techniques to determine the effect of long-term exposure to salt, and the anaerobic environment of the
deep ocean. Mössbauer spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction have been used to identify the corrosion
products, concretion, and marine sediments attached to the turret when it was recovered in 2002, and
subsequently during storage. Optical microscopy and Electron-Probe Micro-Analysis have been used to
characterize the wrought iron morphology, and to locate and map the chlorine and other potentially
detrimental elements in the iron. While submerged in the ocean, the corrosion of the turret has resulted
in a thin coating of the reduced iron oxide, Corrosion Magnetite, which, when covered or incorporated
with marine concretions, appears stable, and offers the wrought iron protection from accelerated
corrosion often observed following recovery of metal artifacts from the ocean. However, if the
concretion is breached and the rust or metal is exposed to air, further and immediate oxidation of the metal and existing rust occurs, and is believed to be detrimental to conservation processes. Elemental Xray
mapping by Wavelength Dispersive Spectroscopy shows that during ocean submersion, chloride
ions diffuse deep into the inclusions in the wrought iron, where they are trapped and become responsible
for significant and continued corrosion. Once exposed to air and dried, the trapped chlorides have a
detrimental effect on the longevity of the artifact.