Carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars are believed to show the chemical
imprints of more massive stars (M > 0.8 Msun) that are now extinct. In
particular, it is expected that the observed abundance of Li should deviate in
these stars from the standard Spite lithium plateau. We study here a sample of
11 metal-poor stars and a double-lined spectroscopic binary with -1.8 <[Fe/H]<
-3.3 observed with VLT/UVES spectrograph. Among these 12 metal-poor stars,
there are 8 CEMP stars for which we measure or constrain the Li abundance. In
contrast to previous arguments, we demonstrate that an appropriate regime of
dilution permits the existence of "Li-Spite plateau and C-rich" stars, whereas
some of the "Li-depleted and C-rich" stars call for an unidentified additional
depletion mechanism that cannot be explained by dilution alone. We find
evidence that rotation is related to the Li depletion in some CEMP stars.
Additionally, we report on a newly recognized double-lined spectroscopic binary
star in our sample. For this star, we develop a new technique from which
estimates of stellar parameters and luminosity ratios can be derived based on a
high-resolution spectrum alone, without the need for input from evolutionary
models.Comment: 62 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in Ap