The analysis of organic residues from pottery sherds using Gas-Chromatography with mass-spectroscopy (GC-MS) has revealed information about the variety of foods eaten and domestic routine at Silchester between the second and fourth–sixth centuries A.D. Two results are discussed in detail: those of a second-century Gauloise-type amphora and a fourth-century SE Dorset black-burnished ware (BB1) cooking pot, which reveal the use of pine pitch on the inner surface of the amphora and the use of animal fats (ruminant adipose fats) and leafy vegetables in cooking at the Roman town of Silchester, Hants
International audienceDirect, accurate, and precise dating of archaeological pottery vessels is now ...
Charred plant remains included charred cereal grains and chaff together with other crop plants, such...
Recent research has attributed the introduction of agriculture in the western Mediterranean to sever...
The analysis of organic residues from pottery sherds using Gas-Chromatography with mass-spectroscopy...
Our understanding of the introduction and adoption of new plant foods in Roman Britain is currently ...
The data are associated with the fourth monograph publication of the excavation of Silchester Insula...
AbstractThe development of oppida in the late first millennium BC across north-western Europe repres...
This article presents an analysis of three dining-related assemblages of pottery from Roman Leiceste...
The paper deals with the results of a study on food habits during the Archaic Age in the Messapian s...
This article presents an analysis of three dining-related assemblages of pottery from Roman Leiceste...
This thesis explores food and foodways, and changes in foodways over the Roman period, it has two ma...
This research explores the extent to which food residues from ceramics can contribute to archaeologi...
Pottery residues offer a promising source of evidence about the types of food that were important in...
Analyses of organic residues preserved in ceramic potsherds enable the identification of foodstuffs ...
Direct, accurate, and precise dating of archaeological pottery vessels is now achievable using a rec...
International audienceDirect, accurate, and precise dating of archaeological pottery vessels is now ...
Charred plant remains included charred cereal grains and chaff together with other crop plants, such...
Recent research has attributed the introduction of agriculture in the western Mediterranean to sever...
The analysis of organic residues from pottery sherds using Gas-Chromatography with mass-spectroscopy...
Our understanding of the introduction and adoption of new plant foods in Roman Britain is currently ...
The data are associated with the fourth monograph publication of the excavation of Silchester Insula...
AbstractThe development of oppida in the late first millennium BC across north-western Europe repres...
This article presents an analysis of three dining-related assemblages of pottery from Roman Leiceste...
The paper deals with the results of a study on food habits during the Archaic Age in the Messapian s...
This article presents an analysis of three dining-related assemblages of pottery from Roman Leiceste...
This thesis explores food and foodways, and changes in foodways over the Roman period, it has two ma...
This research explores the extent to which food residues from ceramics can contribute to archaeologi...
Pottery residues offer a promising source of evidence about the types of food that were important in...
Analyses of organic residues preserved in ceramic potsherds enable the identification of foodstuffs ...
Direct, accurate, and precise dating of archaeological pottery vessels is now achievable using a rec...
International audienceDirect, accurate, and precise dating of archaeological pottery vessels is now ...
Charred plant remains included charred cereal grains and chaff together with other crop plants, such...
Recent research has attributed the introduction of agriculture in the western Mediterranean to sever...