The archaeometric study of the \u201cgolden slip\u201d ware (second century BCE\u2014fourth century CE) at the site of Barikot (Swat, north-western Pakistan) aimed to define its manufacturing technology and provenance of the raw materials used. For this reason, a multianalytical approach consisting of the microscopic, microstructural and mineralogical analysis of both the golden slip and the ceramic paste was adopted. The slip was found to be composed by platy minerals, microchemically identified as talc and chlorite; their intimate association indicated clearly that they derived from a chlorite-talc schist. This rock is geologically available near the site in the \u201cgreen stones\u201d lenses within the Mingora ophiolites outcropping in ...
A detailed reconstruction of the bead-making technology of talc/steatite disk beads at Mehrgarh (Pak...
Roman red slip ware uncovered at Tripolis, an ancient city of Lydia region in modern Denizli provinc...
A detailed description of the talc/steatite disk beads of Mehrgarh (Pakistan, 5th millennium BCE) al...
The archaeometric study of the “golden slip” ware (second century BCE—fourth century CE) at the sit...
The archaeometric study of the “golden slip” ware (second century BCE—fourth centu...
The archaeometric study of the "golden slip" ware (second century BCE-fourth century CE) at the site...
The archaeometric analysis of a set of potsherds of black slip ware found at the site of Barikot (Sw...
The French Archaeological Mission in the Indus Basin in cooperation with the Department of Archaeolo...
Since the earliest agricultural communities settled in the greater Indus basin in the 7th millennium...
In addition to the red terra sigillata production, the largest Gallic workshop (La Graufesenque) mad...
Since the earliest agricultural communities settled in the greater Indus basin in the 7th millennium...
References in the ancient sources indicate that the Libyan desert was a source of \u2018carbunculi\u...
WOS: 000418897300011The primary objective of the present work is to make a comparison between the re...
Following a survey ot the plain of Taluqan in the north-east of Afghanistan (1977), potsherds assign...
Sindh (Pakistan) is very rich in lithic resources that were exploited in prehistory at least since t...
A detailed reconstruction of the bead-making technology of talc/steatite disk beads at Mehrgarh (Pak...
Roman red slip ware uncovered at Tripolis, an ancient city of Lydia region in modern Denizli provinc...
A detailed description of the talc/steatite disk beads of Mehrgarh (Pakistan, 5th millennium BCE) al...
The archaeometric study of the “golden slip” ware (second century BCE—fourth century CE) at the sit...
The archaeometric study of the “golden slip” ware (second century BCE—fourth centu...
The archaeometric study of the "golden slip" ware (second century BCE-fourth century CE) at the site...
The archaeometric analysis of a set of potsherds of black slip ware found at the site of Barikot (Sw...
The French Archaeological Mission in the Indus Basin in cooperation with the Department of Archaeolo...
Since the earliest agricultural communities settled in the greater Indus basin in the 7th millennium...
In addition to the red terra sigillata production, the largest Gallic workshop (La Graufesenque) mad...
Since the earliest agricultural communities settled in the greater Indus basin in the 7th millennium...
References in the ancient sources indicate that the Libyan desert was a source of \u2018carbunculi\u...
WOS: 000418897300011The primary objective of the present work is to make a comparison between the re...
Following a survey ot the plain of Taluqan in the north-east of Afghanistan (1977), potsherds assign...
Sindh (Pakistan) is very rich in lithic resources that were exploited in prehistory at least since t...
A detailed reconstruction of the bead-making technology of talc/steatite disk beads at Mehrgarh (Pak...
Roman red slip ware uncovered at Tripolis, an ancient city of Lydia region in modern Denizli provinc...
A detailed description of the talc/steatite disk beads of Mehrgarh (Pakistan, 5th millennium BCE) al...