AbstractWe present a detailed description of the layered structure developing in the walls of Egyptian Late Bronze Age glass-making vessels, and in similar vessels successfully replicated in laboratory experiments. The analyses show that this layered discolouration and change in ceramic composition is due to the interaction of the glass batch with the vessel during firing. The formation of this visually striking and easy to recognise pattern is due to the chloride content of primary glass batches and does not occur in vessels used to re-melt existing glass. Thus, we argue that these discolourations can be used as a reliable and easy field guide to identify glassmaking waste among Late Bronze Age ceramic assemblages, hopefully increasing the...
AbstractEighty-seven glass fragments from Roman and Late Antique layers at Tell Basta/Bubastis in th...
International audienceOur recent LA-ICP-MS analyses of glass ingots from the Uluburun shipwreck alon...
International audienceThere is substantial archaeological evidence to suggest that glass mosaics wer...
We present a detailed description of the layered structure developing in the walls of Egyptian Late ...
AbstractWe present a detailed description of the layered structure developing in the walls of Egypti...
There is very little known about ancient glass-making practice from the Late Bronze Age (LBA), despi...
The Late Bronze Age in Western Asia and Egypt witnessed an explosion in the production of so-called ...
The Late Bronze Age in Western Asia and Egypt witnessed an explosion in the production of so-called ...
The present study focuses on the primary glass production during Late Bronze Age mainly in Egypt and...
Lisht is one of a few New Kingdom sites with known glass-working debris. Here, we present evidence f...
This paper presents direct archaeological evidence for the primary production of glass at the LBA si...
© 2017 University of Oxford This paper re-analyses a considerable corpus of glass from the Late Bron...
This paper discusses historical development of glass in ancient times, identify the most important c...
Glass production starts in the second half of the sixteenth century BCE. Glass was produced from the...
The chemical compositions and microstructures of some 35 faience objects from Egypt spanning the per...
AbstractEighty-seven glass fragments from Roman and Late Antique layers at Tell Basta/Bubastis in th...
International audienceOur recent LA-ICP-MS analyses of glass ingots from the Uluburun shipwreck alon...
International audienceThere is substantial archaeological evidence to suggest that glass mosaics wer...
We present a detailed description of the layered structure developing in the walls of Egyptian Late ...
AbstractWe present a detailed description of the layered structure developing in the walls of Egypti...
There is very little known about ancient glass-making practice from the Late Bronze Age (LBA), despi...
The Late Bronze Age in Western Asia and Egypt witnessed an explosion in the production of so-called ...
The Late Bronze Age in Western Asia and Egypt witnessed an explosion in the production of so-called ...
The present study focuses on the primary glass production during Late Bronze Age mainly in Egypt and...
Lisht is one of a few New Kingdom sites with known glass-working debris. Here, we present evidence f...
This paper presents direct archaeological evidence for the primary production of glass at the LBA si...
© 2017 University of Oxford This paper re-analyses a considerable corpus of glass from the Late Bron...
This paper discusses historical development of glass in ancient times, identify the most important c...
Glass production starts in the second half of the sixteenth century BCE. Glass was produced from the...
The chemical compositions and microstructures of some 35 faience objects from Egypt spanning the per...
AbstractEighty-seven glass fragments from Roman and Late Antique layers at Tell Basta/Bubastis in th...
International audienceOur recent LA-ICP-MS analyses of glass ingots from the Uluburun shipwreck alon...
International audienceThere is substantial archaeological evidence to suggest that glass mosaics wer...