Although plastic and metal vessels offer significant advantages and have almost universally supplanted ceramics throughout the world, pottery fragments are one of the most ubiquitous artifacts in the archaeological record. The southwestern region of Ethiopia is one of the few places in the world where locally made pottery is still the dominant choice for everyday domestic use. The Gamo people continue to produce and use pottery for transporting water, cooking, storing, and serving. Ethnoarchaeology undertaken in a society where people still use low-fired ceramics in daily life provides a powerful framework for archaeological inferences, especially since little behavioral information exists concerning the relationship between status, wealth,...
Ethnoarchaeological research among the Gamo people of south-western Ethiopia indicates that pottery ...
The late third millennium B.C. in Israel until recently was known by funerary deposits only. At Jebe...
Indigenous knowledge is a wisdom born in the community by the community. These knowledge and wisdom ...
Although plastic and metal vessels offer significant advantages and have almost universally supplant...
The goal of this research is to provide an understanding of ceramic assemblage variation in the inte...
Few ethnoarchaeological studies have combined the production and use of groundstones and pottery as ...
The use of a pottery vessel leaves markers on the ceramic wall that can inform archaeologists how th...
The goal of this paper is to identify the relationship between ceramic assemblages and household pop...
Previous research has shown that there are many factors, such as vessel type, size, and function, pr...
Among the Gamo of southwestern Ethiopia, a select group of women continue to make pottery offering a...
Ethnoarchaeology, the study of material culture in a living society by archaeologists, facilitates t...
This study seeks to define the relationship between the pottery remains from early and mid-Holocene ...
This an ethno-archaeological study focused on the investigation of indigenous pottery technology in ...
International audienceDisappearing African Pottery Traditions?Past and Present evidences of loss and...
Ethnoarchaeological research among the Gamo people of south-western Ethiopia indicates that pottery ...
The late third millennium B.C. in Israel until recently was known by funerary deposits only. At Jebe...
Indigenous knowledge is a wisdom born in the community by the community. These knowledge and wisdom ...
Although plastic and metal vessels offer significant advantages and have almost universally supplant...
The goal of this research is to provide an understanding of ceramic assemblage variation in the inte...
Few ethnoarchaeological studies have combined the production and use of groundstones and pottery as ...
The use of a pottery vessel leaves markers on the ceramic wall that can inform archaeologists how th...
The goal of this paper is to identify the relationship between ceramic assemblages and household pop...
Previous research has shown that there are many factors, such as vessel type, size, and function, pr...
Among the Gamo of southwestern Ethiopia, a select group of women continue to make pottery offering a...
Ethnoarchaeology, the study of material culture in a living society by archaeologists, facilitates t...
This study seeks to define the relationship between the pottery remains from early and mid-Holocene ...
This an ethno-archaeological study focused on the investigation of indigenous pottery technology in ...
International audienceDisappearing African Pottery Traditions?Past and Present evidences of loss and...
Ethnoarchaeological research among the Gamo people of south-western Ethiopia indicates that pottery ...
The late third millennium B.C. in Israel until recently was known by funerary deposits only. At Jebe...
Indigenous knowledge is a wisdom born in the community by the community. These knowledge and wisdom ...