This paper documents a comprehensive study of coarse wares for table use, serving, washing and cooking, found at the archaeological site of Paola (Cosenza, southern Italy). Major aims of the study were to group local products and imports and to determine technological features of local products. Results were obtained through a combination of archaeological (stratigraphy and ceramic typology), chemical and mineralogical-petrographical techniques (ICP-OES, ICP-MS, INAA, XRF, OM, SEM-EDS and EMPA). Data integration revealed that the coarse wares found at Paola were produced locally or imported over short (Calabria region), medium (Campania, Pantelleria, Sicily) and long distances (Greece and Africa). The local production focused on basins, ste...
Excavations carried out in Cuma by the Centre Jean Bérard archaeologists have uncovered a large quan...
The Ancient Appia Landscapes project (AAL) has been operating since 2011 in partnership with the Sup...
This thesis addresses issues of the technology and provenance of pottery from medieval Sicily (6th-1...
This paper documents a comprehensive study of coarse wares for table use, serving, washing and cooki...
Fifty ceramic sherds of Roman Coarse Ware collected in the Forum of Cumae have been characterized fr...
The paper presents archaeometric analyses (OM, XRPD and XRF) of Greek imports, Greek-type pottery, l...
The study explores technological choices and practices of Iron Age pottery production at Monte Iato ...
Ceramic building materials (CBM) are interesting archaeological items for gathering the material cul...
Ethnoarchaeometry can be used to test assumptions in ceramic provenance studies. Within the Late Rom...
The current study aims at testing whether potters acting across Central Sicily broadly shared the sa...
Coarse and painted fine wares from the Late Antique residential complex of Posta Crusta (Lucera, Fog...
Mineralogical and petrographical studies on 23 ancient pottery fragments of terra sigillata from anc...
An ethnoarchaeometric approach has been followed to identify the textural and compositional characte...
Excavations carried out in Cuma by the Centre Jean Bérard archaeologists have uncovered a large quan...
The Ancient Appia Landscapes project (AAL) has been operating since 2011 in partnership with the Sup...
This thesis addresses issues of the technology and provenance of pottery from medieval Sicily (6th-1...
This paper documents a comprehensive study of coarse wares for table use, serving, washing and cooki...
Fifty ceramic sherds of Roman Coarse Ware collected in the Forum of Cumae have been characterized fr...
The paper presents archaeometric analyses (OM, XRPD and XRF) of Greek imports, Greek-type pottery, l...
The study explores technological choices and practices of Iron Age pottery production at Monte Iato ...
Ceramic building materials (CBM) are interesting archaeological items for gathering the material cul...
Ethnoarchaeometry can be used to test assumptions in ceramic provenance studies. Within the Late Rom...
The current study aims at testing whether potters acting across Central Sicily broadly shared the sa...
Coarse and painted fine wares from the Late Antique residential complex of Posta Crusta (Lucera, Fog...
Mineralogical and petrographical studies on 23 ancient pottery fragments of terra sigillata from anc...
An ethnoarchaeometric approach has been followed to identify the textural and compositional characte...
Excavations carried out in Cuma by the Centre Jean Bérard archaeologists have uncovered a large quan...
The Ancient Appia Landscapes project (AAL) has been operating since 2011 in partnership with the Sup...
This thesis addresses issues of the technology and provenance of pottery from medieval Sicily (6th-1...