In this article, the authors investigate the effectiveness of glass and metal recycling in Roman towns. The comparison of sealed primary deposits (reflecting what was in use in Roman towns) with dumping sites shows a marked drop in glass and metal finds in the dumps. Although different replacement ratios and fragmentation indices affect the composition of the assemblages recovered in dumps, recycling appears to have played a fundamental role, very effectively reintroducing into the productive chain most glass and metal items before their final discard. After presenting a case study from Pompeii, the authors examine contexts from other sites that suggest that recycling practices were not occasional. In sum, recycling should be consider...
The number and complexities of the legal texts from the Roman world far surpass anything we have fro...
Research on the cargo of glass in the Roman ship Iulia Felix, wrecked off the town of Grado (provinc...
In this multi-disciplinary study of Roman glass from Karanis, Egypt, I combine archaeological, chemi...
While recycling was an important part of industry during the Roman Period, after the imaginary line ...
The suitability of glass for re-melting and recycling was widely exploited in the past. This paper r...
Scholars of Roman archaeology, epigraphy, and history are increasingly discussing urban maintenance ...
Aquileia is widely cited as a major Roman glassworking center, but this assumption is based on scarc...
Glass can be considered a locus of meaning, a material which has been the repository of traditional ...
Any archaeological artefact made from recyclable material may have been recycled before deposition. ...
In Late Antiquity, reuse and recycling has mostly been considered in relation to spolia and to preci...
Excavations in the upper Walbrook valley, in a marginal area in the north-west of the Roman city, re...
Editorial for the Special Issue of Archaeometry ‘Tackling Recycling in the Past’. The practice of re...
Recycling may be a topical subject today, but it is an ancient practice. Glass was regularly recycle...
Glassblowing in the Roman Empire is the main root for the popularity of glass trade throughout the e...
One hundred and ninety three glass fragments from the canabae in York were analysed (first to fourth...
The number and complexities of the legal texts from the Roman world far surpass anything we have fro...
Research on the cargo of glass in the Roman ship Iulia Felix, wrecked off the town of Grado (provinc...
In this multi-disciplinary study of Roman glass from Karanis, Egypt, I combine archaeological, chemi...
While recycling was an important part of industry during the Roman Period, after the imaginary line ...
The suitability of glass for re-melting and recycling was widely exploited in the past. This paper r...
Scholars of Roman archaeology, epigraphy, and history are increasingly discussing urban maintenance ...
Aquileia is widely cited as a major Roman glassworking center, but this assumption is based on scarc...
Glass can be considered a locus of meaning, a material which has been the repository of traditional ...
Any archaeological artefact made from recyclable material may have been recycled before deposition. ...
In Late Antiquity, reuse and recycling has mostly been considered in relation to spolia and to preci...
Excavations in the upper Walbrook valley, in a marginal area in the north-west of the Roman city, re...
Editorial for the Special Issue of Archaeometry ‘Tackling Recycling in the Past’. The practice of re...
Recycling may be a topical subject today, but it is an ancient practice. Glass was regularly recycle...
Glassblowing in the Roman Empire is the main root for the popularity of glass trade throughout the e...
One hundred and ninety three glass fragments from the canabae in York were analysed (first to fourth...
The number and complexities of the legal texts from the Roman world far surpass anything we have fro...
Research on the cargo of glass in the Roman ship Iulia Felix, wrecked off the town of Grado (provinc...
In this multi-disciplinary study of Roman glass from Karanis, Egypt, I combine archaeological, chemi...