Abstract Organic residue analysis was conducted on various vessels from burials at Tel Yehud, Israel. The analyses led to new reliable evidence for the presence of opioid alkaloids and their decomposition products. This research revitalizes a decades‐old discussion on the presence and function of the opium trade across a cultural region of utmost ...
Vanessa Linares +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Wound cord (whipped cord, cord stamp) decoration on pottery from the late 4th to early 3rd millennium BC in Latvia has been subject to detailed stereomicroscope study, incorporating reflectance transformation imaging, which proved an invaluable tool for
Valdis Bērziņš
doaj +1 more source
Non-discursive knowledge and the construction of identity. Potters, potting and performance at the bronze age tell of Százhalombatta, Hungary [PDF]
This article explores the relationship between the making of things and the making of people at the Bronze Age tell at Százhalombatta, Hungary. Focusing on potters and potting, we explore how the performance of non-discursive knowledge was critical to ...
Budden, Sandy, Sofaer, Joanna
core +1 more source
Development of Ceramic Decorative Rotary Tool Technology Based on the Internet of Things as a Learning Media to Support Creative Industries [PDF]
Indonesia is a rich and diverse country for crafts and creative industries. In supporting the creative industry, it is necessary to have skills through learning creative crafts in the community of Rangdumulya Village, Pedes District, Karawang.
Hidayat Rahmat +2 more
doaj +1 more source
Local and imported pottery in the Neolithic Gulf: a new perspective from the site of Bahra 1 in Kuwait [PDF]
The paper presents a new perspective on pottery traditions in the Gulf during the Neolithic period, based on new data from the Ubaid-related site of Bahra 1 in Kuwait.
Anna Smogorzewska
doaj +1 more source
Ceramics and Society in Northern Europe [PDF]
Neolithic pottery in Britain and Ireland was produced from shortly after 4000 BC. There are regional variations but overall a four phase chronology for the pottery is also suggested: First Neolithic, approximately 4000–3800 BC; Early Neolithic ...
Muller, Johannes, Peterson, Rick
core +1 more source
The oldest pottery of the Para-Neolithic Zedmar culture at the site Szczepanki, Masuria, NE-Poland
The article presents the earliest ceramics of the site Szczepanki, north-eastern Poland, belonging to the Para-Neolithic Zedmar culture, which existed in the south-east Baltic region.
Witold Gumiński
doaj +1 more source
Khirbet al-Batrawy ceramics. A systematic mineralogical and petrographic study for investigating the material culture [PDF]
The present paper reports the results of a mineralogical and petrographic study focused on the archaeometric characterization of Early Bronze Age pottery from the archaeological site of Khirbet al-Batrawy (Jordan), dated between 3000 and 2000 BC. Optical
Medeghini, Laura, Nigro, Lorenzo
core +1 more source
Earliest pottery in Eurasia continent
This paper presents an overview of the latest information about the beginnings of the technology of pottery making in the area of the forest-steppe belt in Siberia and the Russian part of Eastern Europe all the way to the Ural Mountains.
Ivan Pavlů +2 more
doaj +1 more source
An Enigmatic Funnel Find of the Somogyvár-Vinkovci Culture from Balatonőszöd-Temetői dűlő in Transdanubia, Hungary [PDF]
A small section of an Early Bronze Age settlement made up of pits was uncovered at the prehistoric, multi-period site of Balatonőszöd-Temetői dűlő.
Gherdán, Katalin +4 more
core +1 more source

