Ceramics (Other Keyword)

51-75 (693 Records)

Barnes Site Regrouped Ceramic Data (1969)
DOCUMENT Full-Text William Engelbrecht.

ceramic data from the Barnes Site (Onondaga) with regrouped attributes


Before Calchaquí. The Formative Period and Middle Horizon ceramics in Northwest Argentina (2015)
DOCUMENT Citation Only María Scattolin.

This paper gives a characterization of the ceramic styles as well as the forms and functions of vessels and, broadly, the production of pottery in the village societies that inhabited the southern Calchaquí Valleys (Northwestern Argentina) during Formative period and Middle Horizon (first millennium AD). The study of ceramics in Northwestern Argentina has traditionally been centred on descriptions, taking decorative motives as fundamental evidence in the definition of styles and periodization....


Belcher (1970)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: William Engelbrecht

.txt file


Belcher Site Ceramic Data (1970)
DATASET William Engelbrecht.

ceramic data from the Belcher Site (Seneca area)


Belcher Site Regrouped Ceramic Data (1970)
DOCUMENT Full-Text William Engelbrecht.

ceramic data from the Belcher Site (Seneca) with regrouped attributes


Beyond the Visible: Identifying Microscopic Erosion in Ceramics Used for Alcohol Fermentation. An Application of Scanning Electron Microscopy in Archaeology (2016)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Andrew Fernandez. Christine VanPool. Heidi Noneman.

Ethnographic research on low-fired pottery has demonstrated that the production of alcohol deteriorates the interior vessels’ wall leaving deep pitting marks. Similar pitting is seen on some jars and sherds from the North American Southwest and Northern Mexico, causing researchers to suggest that alcohol was brewed in this region before European contact. The identification of these marks on archaeological materials relies on an observer to visually confirm and quantify the level of erosion...


Blue Willow Vessels and Life’s Other Mysteries: Understanding high value ceramics and their role in identity formation within contexts of company town economic deprivation (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only V. Camille Westmont.

Historical archaeologists have long recognized the connection between material culture and identity. Ceramics, in particular, have the opportunity to inform researchers about economic choices, consumer decisions, and societal trends. However, when looking at communities that experience social and economic deprivation, the presence of (oftentimes more expensive) decorated vessels can cause confusion. Excavations conducted in 2016 focusing on the poorest workers’ housing in a coal company town in...


Booze or Food? Experimental Archaeology of Low-Fired Pottery to Examine Tribochemical Processes (2016)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Christine VanPool. MacLaren Law-de-Lauriston. Heidi Noneman. Andrew Fernandez.

Ceramic ethnographic research from Africa shows that the fermenting of alcohol in low-fired pottery results in a variety of tribochemical processes, which cause pitting in the interior of the vessel. Jars and sherds from the Casas Grandes region (AD 1200-1450) have similar pitting, causing researchers to propose that either alcohol or hominy was made in these jars. To evaluate these hypotheses we created low-fired vessels and used them for boiling water, making hominy, fermenting corn (corn...


Breaking and Making Identities: Transformations of Ceramic Repertoires in Early Colonial Hispaniola (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Marlieke Ernst. Corinne Hofman.

Placed within the context of the ERC-NEXUS1492 research, this paper focusses on transformations in indigenous social and material worlds in Early Colonial Hispaniola. The initial intercultural encounters in the New World have led to the creation of entirely new social identities and changing material culture repertoires in the first decennia after colonization. The incorporation of European earthenwares in the indigenous sites of El Cabo and Playa Grande will be contrasted with the presence of...


Breaking News: Mended Ceramics in Historical Context (2016)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Angelika R. Kuettner.

Coupled with inventories, receipts, account books, trade cards, and newspaper advertisements, archaeology broadens the interpretation and understanding of an object’s value and worth in the period in which it was made and used. Evidence of mended ceramics in the archaeological collections at Colonial Williamsburg and in other collections provides a means to assist in the identification, dating, and contextual understanding of repairs made to ceramic objects of a variety of materials. Questions...


British Capital, Mercury Miners, and Transfer Print Ceramics in 19th Century Peru (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Douglas K Smit.

During the late 18th century, Spanish colonies in South America increasingly liberalized their trade policies, leading to an increased access to British goods such as transfer print ceramics. In Peru, the importation of transfer print ceramics grew rapidly after independence in 1824, along with the entry of British capital into the mining sector of the Peruvian economy. This paper examines the role of transfer print ceramics at Santa Barbara, an indigenous mercury mining community located...


British Ceramics at the Empire’s Edge: Economy and Identity Among Subaltern Groups in Late 19th-Century British Honduras (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Brooke Bonorden. Brett A. Houk.

Following the outbreak of the Caste War in the Yucatán (1847-1901), a group of approximately 1,000 Maya migrated into northwestern British Honduras (Belize) and settled 20 small villages. Far from the principal population centers of the Yucatán, the Petén, and Belize City, the only other inhabitants in this region were logging gangs predominantly composed of descendants of African slaves who seasonally inhabited the mahogany camps of the Belize Estate and Produce Company’s (BEC) vast land...


British Ceramics, Indigenous Miners, and the Commercialization of Daily Practice in Late Colonial Huancavelica (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Douglas K Smit.

Throughout the 18th century, indigenous Andean miners at the Huancavelica mercury mine increasingly entered into wage labor agreements with Spanish mine owners in order to avoid the harsher conditions of the mita labor draft. This shift from forced to free labor increased the circulation of specie within the mining community, and as a result, the miners began increasingly participating in local, regional, and global markets. Drawing upon recent excavations at the indigenous mining settlement of...


Buffum (1971)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: William Engelbrecht

.txt file


Buffum Information (2001)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: William Engelbrecht

Nancy Rayner-Herter, The Niagara Frontier Iroquois, Ph.D., SUNY/Buffalo, Anthropology.


Buffum Site Ceramic Data (1971)
DATASET William Engelbrecht.

ceramic data from the Buffum Site (multi-component)


Buffum Site Regrouped Ceramic Data (1971)
DOCUMENT Full-Text William Engelbrecht.

ceramic data from the Buffum Site (Niagara Frontier) with regrouped attributes


Burr (1990)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: William Engelbrecht

.txt file


Burr Site Ceramic Data (1990)
DATASET William Engelbrecht.

ceramic data from the Burr Site (Jefferson County, NY)


The Butana Group in Comparison with the Predynastic and Late Neolithic Groups in the Nile Valley and Adjacent Areas of the Sahel and Sahara: A Look at How Ceramics Can be Used to Differentiate Socioeconomic, Ethnic, and Political Differences (2015)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Frank Winchell.

Various ceramic-bearing groups occupied and settled in the Nile Valley during the end of the 5th millennium BC and through the 4th millennium BC, ranging from hunter-gatherers, agro-pastoralists, agriculturalists, and finally to state level societies. Some of these groups appear to have been involved with intergroup trade and cooperation at various levels, while others were not. This paper will look into the characteristic traits associated with these groups in northeast Africa and how their...


Buyea Site Regrouped Ceramic Data (1969)
DOCUMENT Full-Text William Engelbrecht.

ceramic data from the Buyea Site (Oneida) with regrouped attributes


Buyer (1969)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: William Engelbrecht

.txt file


Buyer Site Ceramic Data (1969)
DATASET William Engelbrecht.

ceramic data from the Buyer Site (Oneida area)


Buying Pottery, Leasing Land, And Marketing A Nation: Investigating Euroamerican Ceramic Use In The Catawba Nation Before And After Land-Leasing (2020)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Chris LaMack.

This is an abstract from the session entitled "Before, After, and In Between: Archaeological Approaches to Places (through/in) Time" , at the 2020 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. From the late eighteenth to the early nineteenth centuries the Catawba, members of a South Carolina Piedmont Native American nation, were well-known in the Carolina backcountry as manufacturers of well-made, inexpensive ceramics. However, at precisely the moment that Catawba ceramic...


Buying Pottery, Leasing Land, And Marketing A Nation: Investigating Euroamerican Ceramic Use In The Catawba Nation Before And After Land-Leasing (2020)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Chris LaMack.

This is an abstract from the session entitled "Before, After, and In Between: Archaeological Approaches to Places (through/in) Time" , at the 2020 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. From the late eighteenth to the early nineteenth centuries the Catawba, members of a South Carolina Piedmont Native American nation, were well-known in the Carolina backcountry as manufacturers of well-made, inexpensive ceramics. However, at precisely the moment that Catawba ceramic...