Ceramics (Other Keyword)
226-250 (725 Records)
The Durham Site: A Prehistoric Iroquois Component in Jefferson County, New York. Earl Sidler, III. M.A. SUNY/Buffalo Anthropology.
Durham Map (2012)
This map photo was in the Earl Sidler collection, now in the possession of Tim Abel. For more information on SUNY/Buffalo's excavations at Durham, consult the SUNY/Buffalo site files.
Durham Regrouped Ceramic Data (1990)
Regrouped Ceramic Data
Durham Sherd Images (2012)
These scanned photos were in the Earl Sidler collection, now in the possession of Timothy Abel. They were probably done by Gordon Schmahl of the SUNY/Buffalo Anthropology Dept. in the early 1970's when the sherds from Harvard were on loan to Marian White.
Dutch Artifacts in the NYC Archaeological Repository: The Nan A. Rothschild Repository Center (2022)
This is an abstract from the session entitled "More than Pots and Pipes: New Netherland and a World Made by Trade" , at the 2022 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. The New York City Archaeological Repository houses artifacts from sites excavated within the city under the auspices of the Landmarks Preservation Commission, including those from the New Netherland period and the early (ca. 1664-1700) English colonial town. Many of these sites were dug in the 1980s and it’s...
Dutch Hollow (1970)
.txt file
Dutch Hollow Site Ceramic Data (1970)
ceramic data from the Dutch Hollow Site (Seneca area)
Dutch Hollow Site Regrouped Ceramic Data (1970)
ceramic data from the Dutch Hollow Site (Seneca) with regrouped attributes
Early Colonial Material Entanglements at Tlaxcallan, Mexico: Insights from a Polychrome Ceramic Sherd Disk (2020)
This is an abstract from the session entitled "Plus Ultra: An examination of current research in Spanish Colonial/Iberian Underwater and Terrestrial Archaeology in the Western Hemisphere." , at the 2020 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. In October 1519, the fiercely independent Tlaxcallan state first sent aid for Cortés’s conquest efforts, establishing a community of people who identified as Indigenous conquerors. By the mid-16th century, Indigenous peoples in Tlaxcala...
Early Pottery at Petrified Forest National Park (2017)
Petrified Forest National Park is notable for the diversity of its ceramic assemblages which encompass several major ware groups. The earliest ceramics sequence saw one of the most dramatic shift in pottery production techniques at any time in the park, from the paddle and anvil, micaceous tempered Adamana Brown Ware, to the coil and scrape, sherds and sand tempered white wares and grey wares that dominate the rest of the park’s ceramics assemblages. This poster presents a characterization study...
An Early Twentieth Century Ceramic Assemblage from a Burned House in Northern Georgia (2015)
Most of the sites we investigate have architectural remains, middens, and features. Artifacts collected from middens often span the history of the site. Features may represent frozen moments in time, but rarely reflect the total material culture of the household and contain artifacts that have been removed from their household and discarded. The site discussed in this paper contains a residence that was destroyed by fire during the second decade of the twentieth century. The house was occupied...
Eaton (1976)
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Eaton Site Ceramic Data (1976)
ceramic data from the Eaton Site (western New York area)
Eaton Site Regrouped Ceramic Data (1976)
ceramic data from the Eaton Site (Niagara Frontier) with regrouped attributes
EDXRF Analysis on Ceramics During the Mongol Period in China (2017)
In this paper I will present the results from analyzing and comparing ceramics from multiple contexts, including ceramic production centers, burials and residential areas during the Mongol period. I adopted Energy-Dispersive X-Ray Fluorescence (EDXRF), a very effective and non-destructive way to analyze the chemical compositions of their pastes, glazes and pigments of samples from Jingdezhen, Inner Mongolia, and other areas of the Mongol Empire. Other scientific techniques and statistic methods...
The Elk Hill Site, 14RY328: Survey and Testing in Riley County, Kansas (2014)
In 2009 the Kansas Department of Transportation requested cultural resources consultation with the Contract Archeology Program of the Kansas Historical Society and the Kansas State Historic Preservation Office regarding a proposed borrow area associated with the reconstruction of Highway K-18, KDOT project 18-81 KA-0410-01, SFBA no. 1. A Phase II survey conducted by the Contract Archeology Program led to the discovery and documentation of three archeological sites: 14RY328, the Elk Hill site;...
Ellis (1977)
.txt files
Ellis site Ceramic Data (1977)
ceramic data from the Ellis Site (western New York area)
Ellis Site Regrouped Ceramic Data (1977)
ceramic data from the Ellis Site (Niagara Frontier) with regrouped attributes
Englebert (1974)
.txt file
Englebert Site Ceramic Data (1974)
ceramic data from the Englebert Site (Southern Tier area)
Englebert Site Regrouped Ceramic Data (1974)
ceramic data from the Englebert Site (Proto-Susquehannock) with regrouped attributes
Erie (1991)
Ceramic patterning within and between Erie village sites is discussed.
Establishing Chemical Signatures for Cabuza Style Pottery and the Tiwanaku Tradition Using Portable X-ray Florescence (pXRF) (2015)
Portable X-ray Florescence (pXRF)was used to analyze the chemical composition of 60 Tiwanaku and derived style ceramic sherds from different locations in the south central Andes. The results indicate that there are four distinct geochemical groups and that the local Cabuza style pottery from survey collections in the Azapa Valley in Chile has a distinct chemical composition from all other Tiwanaku tradition ceramics. The results also indicate that pXRF is a viable technique for distinguishing...
Ethnic interaction and settlement composition at Huacramarca (2015)
The Late Intermediate Period (LIP) is usually considered as the time of ethnic diversity in the Central Andes and representations of ethnic boundaries in maps illustrate this scenario. However, these representations offer a synchronic perspective of ethnic configuration as a consequence of their reliance on XVI Century sources. Nevertheless, Andean chronologies demonstrate that the LIP covers more than 500 years (from AD. 900 to 1450) in which several dynamic phenomena including expansion,...