Ceramics (Other Keyword)

401-425 (693 Records)

Matteson Site Ceramic Data (2011)
DATASET William Engelbrecht.

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


Matteson Site Regrouped Ceramic Data (2011)
DOCUMENT Full-Text William Engelbrecht.

ceramic data from the Matteson Site (Jefferson County, NY) with regrouped attributes


Maverick Mountain Phase Ceramics from Point of Pines Pueblo: A Preliminary Report (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Patrick Lyons. Don Burgess. Marilyn Marshall. Jaye Smith.

Emil Haury's 1958 synthesis of the Pueblo III-Pueblo IV period (A.D. 1265-1450) archaeology of Point of Pines Pueblo, in east-central Arizona, is the American Southwest's classic case study in how to reliably infer ancient migrations. Field school excavations conducted between 1946 and 1960 uncovered compelling evidence of immigrants from the Kayenta region of far northeastern Arizona and southeastern Utah. However, because the excavations at Point of Pines Pueblo have never been fully reported,...


Maya Ceramic Production along the North Coast of the Yucatan Peninsula: Diagnostic Attributes Associated with Unslipped Wares at Viste Alegre (2015)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Joseph Horne.

Along the northeastern portion of the Yucatan Peninsula prehistoric ceramic production practices included a variety of utilitarian forms. During recent work at the Maya coastal site of Vista Alegre, Drs. Jeffrey Glover and Dominique Rissolo recovered a high volume of unslipped plain and striated sherds. Due to the absence of complete vessels as well as the mixing of materials stratigraphically, classifying the sherds typologically has proven problematic. This paper examines and compares...


Measuring Ceramic Change and Variability at Final Neolithic Diros (2016)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Daniel Pullen.

The southern Greek Final Neolithic period extends for over 1500 years, ca. 4700 – 3200 cal BC, but has resisted satisfactory subdivision in largely due to the lack of stratified excavations. Nevertheless most scholars follow Phelps’ 1975 division into an earlier and a later phase, each with distinct ceramic features, but this division combines data from many different regions, and finds from surface surveys or from poorly dated contexts. A series of stratified radiocarbon dates from Ksagounaki,...


Mesa Grande and Its World: An Analysis of Intrusive Pottery Types Recovered from Mesa Grande and Their Social Implications (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Jerry Howard. Chris Caseldine. David Abbott. David Wilcox.

Mesa Grande, one of the two largest Hohokam platform mound villages in the lower Salt River Valley, Arizona, contains an exceptionally large and diverse excavated sample of intrusive, diagnostic pottery types that have been cross-dated with tree-ring dates in other regions. Complexes of these intrusive types in a stratigraphically defined sequence at the site provide new insight into calendrical age of the mound and its associated compounds, allowing us to test recent suggestions that Mesa...


Methods to Identify Post-depositional Geochemical Alterations to Ceramics in Submerged Archaeological Sites: a Case Study Using Prehistoric Ceramics from Eastern Dominican Republic (2023)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Kirsten M Hawley. Charles D Beeker. Claudia C Johnson. Shelby Rader.

This is an abstract from the session entitled "Paper / Report Submission (General Sessions)", at the 2023 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. Geochemical analysis methods such as trace element and stable isotope analyses have been refined in recent years to better address archaeological questions pertaining to clay sourcing as well as ceramic trade and transport. However, these analyses are rarely applied to studies of ceramics from submerged sites due to increased...


Michilimackinac and the Modern World: The View from an English Trader's House (2017)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Lynn Evans.

Archaeological excavations have taken place at Michilimackinac every summer since 1959, pre-dating the Society for Historical Archaeology.  The project and its approaches have evolved along with the discipline.  This paper examines current research at an English trader's house within the fort.  His wide range of ceramics and other goods provide insight into the cosmopolitan nature of life on the edge of the eigteenth-century British empire.


Mitayos and Markets in Colonial Huancavelica (AD 1564-1810) (2016)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Douglas Smit. Antonio Coello Rodríguez.

Located in the Central Peruvian Andes, Huancavelica was the largest source of mercury in the Western Hemisphere and a critical source of wealth for Spain’s colonial empire. The Spanish administration mobilized labor through the infamous mita, a rotational labor tax that required colonial provinces to send one-seventh of their population to work in the mines. Forced labor in Huancavelica not only exposed these indigenous miners to the horrors of colonial mercury mining, but also brought...


Modeling Ceramic Transport with GIS in East-Central Arizona (2023)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Fiona Haverland. Scott Van Keuren.

This is an abstract from the "SAA 2023: Individual Abstracts" session, at the 88th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. Decades of provenance studies in the American Southwest have greatly clarified ceramic exchange networks. However, very little investigation has been done on the actual paths or processes used to move pottery within these networks. What pathways were used to transport pottery? What are the energetics of traveling those pathways? And how were ceramics...


Modeling Hands: Photogrammetric Analysis of Hand Imprints in Ceramic Vessels from Copán, Honduras (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Alexis Hartford. Sarah Loomis.

In A.D. 756, Ruler 15 of Copán, Honduras—a Classic Maya settlement—erected Stela M in front of the Hieroglyphic Staircase as a permanent marker of a calendrical event – the 9.16.5.0.0 Period Ending. As part of the ritual ceremony conducted at the time of the stela’s dedication, offerings were placed under the stela to activate or ensoul the monument. In a recent study of the ceramics from this offering conducted at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University, the...


Molded Ceramic Vessels of the Late Prehistoric Appalachian Summit (2016)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Thomas Whyte.

Late Woodland ceramic vessels in northwestern North Carolina are highly variable in tempering materials and surface treatments but are nearly limited to jar forms of a limited size range. Coil breaks are found almost exclusively on shoulder, neck, and rim sherds. Vessel bodies sometimes exhibit evidence of net impression underlying rectilinear stamping. These attributes coupled with experimental observations indicate that vessel bodies were often formed in molds. This mode of ceramic vessel...


The Monagrillo Ceramic Complex of Panama in Subsistence and Social Contexts (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Carly Pope.

The Monagrlon ceramic complex has been identified at myriad archaeological sites around Parita Bay, Panama. These vary widely in geography from costal, to inland, to riverine places. In these different environments, there is disparate and varied evidence of agriculture, indications of hierarchical social structures, and relationships with the creation of pottery at Panamanian sites. I theorize that maritime resources as opposed to cultivation formed the basis of these sedentary or semi-sedentary...


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

.txt file


Morse Regrouped Ceramic Data (1990)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: William Engelbrecht

.pdf file


Morse Sherd Images (2012)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: William Engelbrecht

These photos were made for Earl Sidler (a SUNY/Buffalo grad student) in the early 1970's.


Morse Site Ceramic Data (2011)
DATASET William Engelbrecht.

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


Morse Site Regrouped Ceramic Data (2011)
DOCUMENT Full-Text William Engelbrecht.

ceramic data from the Morse Site (Jefferson County, NY) with regrouped attributes


"…Much improved in fashion, neatness and utility": The Development of the Philadelphia Ceramic Industry, 1700-1800 (2016)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Deborah L. Miller.

The potting industry of Philadelphia has a long and storied past, beginning in the late 17th century with William Crews, the first documented potter in the city. More than fifty years of archaeological research has provided incredible insight into the ceramics industry of Philadelphia, not only in terms of available wares, but also the role Philadelphia ceramics played in the early American marketplace. This presentation explores the 18th century development and diversity of the Philadelphia...


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

.txt file


Mud Creek Regrouped Ceramic Data (1990)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: William Engelbrecht

.pdf file


Mud Creek Site Ceramic Data (2011)
DATASET William Engelbrecht.

ceramic data from the Mud Creek Site (Jefferson County, NY)


Mud Creek Site Regrouped Ceramic Data (2011)
DOCUMENT Full-Text William Engelbrecht.

ceramic data from the Mud Creek Site (Jefferson County, NY) with regrouped attributes


Multi-Element Characterization of Early Nineteenth Century Edged Pearlware from Native American and Euro-American Sites (2016)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Emily Dawson. Mark Schurr.

Edged Pearlware, a type of refined earthenware imported from England, is found at many early nineteenth century Native American and Euro-American sites in North America. Due to the small size of sherds and the lack of sherds with maker’s marks, it is currently difficult to identify the date, location, and manufacturing process for Edged Pearlware. This poster compares sherds from three sites occupied during the first half of the nineteenth century: Pokagon Village, a Native American site;...


Multi-Lab Collaborative Experiments with RHX Dating (2015)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Timothy Scarlett. Jaroslaw Drelich. Carl Lipo. Elizabeth Niespolo. Shan Zhao.

Michigan Technological University, California State University-Long Beach, and Arizona State University scientists have been collaborating on a critical assessment of the novel RHX Dating technique, pioneered by Wilson et al. (2009). This chronometric technique, if proven reliable, will transform archaeological dating practices. We have conducted multiple trials with a wide range of ceramic types from Neolithic through Early Modern, using varied set ups of instrumentation and thoughtful lab...