Advances in the Method and Application of Ceramic Petrography: International Perspectives on Key Archaeological Questions Part II

Part of: Society for American Archaeology 80th Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA (2015)

Over the last 30 years the archaeological application of petrographic analysis has gained methodological and theoretical traction. Ceramic petrography, in particular, has emerged as a key methodological tool because it provides insights into technological practice, the choice and manipulation of raw materials by ancient potters, and methods of forming and firing conditions. Petrography has the advantage of being a visual technique whose observations are easily combined with macroscopic study of fabric, form, and decoration. A holistic approach that combines such observation with chemical (e.g. INAA, ICP-MS, XRF), mineralogical (especially XRD), and microstructural (SEM) data, in addition to geological information provides a powerful analytical strategy for understanding the social, political, economic, and environmental contexts of ceramic production, distribution, and consumption. Such information is vital for developing robust interpretations of ancient social organization and change. We have invited a group of scholars whose work highlights advances in ceramic petrography for understanding, technological traditions and change, identity, ceramic production and exchange, migration, and the social context of consumption. Many of the papers highlight new methods for combining petrography with other analytical strategies to address social process. As such, the session provides an analytical exchange among researchers with diverse intellectual backgrounds and research interests.

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Documents
  1. Arybolas, amphoras and Manteño Ordinario: The production and significance of Ecuadorian transport vessels (2015)
  2. "A burden of one’s own choice is not felt": observing ceramic production technology, exchange and consumption in the Late Mycenaean Saronic Gulf. (2015)
  3. Ceramic Petrography and Woodland Period Social Interactions in Florida and the Southeastern United States (2015)
  4. Ceramic petrography, historical linguistics and the Bantu expansion: tracking the arrival of the first pottery-using peoples in northern Botswana (2015)
  5. Characterizing Eighteenth Century Technological Changes in Pawnee Pottery (2015)
  6. Cooking vessels of the early medieval village of Miranduolo, Tuscany: a petrographic study (2015)
  7. Crafting Choices: Neolithic – Early Helladic II Ceramic Production and Distribution, Midea, Mainland Greece (2015)
  8. In the Land of Lava: Petrographic and Chemical Analysis of Pottery from El Malpais National Monument (2015)
  9. The Microscopy and Macroscopy of Islamic Lustre wares (2015)
  10. Petrography of "Nderit" pottery from Pastoral Neolithic sites surrounding Lake Turkana in Kenya (2015)
  11. Pottery Production in Anglo-Scandinavian Torksey (Lincolnshire): reconstructing and contextualising the chaîne opératoire. (2015)
  12. Preliminary Petrographic Analysis of Ceramics from the Bocas del Toro Archipelago, Panama (2015)
  13. Rojo Grafitado is not graphite. A slow-science interpretation of the production of an Andean ceramic style. (2015)
  14. Technological variability in ceramics of the Neolithic to Early Bronze Age transition at Phaistos, Crete: an integrated approach (2015)