Characterization of pottery in Characato and Ongamira valleys, southern Pampean Hills, Córdoba, Argentina. Compositional analysis of raw material and sherds using XRD, FRX and INAA
Author(s): Roxana Cattaneo
Year: 2025
Summary
This is an abstract from the "Ceramic Petrographers in the Americas, Production Practices and Social Networks from Multilevel Angles" session, at the 90th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.
A combination of mineralogical, geochemical and petrographic analyses is utilized in studying both clay raw material and pottery sherds from archaeological sites located in the Ongamira and Characato valleys (Córdoba, Argentina). By employing XRD, XRF, INAA, and crystallography to refine the diffraction patterns, we analyze the record of 18 clay potential sources and 78 pottery sherds from 16 archaeological sites dated between 1900 and 300 BP. In both regions, we interpret the archaeological remains as evidence of seasonally reoccupied encampments, using both, rock shelters and also open air sites. Our comparisons reveal an intravalley use of different sources, consistent with findings of others researchers at the macro-regions level. The variability in mineral composition indicates multiple producers, the use of several sources, and diverse provenances within each microregion. The variability in mineralogical composition suggests multiple producers, the use of several local sources with diverse provenance in each region. This local sourcing suggests a lack of vessel transfer between regions, aligning with studies of different raw materials such as quartz and silcretes used in lithic technology, or firewood, which also indicate local use.
Cite this Record
Characterization of pottery in Characato and Ongamira valleys, southern Pampean Hills, Córdoba, Argentina. Compositional analysis of raw material and sherds using XRD, FRX and INAA. Roxana Cattaneo. Presented at The 90th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. 2025 ( tDAR id: 509817)
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Abstract Id(s): 51138