2006
DOI: 10.1002/gea.20115
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Petrography and provenance of Laecanius Amphorae from Istria, northern Adriatic region, Croatia

Abstract: Amphorae sherds from the Laecanius workshop of Roman Istria (10-5 B.C. and 78 A.D.), Croatia, were studied by integrating archaeological and geological techniques including fabric analysis, thin-section petrography, X-ray diffractometry (XRD), and heavy mineral analysis. The fabric of the sherds showed distinctive characteristics, permitting their classification and allocation into nine fabric groupss. Petrography revealed that quartz is the dominant clastic component, whereas carbonate is common as temper; XR… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The variability in mobility and social organization under which ceramic technology is first developed needs to be understood on a regional basis. Ceramic sourcing (e.g., Bong, Matsumura, Yokoyama, & Nakai, ; Dunning et al., ; Eerkens, Neff, & Glascock, ; Gonzales, Arakawa, & Koenig, ; Mange & Bezeczky, ; Pavia, Marsaglia, & Fitzpatrick, ; Šegvić et al., ) is one effective way of assessing the nature of the adoption of pottery through the identification of production zones, the intensity of production, and the extent of circulation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The variability in mobility and social organization under which ceramic technology is first developed needs to be understood on a regional basis. Ceramic sourcing (e.g., Bong, Matsumura, Yokoyama, & Nakai, ; Dunning et al., ; Eerkens, Neff, & Glascock, ; Gonzales, Arakawa, & Koenig, ; Mange & Bezeczky, ; Pavia, Marsaglia, & Fitzpatrick, ; Šegvić et al., ) is one effective way of assessing the nature of the adoption of pottery through the identification of production zones, the intensity of production, and the extent of circulation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A similar situation is observed at Fažana, in the southern part of the peninsula. Maria Mange and Tamás Bezeczky have conducted a study of the Fažana amphorae, based on heavy minerals, which suggests that terra rossa might have been used in the production of these containers [5].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Heavy minerals of the nonplastic components provide information about the provenance of the raw material, and manufacturing practices/processes. Archaeometric studies of potteries from different sites may provide information about trade and transport routes in ancient times (Mange & Bezeczky 2006Dickinson 2007;Obbágy et al 2014;Obbágy 2015;Józsa et al 2016a,b;Szakmány et al 2017). In most cases these minerals were analysed in thin sections (Kürthy et al 2015(Kürthy et al , 2018.…”
Section: Heavy Mineral Analysis In Petroarchaeological Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%