Abstract
Aspects of 2nd- to 5th-century ce Roman production technology and knowledge transfer in southern Austria (known as Noricum) were examined. With no evidence for workshops identified in the study area, 44 grey ware bowls from two sites at Aguntum and Lavant were studied macroscopically, and combined with optical microscopy, X-ray powder diffraction, prompt gamma activation, neutron activation and scanning electron microscopy, in order to understand whether one (large) workshop supplied these bowls, or whether the bowls were produced by several (small) workshops nearby. Combined with information from the geological background, the results were used to tentatively indicate the production location. The results indicate that the grey ware bowls from Aguntum and Lavant were produced by local workshops nearby. The bowls were manufactured with similar clay sources, tempered with crushed calcite-marble rocks from the Tauern Window, their surface smoothed and burnished, and fired between 800 and 850°C in a reducing atmosphere of an open fire. This is taken to suggest that Roman potters, who were located at Aguntum and Lavant, shared strategies of raw materials selection, paste preparation, finishing and firing, and transferred technological knowledge through time.
Originalsprache | Englisch |
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Fachzeitschrift | Archaeometry |
Jahrgang | 2022 |
Frühes Online-Datum | 2 Sept. 2022 |
DOIs | |
Publikationsstatus | Veröffentlicht - Juni 2023 |
Bibliographische Notiz
Funding Information:The PGA and NA analyses were financed by the Integrated Platform for the European Research Infrastructure/Cultural Heritage (IPERION‐CH) through Grant Agreement Number: 654028. Further financial support was obtained by B.B. from the Austrian Science Fund through the FWF project T‐1085G. Financial support of the Romanian Ministry of Education and Research (Ministerul Educației și Cercetării Științifice din România) through the UEFISCDI/CNCS project PN‐III‐P4‐ID‐PCE‐2016‐0229 is acknowledged by C.I. The authors thank the two anonymous referees for their comments and suggestions on a previous version of this paper.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. Archaeometry © 2022 University of Oxford.
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