Advancing the morphometric analysis of early medieval Slavic pottery: A semi-automated 3D toolset for virtual sections
Advancing the morphometric analysis of early medieval Slavic pottery: A semi-automated 3D toolset for virtual sections
877
- 10.1080/10867651.1997.10487468
- Jan 1, 1997
- Journal of Graphics Tools
18
- 10.1016/j.jas.2006.03.005
- May 15, 2006
- Journal of Archaeological Science
33
- 10.3390/heritage4010008
- Jan 13, 2021
- Heritage
160
- 10.1016/j.jas.2007.08.008
- Oct 24, 2007
- Journal of Archaeological Science
6
- 10.1515/opar-2022-0273
- Dec 22, 2022
- Open Archaeology
170
- 10.1016/j.jas.2013.08.020
- Sep 3, 2013
- Journal of Archaeological Science
249
- 10.1145/358656.358681
- Oct 1, 1982
- Communications of the ACM
149
- 10.1016/j.jas.2014.01.010
- Jan 17, 2014
- Journal of Archaeological Science
12
- 10.1016/j.jas.2019.104973
- Jun 14, 2019
- Journal of Archaeological Science
301
- 10.1016/j.jas.2012.08.040
- Sep 12, 2012
- Journal of Archaeological Science
- Research Article
10
- 10.1080/00758914.2018.1547004
- Jan 2, 2018
- Levant
This paper details the results of a large-scale multi-disciplinary analysis of Iron Age pottery from a settlement in the core of the Phoenician homeland. The research presented is centred upon a large corpus of Phoenician carinated-shoulder amphorae (CSA) from the later Iron Age II and Persian period contexts at the coastal site of Tell el-Burak. Traditional typological investigations are combined with a focused archaeometric approach including a new quantitative method for the morphometric analysis of amphorae, thin-section petrography, geochemistry and organic residue analyses, aimed at gaining a more detailed understanding of the organization of the Phoenician economy. Despite gradual, but marked typological changes, very little change in the fabrics of these amphorae was noted over the 400-year Iron Age occupation of the site. The research, thus, demonstrates that the production of Iron Age amphorae from Tell el-Burak was highly organized, and was undertaken by long-lived, sustained and centralized modes. The establishment of Tell el-Burak and this new pottery industry coincides with the proliferation of the world’s first great imperial powers, the Neo-Assyrian, Neo-Babylonian and Persian empires; the outcomes of this research provide new insights into socio-economic strategies adopted in the Phoenician homeland during this pivotal time.
- Research Article
1
- 10.14201/zephyrus201984161182
- Dec 1, 2019
- Zephyrvs
Cooking wares fired under reducing atmosphere are one of the most common archaeological findings in medieval contexts. These are coarse, irregular and mostly coil-built vessels finished on the wheel. The great homogeneity of these products, together with the high level of breakage and the massive amount of sherds found out in many contexts are the main difficulties to deal with in order to study them. In this paper results obtained from the morphometric analysis of traditional craft greyware pottery from Quart (Girona) and medieval greywares from the site of Santa Margarida (Martorell, Barcelona) are introduced. According to the obtained results in both cases, we demonstrate the methodological validity of including vessel’s profile measurement within a multivariate statistic exploitation of morphometric data. This exploitation allowed us to obtain precise classifications that take into account the degree of breakage and to establish comparable types.
- Research Article
3
- 10.1016/j.jas.2023.105776
- Apr 10, 2023
- Journal of Archaeological Science
Many anthropological studies have examined the functional implications of enamel thickness in human dental crowns. Despite limitations, Enamel thickness (ET) values are still used to infer taxonomic attribution in the genus Homo, and to identify mechanisms of functional adaptation against macrowear. However, only a few studies have tried to describe the possible relationship between ET and dental wear patterns in permanent lower first molars (M1) aiming to observe whether an adaptive response to the environmental and cultural context is detectable. The present work aims to investigate a possible signal of ET adaptive response in M1 (wear stage 3; Molnar, 1971) belonging to individuals who lived between the Neolithic (early 6th millennium BCE) and the Bronze Age (second half of the 2nd millennium BCE) in Croatia to identify any signal of change in dental tissue proportions based on archaeologically documented shifts in population structure and subsistence strategies. In order to do so, we explored 3D Average Enamel Thickness (AET) of the entire crown and wear pattern distribution among individuals and across chronological groups. We then described a new method called “Enamel Thickness per Masticatory Phases” (ETMP) involving the creation of virtual sections cutting enamel and coronal dentine in three parts based on masticatory phases, and explored the distribution of 3D AET accordingly. Finally, we performed geometric morphometric analysis on dental crown to ascertain possible morphological differences between Neolithic, Eneolithic, and Bronze Age groups. Results show that Bronze Age individuals differ from previous groups due to 1) higher values of ET in both the entire crown and specifically in the buccal area, 2) to an extensive wear pattern localized on the buccal side, and 3) to the distal extension of the hypoconid together with an extended mesio-distal shape of the crown. These patterns may represent an adaptive response of dental tissue to varying functional demands (e.g. archaeologically documented dietary shift). The study of ETMP therefore offers a more nuanced method, in addition to morphology and macrowear analysis, to document biocultural processes of change over time in archaeological populations through dental tissues.
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- Nov 1, 2025
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- Nov 1, 2025
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- Nov 1, 2025
- Journal of Archaeological Science
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