Abstract

The Achaea and Corinth regions of the northern Peloponnese are renowned for their rich archaeological record. Achaea is part of mainland Greece in the North-Western Peloponnese, whereas Corinth is in the North-Eastern Peloponnese. Since ancient times, ceramic production has played an important role in the local and regional social and economic evolution in both regions. Our aim is to identify and evaluate sources of clayey raw materials outcropping in the territory of the northern Peloponnese, potentially used for ceramic production during antiquity, by means of their compositional and technological properties. This was accomplished by the systematic sampling of clayey raw materials from a wide area spanning the Northern Peloponnese. In spite of the inter-regional chemical homogeneity recorded in their geochemical analysis in terms of major, minor, and trace elements, the data obtained led to their intra-regional compositional distinction into calcareous, calcareous-dolomitic, and siliceous clayey sediments. In addition, the presence of the clay minerals (illite, chlorite, smectite, mixed phases), their granulometry, and their bulk mineralogy all proved to considerably influence some of their performance characteristics, such as their plasticity. After a full characterization of the studied material, the clay deposits in all areas did not show significant differentiations, but they did need improvement to be suitable for the production of ceramic artifacts.

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