Abstract

This work presents the characterization results of Middle Iron Age pottery fragments excavated in Van Fortress, the historical capital of the Urartu Kingdom, located on the eastern coast of Lake Van in Turkey. A multi-analytical approach combining optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDS), X-ray diffraction (XRD), and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) has been employed to investigate the mineralogical composition of ceramics. Micro-Raman spectrometer was also used for the characterization of the pigments used for decoration. The data collected from the analyses offered information on the minerals that were discovered in the ceramics, as well as the temperature at which the ceramics were fired and the atmosphere that they were exposed to. The existence of hematite suggests that they were subjected to firing in an oxidizing environment, with the exception of one sample, which has a sandwich shape characterized by a red-edge and a black center, indicating exposure to both reducing and oxidative atmospheres during the fire process. The ceramics utilized in this investigation are hypothesized to have been crafted from elemental substances procured from two to three distinct clay origins.

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