نتایج جستجو برای: pottery

تعداد نتایج: 2207  

Journal: :American Anthropologist 1931

2016
Gülşah Merve Kılınç Ayça Omrak Füsun Özer Torsten Günther Ali Metin Büyükkarakaya Erhan Bıçakçı Douglas Baird Handan Melike Dönertaş Ayshin Ghalichi Reyhan Yaka Dilek Koptekin Sinan Can Açan Poorya Parvizi Maja Krzewińska Evangelia A. Daskalaki Eren Yüncü Nihan Dilşad Dağtaş Andrew Fairbairn Jessica Pearson Gökhan Mustafaoğlu Yılmaz Selim Erdal Yasin Gökhan Çakan İnci Togan Mehmet Somel Jan Storå Mattias Jakobsson Anders Götherström

The archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatolia is not yet mirrored by a genetic understanding of the human populations involved, in contrast to the spread of farming in Europe [1-3]. Sedentary farming communities emerged in parts of the Fertile Crescent during the tenth millennium and early ninth millennium calibrated (cal) BC and had appeared in ...

2016
John P Hart Termeh Shafie Jennifer Birch Susan Dermarkar Ronald F Williamson

Pottery is a mainstay of archaeological analysis worldwide. Often, high proportions of the pottery recovered from a given site are decorated in some manner. In northern Iroquoia, late pre-contact pottery and early contact decoration commonly occur on collars-thick bands of clay that encircle a pot and extend several centimeters down from the lip. These decorations constitute signals that convey...

Journal: :Computer-Aided Design 2015
Vinayak Karthik Ramani

The advent of depth cameras has enabled mid-air interactions for shape modeling with bare hands. Typically, these interactions employ a finite set of pre-defined hand gestures to allow users to specify modeling operations in virtual space. However, human interactions in real world shaping processes (such as pottery or sculpting) are complex, iterative, and continuous. In this paper, we show tha...

Journal: :European Journal of Engineering Research and Science 2019

2014
Fumie Iizuka Richard Cooke Lesley Frame Pamela Vandiver

Monagrillo (3520–1300 cal BC) is Panama’s oldest pottery. Archaeologists assumed it was a low-fired expedient ware made with any available clay. We studied 1) clay sources (thin sections; DTA; shrinkage, porosity, and plasticity tests), 2) manufacturing techniques (xeroradiography; thin sections; visual inspection), and 3) firing temperature (SEM-EDS; porosity tests). We identified two clay typ...

2009
Vivianne Sanchez

During colonization in the 16th century both the Spanish and indigenous population underwent a dramatic cultural change. Puebla, Mexico is a unique city to discover the layers of identity because a different approach the Spanish decided to pursue to build its society. As Mexico’s first industrialized city, it is also the first Mexican city that was not built upon existing indigenous civilizatio...

Journal: :Occupational and environmental medicine 1996
M Falchi L Paoletti S Mariotta S Giosue L Guidi L Biondo P Scavalli A Bisetti

AIM To study the actual exposure of pottery workers to silica particles, as their risk of silicosis is potentially high because of the presence of inhalable crystalline silica particles in the workplace. METHODS Nine pottery workers underwent bronchoalveolar lavage. The recovered fluid was analysed for cytological and mineralogical content by analytical transmission electron microscopy. The d...

2016
János Jakucs Eszter Bánffy Krisztián Oross Vanda Voicsek Christopher Bronk Ramsey Elaine Dunbar Bernd Kromer Alex Bayliss Daniela Hofmann Peter Marshall Alasdair Whittle

Perhaps nowhere in European prehistory does the idea of clearly-defined cultural boundaries remain more current than in the initial Neolithic, where the southeast-northwest trend of the spread of farming crosses what is perceived as a sharp divide between the Balkans and central Europe. This corresponds to a distinction between the Vinča culture package, named for a classic site in Serbia, with...

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