Composition of white paste inlay on the pottery from sites of the 10th–8th centuries bce in the northern Pontic region
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KULIKOVA, Mariana, KASHUBA, Maya, GAVRILYUK, Nadia, KUL’KOV, Alexander M., KAISER, Elke, VETROVA, Maria, ZANOCI, Aurel, PLATONOVA, Nadejda, HELLSTROM, Kirsten, WINGER, Katja. Composition of white paste inlay on the pottery from sites of the 10th–8th centuries bce in the northern Pontic region. In: Archaeometry, 2020, nr. 5(62), pp. 917-934. ISSN 0003-813X. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/arcm.12567
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Archaeometry
Numărul 5(62) / 2020 / ISSN 0003-813X /ISSNe 1475-4754

Composition of white paste inlay on the pottery from sites of the 10th–8th centuries bce in the northern Pontic region

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/arcm.12567

Pag. 917-934

Kulikova Mariana1, Kashuba Maya2, Gavrilyuk Nadia3, Kul’kov Alexander M.4, Kaiser Elke5, Vetrova Maria4, Zanoci Aurel6, Platonova Nadejda2, Hellstrom Kirsten56, Winger Katja56
 
1 Российский государственный педагогический университет им. А.И. Герцена,
2 Institute for the History of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences,
3 Institute of Archaeology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine,
4 Saint Petersburg State University,
5 Free University of Berlin, Germany,
6 Moldova State University
 
 
Disponibil în IBN: 13 octombrie 2020


Rezumat

For the first time, the mineralogical–geochemical compositions of the white paste inlay found on vessels from sites (10th–8th centuries bce) in the northern Pontic region are investigated. Samples of the white paste on vessels from settlements, burials of sedentary groups and graves of early nomads were analysed by means of scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry (SEM-EDX) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) methods. Between the 10th and eighth centuries bce, various innovations occurred in the working area. Iron processing technology and the manufacture of iron products also appeared. Other innovations were changes in the manufacturing technology of ceramics. A high-quality, polished/burnished surface and ornaments with white paste inlay are characteristic of this pottery. When collating white paste mixtures of different European sites, similarities in the preparation of white paste recipes for vessels from the Balkan and northern Pontic regions are evident. During the Early Iron Age, further changes in the manufacture of the white paste were discovered in the northern Pontic region, namely the application of high-temperature firing to obtain more resistant synthesized material such as calcium alumosilicates and silicates (wollastonite). The development of iron metallurgy in this period could provide a basis for the elaboration of new techniques in ceramic manufacture. 

Cuvinte-cheie
black burnished pottery, Early Iron Age, early nomadic people, northern Pontic region, SEM-EDX, white paste inlay composition, XRD of white paste