FEATURES OF INITIAL RAW MATERIALS AND POTTERY PASTE OF ANCIENT CERAMICS FROM THE TOMSK OB REGION

被引:2
|
作者
Stepanova, Nadezhda F. [1 ]
Pletneva, Lyudmila M. [2 ]
Rybakov, Dmitriy Yu [3 ]
机构
[1] Russian Acad Sci, Siberian Branch, Inst Archeol & Ethnog, Tomsk, Russia
[2] Tomsk State Pedag Univ, Tomsk, Russia
[3] Tomsk State Univ, Tomsk, Russia
关键词
ceramics; the Tomsk Ob region; early Iron Age; Middle Ages; pottery paste; initial raw materials;
D O I
10.17223/19988613/69/7
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
Studying of ceramics from the Tomsk Ob region for the purpose of identification of specifics of initial raw materials and preparation of pottery paste is carried out within historical and cultural approach. About 400 samples from different vessels from 16 monuments are investigated. The majority of them belongs to the Shelomok culture and the Tomsk local version of the Kulai cultural and historical community (VI century BC - IV centuries AD), minority belongs to the Middle Ages (9th and 17th century). As a result of research, it was found that ceramics were made from qualitatively different clays: the ferruginous and the n.ferruginous. In total, utensils made of such clays on different sites range from 67 to 100 %. Medium iron clays were known to the ancient potters, but vessels were rarely modeled from them. Ceramics from such raw materials make up from 0 to 33 %, but in the settlement of Shelomok III - 70 Strongly (highly) ferruginous raw materials were used even less often (3-6 %). Mainly plastic clays were used, of which 80 to 100 % were vessels, with the exception of Toyanov Gorodok (17 %). Ceramics from medium and low plastic raw materials - from 1.5 to 20 %. 8 recipes for molding masses have been recorded, which, according to mineral impurities, are combined into 4 groups: 1) with the addition of grit (crushed stone) (77-100 %); 2) chamotte (on 4 %); 3) grit and chamotte at the same time, reflecting the mixing of cultural traditions in the use of mineral admixtures, range from 4-8 to 30 %; 4) without artificially introduced mineral impurities (3-8.5 %). The recipe for the last group is unusual. Summing up, we note that in the Tomsk Ob region they preferred to crush the stone to add it to the molding mass. Granites with a predominance of transparent and white quartz were used; sometimes, on the monuments, there are ceramics with grit from granites with reddish or pink quartz. The use of crushed stone for the manufacture of pottery is a local tradition, fireclay is brought. The ancient potters rarely used medium iron clays. This may be due to the lesser availability of such clays, and to the established traditions. Often, vessels made of clays of medium iron content and low plasticity have other unusual features, it is possible that they were made by an alien population or were non-native on the sites of the Tomsk Ob region. Perhaps, a recipe without artificially introduced mineral impurities is also associated with a special group of the population. Recipes with two clays (1-8 %) tend to indicate a new population that has adapted to the local clays.
引用
收藏
页码:55 / 61
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Raw Materials for Archaeological Pottery from the Campania Region of Italy: A Petrophysical Characterization
    De Bonis, Alberto
    Grifa, Celestino
    Cultrone, Giuseppe
    De Vita, Pantaleone
    Langella, Alessio
    Morra, Vincenzo
    [J]. GEOARCHAEOLOGY-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, 2013, 28 (05): : 478 - 503
  • [2] RAW MATERIALS AND PASTE FROM WHEEL-THROWN CERAMICS FROM THE GNEZDOVO BURIAL GROUND
    Sharganova, O. L.
    [J]. ARCHAEOLOGY ETHNOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY OF EURASIA, 2011, 39 (01) : 43 - 49
  • [3] Landscape-topografphical features of the location of archaeological sites in the Tomsk-Narym Ob region
    Bychkov, Dmitry A.
    [J]. VESTNIK TOMSKOGO GOSUDARSTVENNOGO UNIVERSITETA ISTORIYA-TOMSK STATE UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF HISTORY, 2022, (76): : 180 - 191
  • [4] Clay mineralogy of raw materials and ancient pottery from archaeological sites in the Ambato valley, Catamarca, Argentina.
    Bertolino, SR
    Fabra, M
    [J]. 2001 - A CLAY ODYSSEY, 2003, : 237 - 240
  • [5] Renewable raw materials from the Region, and for the Region
    Pude, Ralf
    [J]. BERICHTE UBER LANDWIRTSCHAFT, 2021, 99 (01):
  • [6] ISLAM IN THE TOMSK REGION OF THE OB BASIN FROM THE THIRTEENTH TO THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY: FROM HYPOTHESES TO REALITY
    Tataurov, S. F.
    [J]. ZOLOTOORDYNSKOE OBOZRENIE-GOLDEN HORDE REVIEW, 2022, 10 (02): : 379 - 390
  • [7] The source of raw materials for Roman pottery from Leptiminus, Tunisia
    Sherriff, BL
    Court, P
    Johnston, S
    Stirling, L
    [J]. GEOARCHAEOLOGY-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, 2002, 17 (08): : 835 - 861
  • [8] Pottery production in the Troad: Ancient and modern Akkoy (Reconstructions of ancient ceramics from northwestern Turkey)
    Tekkok-Bicken, B
    [J]. NEAR EASTERN ARCHAEOLOGY, 2000, 63 (02) : 94 - 101
  • [9] Microchemical characterization of ancient ceramics and raw materials using nuclear and conventional techniques
    De la Vega, S.
    Jimenez-Reyes, M.
    Tenorio, D.
    Castaneda-Gomez-del-Campo, A.
    Nieto-Tellez, A.
    Abrego, A.
    [J]. MICROCHEMICAL JOURNAL, 2014, 114 : 59 - 64
  • [10] A pottery workshop in Pompeii unveils new insights on the Roman ceramics crafting tradition and raw materials trade
    Grifa, Celestino
    Germinario, Chiara
    De Bonis, Alberto
    Cavassa, Laetitia
    Izzo, Francesco
    Mercurio, Mariano
    Langella, Alessio
    Kakoulli, Ioanna
    Fischer, Christian
    Barra, Diana
    Aiello, Giuseppe
    Soricelli, Gianluca
    Vyhnal, Christopher R.
    Morra, Vincenzo
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2021, 126