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Index
Cover Title Page Copyright Contents Introduction Apology M.S. Tite Bibliography Chapter 1: Lead frits in Islamic and Hispano-Moresque glazed productions Chapter 2: The emergence of ceramic technology and its evolution as revealed with the use of scientific techniques Chapter 3: Neolithic pottery from Switzerland: raw materials and manufacturing processes Chapter 4: Low-tech in Amalfi: provenance and date assignation of medieval Middle-Eastern pottery by application of eyeball technique Chapter 5: Some implications of the use of wood ash in Chinese stoneware glazes of the 9th–12th centuries Chapter 6: The Hispano-Moresque tin glazed ceramics produced in Teruel, Spain: a technology between two historical periods, 13th to 16th c. AD Chapter 7: Beads beyond number: faience from the ‘Isis Tomb’ at Vulci, Italy Chapter 8: Egyptian blue in Greek painting between 2500 and 50 BC Chapter 9: Links between glazes and glass in mid-2nd millennium BC Mesopotamia and Egypt Chapter 10: The fish’s tale: a foreign glassworker at Amarna? Chapter 11: Ancient copper red glasses: investigation and analysis by microbeam techniques Chapter 12: The provenance of archaeological plant ash glasses Chapter 13: Microanalysis of glass by Laser Induced Plasma Spectroscopy Chapter 14: New thoughts on niello Chapter 15: From mine to microbe – the Neolithic copper melting crucibles from Switzerland Chapter 16: Across the wine dark seas... sailor tinkers and royal cargoes in the Late Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean Chapter 17: What a long, strange trip it’s been: lead isotopes and archaeology A response to the paper of A.M. Pollard: What a long, strange trip it’s been: lead isotopes and archaeology Chapter 18: The juice of the pomegranate: processing and quality control of alumen in antiquity, and making sense of Pliny’s Phorimon and Paraphoron Chapter 19: Finding the Floorstone Chapter 20: ‘Sweet waste’: The industrial waste from the medieval sugar refinery at the Tawahin es-Sukkar in Jordan
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