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29 results for "pottery" — page 1 of 2
D_1_18 — Taş Tepeler: Pre-Pottery Neolithic Ritual Network of Southeastern Turkey
Taş Tepeler ("Stone Hills") is a Turkish government-sponsored archaeological research program and site network encompassing at least 12 Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) sites in the Şanlıurfa Province of southeastern Turkey,
F_3_20 — Pottery Diffusion Patterns: Ceramic Technology Transfer Across Ancient Civilizations
Pottery — humanity's first synthetic material, created by irreversibly transforming clay through firing at 500–1,200°C — serves as the single most abundant and informative artifact class in archaeology, providing evidenc
U_2_03 — Pottery & Ceramics as Cultural Record
Pottery is the most abundant artifact category in archaeological sites worldwide — more pottery sherds have been excavated than any other class of human-made object — making ceramics the foundation of archaeological chro
W_1_23 — Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB)
The Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB, c. 8800–6500 BCE) represents one of the most transformative periods in human history — the era when small communities of early farmers in the Levant and Upper Mesopotamia scaled up into
W_5_12 — Lapita Culture: Pacific Colonization and Pottery Horizon
The Lapita cultural complex (c. 1600/1500–500 BCE) was the foundational maritime culture that colonized Remote Oceania — transforming the Pacific from a barrier into a highway and ultimately giving rise to the Polynesian
W_5_27 — Valdivia Culture: Oldest Pottery in the Americas
The Valdivia culture (~3500–1800 BCE) of coastal Ecuador produced the oldest known pottery in the Americas, making it one of the earliest complex societies in the Western Hemisphere. Discovered by Emilio Estrada in 1956
J_2_04 — Ancient Ceramics and Pottery Technology
Ceramics represent humanity's oldest synthetic material, with the earliest known fired-clay vessels — Jōmon pottery from Japan — dated to c. 16,500 BP (Odai Yamamoto site; Kuzmin, 2006), predating agriculture by thousand
D_1_14 — Karahan Tepe — Pre-Pottery Neolithic Ritual Complex
Karahan Tepe is a Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) site in southeastern Turkey (Şanlıurfa Province), approximately 46 km southeast of Göbekli Tepe, dating to c. 9400–8200 BCE. Discovered during surface surveys in 1997 and sys
M_4_11 — Göbekli Tepe Climate Reconstruction: What Supported Its Builders?
Göbekli Tepe (~9600-8000 BCE), the monumental stone pillar sanctuary in southeastern Turkey, presents a fundamental puzzle: how did pre-agricultural hunter-gatherers — people who had not yet domesticated crops or animals
M_1_16 — Göbekli Tepe Pillar & Enclosure Analysis
Göbekli Tepe — the monumental Neolithic ritual complex located on a limestone ridge ~15 km northeast of Şanlıurfa in southeastern Turkey (coordinates: 37°13′23″N, 38°55′21″E) — contains the oldest known monumental stone
W_2_27 — Jōmon Civilization: Japan's 14,000-Year Pre-Agricultural Complex Society
The Jōmon culture of Japan (~14,000–300 BCE) represents one of the most extraordinary challenges to conventional models of human development. [KEY FINDING] Jōmon people produced the world's oldest known pottery (radiocar
J_2_12 — Ancient Terracotta Technology: Ceramics, Bricks, and Firing
Terracotta (from Italian terra cotta, "baked earth") — the technology of shaping and firing clay into durable forms — is among the oldest and most universally important technologies in human history. The earliest known f
M_5_17 — Natufian Culture: Proto-Agriculture, Sedentism, and the Neolithic Transition
The Natufian culture (ca. 14,500–11,600 years ago) was an Epipalaeolithic archaeological culture of the Levant — spanning modern Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria — that represents the earliest known transiti
M_5_25 — Anatolian Archaeological Frontiers: Göbekli Tepe to Troy
Anatolia (modern Turkey) is among the most archaeologically significant regions on Earth, containing sites that fundamentally challenge conventional timelines of human civilization. Göbekli Tepe (c. 9600–8000 BCE), excav
M_5_28 — Japanese Archaeology: Jōmon Culture and Ancient Japan
The Jōmon period (c. 14,000–300 BCE) represents one of the longest continuous cultural traditions in human history and challenges standard models of social evolution. The Jōmon produced the world's oldest known pottery (
W_2_01 — Jōmon People and Pre-Yamato Japan
This document examines Jōmon People and Pre-Yamato Japan, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Chronological Framework, The Oldest Pottery in the World, Population and Se
E_4_15 — Thermoluminescence and OSL Dating: Beyond Radiocarbon
Thermoluminescence (TL) and Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating are trapped-charge geochronological techniques that determine the time elapsed since a mineral grain (typically quartz or feldspar) was last expo
INTERDOC_17 — Navigation, Seafaring, and the Lost Maritime Web
The Austronesian expansion — beginning ~3500 BCE from Taiwan and reaching Madagascar (~500 CE), Hawaii (~1000 CE), and New Zealand (~1250 CE) — represents the greatest sustained maritime achievement of the pre-modern wor
G_1_08 — Machine Learning in Archaeology — Pattern Recognition in the Past
Machine learning (ML) — the subset of artificial intelligence in which algorithms learn patterns from data rather than being explicitly programmed — is transforming archaeological practice across every stage of research:
G_1_17 — Experimental Replication of Ancient Technologies
Experimental replication — the systematic recreation of ancient objects, structures, and processes using materials, tools, and techniques available in the past — is a core methodology in experimental archaeology, enablin
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