6533b832fe1ef96bd129a1b8

RESEARCH PRODUCT

THE PETROGRAPHY AND CHEMISTRY OF THIN-WALLED WARE FROM AN HELLENISTIC- ROMAN SITE AT SEGESTA (SICILY)*

A. SchwedtM. DenaroHans MommsenGiuseppe MontanaIoannis Iliopoulos

subject

PetrographyArcheologyHistoryProvenanceMediterranean areaChemical dataThin walledPotteryArchaeologyArchaeological science

description

Samples of Roman thin-walled ware from Segesta (northwestern Sicily), dating back to the early Imperial period, were studied by optical microscopy (OM) and Neutron Activation Analysis (NAA). Up to now, this class of Roman fine tableware has only occasionally been evaluated archaeometrically. Nevertheless, numerous production centres are believed to have been simultaneously active in the western Mediterranean area. Petrographic and chemical data seem to be in agreement with the archaeological hypothesis of local manufacture in Segesta for most of the analysed samples, through a comparison with kiln wasters and local raw materials. The effectiveness of thin-section petrography for determining the provenance of such a tiny tempered class of pottery and the integrated use of two different grouping procedures (petrography and chemistry) were also tested.

https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-4754.00115