Itinerant potters and the transmission of ceramic technologies and styles during the Proto-Elamite period in Iran

Title

Itinerant potters and the transmission of ceramic technologies and styles during the Proto-Elamite period in Iran
Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports

Creator

John R. Alden
Leah Minc

Abstract

An INAA study of a widely used potters' tool, the ceramic ring scraper, demonstrates that the elemental compositions of these tools are very different from the pottery produced at the sites where the tools are found. These results are interpreted to indicate that Proto-Elamite (3400–2900 BC) potters in Southwestern Iran were moving from site to site through large regions rather than living and working in single sites. The presence of such mobile potters suggests that ceramic technologies and styles were spread throughout the Uruk/ProtoElamite world, at least in part, by the movements of itinerant craft specialists.

volume

7

pages

863-876

Date

06/2016

short title

Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports

Language

en

doi

10.1016/j.jasrep.2016.03.022

issn

2352409X