Detailed Information on Publication Record
2000
Olomouc-Slavonín (I) Sídliště kultury s vypíchanou keramikou
KAZDOVÁ, Eliška, Inna MATEICIUCOVÁ and Jaroslav PEŠKABasic information
Original name
Olomouc-Slavonín (I) Sídliště kultury s vypíchanou keramikou
Name (in English)
Olomouc-Slavonín (I) Settlement with Stroked pottery culture
Authors
KAZDOVÁ, Eliška (203 Czech Republic, guarantor), Inna MATEICIUCOVÁ (203 Czech Republic) and Jaroslav PEŠKA
Edition
1. vyd. Olomouc, 209 pp. 2000
Publisher
ARF 2
Other information
Language
Czech
Type of outcome
Odborná kniha
Field of Study
Archaeology, anthropology, ethnology
Country of publisher
Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14210/00:00002821
Organization unit
Faculty of Arts
ISBN
80-85037-21-1
Keywords in English
Ceramics; experiment; temperature; stroke-decorated; stone industry; distribution of stone raw material; technology
Změněno: 1/7/2009 15:53, doc. PhDr. Eliška Kazdová, CSc.
V originále
Úvodní monografie předkládá fakta o nejstarším osídlení, které bylo zachyceno archeologickým výzkumem. Ze získaného souboru vypíchané keramiky byl vyčleněn soubor vzorků k technologickému zhodnocení keramické produkce. Monografie je výběrem metod, terminologií i celkovým zpracováním určena především odborníkům - archeologům. Je však použitelná i pro širší okruh zájemců o dávnou historii Olomoucka, pro každého koho zajímají nové poznatky o sídlištních poměrech v mladší době kamenné na Moravě.
In English
The thin-walled ceramics (pear-shaped vessels and bowls) was made without measurable amounts of temper (grog), from which it flows that these forms which much more difficult to work in later stages of production , i.e. shaping, drying and firing. The thick-walled kettle-shaped vessels have a high amount of temper in the form of angular grains of quartz. The source of this temper can be assumed to have been the layer of crystalline cobbles dividing the loess from Pleistocene clays (Zapletal 1996, 1). The cobble were probably mechanically crushed, sorted and subsequently added to the raw material. The firing temperature in the collection of ceramics being examined is convincing evidence for the existence of specialized firing kilns (Kovárník 1988). Heating structures or bread ovens were clearly not used for firing as experiments with these items have shown a temperature range from 50-250 C (Petrasch 1986, 33-83). An important phenomenon is the difference in the firing temperatures of thin-walled forms and the rough, kettle-shaped vessels. The kettle-shaped vessels were fired at temperatures ranging from 850-1000 C, while the thin-walled forms show a wide range of firing temperatures, from 200-900 C. In one case, a shard had not been fired at all. Stroke-decorated ceramics analyzed in other areas also show a fairly wide range of firing temperatures.
Links
MSM 142100001, plan (intention) |
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