The elemental analysis of glass beads technology, chronology and exchange.
Ancient glass beads as a window to the ancient world Glass beads, both beautiful and portable, have been produced and traded globally for thousands of years. Modern archaeologists study these artifacts through sophisticated methods that analyze the glass composition, a process which can be utilized...
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Format: | Electronic eBook |
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Language: | English |
Published: |
[S.l.] :
LEUVEN UNIVERSITY PRESS,
2022.
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Series: | Studies in archaeological sciences.
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Connect to this title online (unlimited users allowed) |
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245 | 0 | 4 | |a The elemental analysis of glass beads |h [electronic resource] : |b technology, chronology and exchange. |
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490 | 1 | |a Studies in archaeological sciences | |
505 | 0 | |a 1 Contextualizing this volume in the field of glass bead studies -- 2 Glass beads and human pasts -- 3 Characterizing glass recipes for distinctive polychrome glass bead types in Ontario, Canada -- 4 Simple blue (IIa40) beads from 17th century Mission Santa Catalina de Guale: Dating, origins, and elemental composition -- 5 Glass trade bead analysis at Upper Hampton Farm (40RH41): A case study for 17th and 18th century Non-Cherokee habitation in East Tennessee Valley -- 6 Compositional analysis of compound drawn white glass beads from colonial California: Implications for chronology and dispersal -- 7 Glass beads and evidence for early "pre-contact" trade in Northwestern Alaska -- 8 The exchange of beads in Central Thailand in the protohistoric period: Glass objects from Phromthin Tai -- 9 Shifting patterns of glass bead cargo of 15th -- 17th century Philippines shipwrecks -- 10 Sources of glass beads from the High Himalayas: 1200 BCE-CE 650 -- 11 Inland from the sea: Rethinking the value of mineral soda alumina drawn glass beads from medieval North India -- 12 Beads from the lowlands of Northwestern Ethiopia -- 13 Inland glass beads in Northeast Tanzania, 8th-17th centuries CE -- 14 Glass beads at Unguja Ukuu in the late 1st millennium CE: Results of the 2018 excavation in Zanzibar -- 15 Chemical analysis of precolonial Indian Ocean glass beads found in the southern African interior: linking global objects to local and regional change -- 16 Morphology and elemental composition: provenancing glass beads from 12th -- 13th century Mayotte -- 17 Elemental composition of glass beads from the eastern Mediterranean region: Chronology and provenance of material from Tel Anafa, Israel -- 18 South Asian beads at the site of Kish, Iraq -- 19 Technology, chronology, and exchange examined through glass beads, Appendix Supplementary Materials. | |
504 | |a Includes bibliographical references. | ||
520 | |a Ancient glass beads as a window to the ancient world Glass beads, both beautiful and portable, have been produced and traded globally for thousands of years. Modern archaeologists study these artifacts through sophisticated methods that analyze the glass composition, a process which can be utilized to trace bead usage through time and across regions. This book publishes open-access compositional data obtained from laser ablation - inductively coupled plasma - mass spectrometry, from a single analytical laboratory, providing a uniquely comparative data set. The geographic range includes studies of beads produced in Europe and traded widely across North America and beads from South and Southeast Asia traded around the Indian Ocean and beyond. The contributors provide new insight on the timing of interregional interactions, technologies of bead production and patterns of trade and exchange, using glass beads as a window to the past. This volume will be a key reference for glass researchers, archaeologists, and any scholars interested in material culture and exchange; it provides a wide range of case studies in the investigation and interpretation of glass bead composition, production and exchange since ancient times. Contributors: Bernard Gratuze (Institut de Recherche sur les ArchéoMATériaux, Centre Ernest-Babelon, UMR 5060 CNRS/Université d'Orléans), Alicia L. Hawkins (University of Toronto Mississauga), Elliot H. Blair (University of Alabama), Jessica Dalton-Carriger (Roane State Community College), Lee M. Panich (Santa Clara University), Thomas R. Fenn (The University of Oklahoma), Alison K. Carter (University of Oregon), Jennifer Craig (McGill University), Mark Aldenderfer (University of California, Merced), Mudit Trivedi (Stanford University), Lindsey Trombetta (The University of Texas at Austin), Jonathan R. Walz (The Field Museum / SIT-Graduate Institute), Akshay Sarathi (Florida Atlantic University), Carla Klehm (University of Arkansas), Marilee Wood (University of the Witwatersrand), Katherine A. Larson (Corning Museum of Glass), Heather Walder (The Field Museum / University of Wisconsin - La Crosse), Laure Dussubieux (The Field Museum)</p><p><a href="https://lup.be/pages/online-material-the-elemental-analysis-of-glass-beads">Supplementary Material 'The Elemental Analysis of Glass Beads' ></a> </p><p>Ebook available in Open Access.<br>This publication is GPRC-labeled (Guaranteed Peer-Reviewed Content).</p> | ||
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650 | 7 | |a Glassware, Ancient |2 fast | |
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