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Título
Clay, Fire, Air, and Mostly Water: Understanding the Importance of Water Resources in Pottery Workshops in Ancient Iberia by Integrating Ethnoarchaeological, Experimental, and Archaeological Research
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Tecnología cerámica
Agua
Etnoarqueología
Ceramic technology
Water
Ethnoarchaeology
Clasificación UNESCO
5505.01 Arqueología
Fecha de publicación
2021-12-15
Editor
Routledge. Taylor and Francis group
Citación
Padilla Fernández, J.J. y H. Sánchez López, E.H. (2021): Clay, Fire, Air, and Mostly Water: Understanding the Importance of Water Resources in Pottery Workshops in Ancient Iberia by Integrating Ethnoarchaeological, Experimental, and Archaeological Research, Ethnoarchaeology, 13:1-2, 33-58
Resumen
[EN]Archaeological studies of pottery production have given little attention to the productive uses of water, building historical discourses without taking into consideration its crucial role in
many chaînes opératoires. Structures related to the use of water in pottery-making, such as wells, cisterns, or settling ponds, are very rarely discussed. This article aims to remedy that situation by contributing archaeological, thnoarchaeological, and experimental evidence of the importance of water and structures related to the use of water in large-scale pottery production in workshops in ancient and traditional Iberia. We propose
recognition of the importance of water use in pottery production to develop a greater understanding of how pottery workshops
have operated in diverse geographical and chronological contexts.
URI
ISSN
1944-2890
DOI
10.1080/19442890.2022.2051281
Versión del editor
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