1
Arnold, Dean E., Ceramic theory and cultural process, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1985, vol. New studies in archaeology.
2
Barley, Nigel, Smashing pots: works of clay from Africa, Smithsonian Institution Press, London, 1994.
3
Berg, Ina, International Conference on Prehistoric Ceramics, and Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group, Breaking the mould: challenging the past through pottery, Archaeopress, Oxford, 2008, vol. BAR international series.
4
Lange, Frederick W. and Bishop, Ronald L., The ceramic legacy of Anna O. Shepard, University Press of Colorado, Niwot, Colo, 1991.
5
Gaimster, David R. M. and Freestone, Ian, Pottery in the making: world ceramic traditions, British Museum Press, London, 1997.
6
Gibson, Alex M. and Woods, A. J., Prehistoric pottery for the archaeologist, Leicester University Press, Leicester, 1990.
7
Orton, Clive, Tyers, Paul, and Vince, A. G., Pottery in archaeology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993, vol. Cambridge manuals in archaeology.
8
Peacock, D. P. S., Pottery in the Roman world: an ethnoarchaeological approach, Longman, London, 1982, vol. Longman archaeology series.
9
Rice, Prudence M., Pottery analysis: a sourcebook, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1987.
10
Prudence M. Rice, Journal of Archaeological Research, 1996, 4, 133–163.
11
Prudence M. Rice, Journal of Archaeological Research, 1996, 4, 165–202.
12
Rye, Owen S., Pottery technology: principles and reconstruction, Taraxacum, Washington, D.C., 1981, vol. Manuals on archeology.
13
Shimada, Izumi, Craft production in complex societies: multicraft and producer perspectives, University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City, 2007, vol. Foundations of archaeological inquiry.
14
Scarcella, Simona, Archaeological ceramics: a review of current research, Archaeopress, Oxford, 2011, vol. BAR international series.
15
Sinopoli, Carla M., Approaches to archaeological ceramics, Plenum Press, New York, 1991.
16
Feinman, Gary M. and Skibo, James M., Pottery and people: a dynamic interaction, University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City, 1999, vol. Foundations of archaeological inquiry.
17
Miriam T. Stark, Journal of Archaeological Research, 2003, 11, 193–242.
18
M. S. Tite, Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, 1999, 6, 181–233.
19
Tyers, Paul, Roman pottery in Britain, Batsford, London, 1996.
20
Pritchard, Alison C. and Leeuw, Sander Ernst van der, The many dimensions of pottery: ceramics in archaeology and anthropology, Universiteit van Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1984, vol. Cingula.
21
Di Pierro, S., Serneels, Vincent, Maggetti, Marino, and European Meeting on Ancient Ceramics, Ceramic in the society: proceedings of the 6th European Meeting on Ancient Ceramics, Fribourg, Swtizerland 3-6 October 2001, Department of Geosciences, Mineralogy and Petrography, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, 2003.
22
Prudêncio, M. Isabel, Dias, M. Isabel, Waerenborgh, J. C., and European Meeting on Ancient Ceramics, Understanding people through their pottery: proceedings of the 7th European Meeting on Ancient Ceramics (EMAC’03) : October 27-31, 2003 : Instituto Tecnológico e Nuclear, Lisbon, Portugal, Instituto Português de Arqueologia, Lisboa, 2005, vol. Trabalhos de arqueologia.
23
Welcome to the PCRG, http://www.pcrg.org.uk/.
24
Medieval Pottery Research Group, http://www.medievalpottery.org.uk/.
25
Roman Pottery in Britain, http://potsherd.net/atlas/publications.
26
ArchNet: Ceramic Attribute Glossary, http://archnet.asu.edu/archives/ceramic/hgloss/hgloss.html.
27
The Alan Vince Archaeological Consultancy, http://www.postex.demon.co.uk/.
28
S. E. Van der Leeuw and A. C. Pritchard, in The many dimensions of pottery: ceramics in archaeology and anthropology, Universiteit van Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1984, vol. Cingula, pp. 707–773.
29
Rye, Owen S., Pottery technology: principles and reconstruction, Taraxacum, Washington, D.C., 1981, vol. Manuals on archeology.
30
Abbink, Albertine Alie, Make it and break it: the cycles of pottery : a study of the technology, form, function, and use of pottery from the settlements at Uitgeest-Groot Dorregeest and Schagen-Muggenburg 1, Roman period, North Holland, the Netherlands, Faculty of Archaeology, Leiden University, Leiden, 1999, vol. Archaeological studies Leiden University.
31
Nordström, Hans-Åke, Arnold, Dorothea, Bourriau, Janine, and Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, An Introduction to ancient Eqyptian pottery, P. von Zabern, Mainz am Rhein, 1993, vol. Sonderschrift / Deutsches Archäologisches Institut. Abteilung Kairo.
32
Atkin, Jacqui, Handbuilt pottery techniques revealed: the secrets of handbuilding shown in unique cutaway photography, Barron’s Educational Series, Hauppauge, N.Y., 2004.
33
J. C. Barrett, in Papers on the prehistoric archaeology of Cranborne Chase, Oxbow, Oxford, 1991, vol. Oxbow monograph, pp. 201–231.
34
Gibson, Alex M., Prehistoric pottery in Britain & Ireland, Tempus, Stroud, 2002.
35
A. M. Gibson and A. J. Woods, Prehistoric pottery for the archaeologist, Leicester University Press, Leicester, 1990.
36
Hamer, Frank and Hamer, Janet, The potter’s dictionary of materials and techniques, A & C Black, London, 3rd ed., 1991.
37
Kempton, Willett, The folk classification of ceramics: a study of cognitive prototypes, Academic Press, New York, 1981, vol. Language, thought, and culture.
38
Miller, Daniel, Artefacts as categories: a study of ceramic variability in central India, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1985, vol. New studies in archaeology.
39
Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group, The study of later prehistoric pottery: general policies and guidelines for analysis and publication, Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group, Oxford, 1995, vol. Occasional paper / Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group.
40
Read, Dwight W., Artifact classification: a conceptual and methodological approach, Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif, 2007.
41
S. E. Van der Leeuw and W. A. Longacre, in Ceramic ethnoarchaeology, University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 1991, pp. 11–39.
42
Hill, J. D., Woodward, Ann, and Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group, Prehistoric Britain: the ceramic basis, Oxbow, Oxford, 2002, vol. Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group. occasional publication.
43
ArchNet: Ceramic Attribute Glossary, http://archnet.asu.edu/archives/ceramic/hgloss/hgloss.html.
44
Welcome to the PCRG, http://www.pcrg.org.uk/.
45
A. Livingston-Smith and O. P. Gosselain, in Pottery manufacturing processes: reconstitution and interpretation, Archaeopress, Oxford, 2005, vol. BAR international series, pp. 33–47.
46
A. M. Pollard and C. Heron, in Archaeological chemistry, Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, 2nd ed., 2008, pp. 104–148.
47
Barley, Nigel, Smashing pots: works of clay from Africa, Smithsonian Institution Press, London, 1994.
48
Colbeck, John, Pottery materials: their composition, preparation and use, Batsford, London, 1988.
49
Grimshaw, Rex W. and Searle, Alfred B., The chemistry and physics of clays and allied ceramic materials, Wiley-Interscience, New York, 4th ed. rev.
50
Hamer, Frank and Hamer, Janet, The potter’s dictionary of materials and techniques, A & C Black, London, 3rd ed., 1991.
51
Pollard, A. M., Heron, Carl, and Royal Society of Chemistry (Great Britain), Archaeological chemistry, Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, 2nd ed., 2008.
52
P. M. Rice, in Pottery analysis: a sourcebook, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1987, pp. 54–79.
53
B. Sillar, Journal of Material Culture, 1996, 1, 259–289.
54
A. L. Smith, Archaeometry, 2000, 42, 21–42.
55
N. Tobert, Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 1984, 3, 141–156.
56
Velde, B., Introduction to clay minerals: chemistry, orgins, uses and environmental significance, Chapman & Hall, London, 1992.
57
A. Woodward, in Prehistoric Britain: the ceramic basis, Oxbow, Oxford, 2002, vol. Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group. occasional publication, pp. 106–118.
58
Worrall, W. E., Clays and ceramic raw materials, Elsevier Applied Science Publishers, London, 2nd ed., 1986.
59
S. Van der Leeuw, in Technological choices: transformation in material cultures since the Neolithic, Routledge, London, 1993, vol. Material cultures, pp. 238–288.
60
Rye, Owen S., Pottery technology: principles and reconstruction, Taraxacum, Washington, D.C., 1981, vol. Manuals on archeology.
61
Nordström, Hans-Åke, Arnold, Dorothea, Bourriau, Janine, and Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, An Introduction to ancient Eqyptian pottery, P. von Zabern, Mainz am Rhein, 1993, vol. Sonderschrift / Deutsches Archäologisches Institut. Abteilung Kairo.
62
Brandt, R. W., Leeuw, Sander Ernst van der, and Groenman-Van Waateringe, Willy, Assendelver Polder papers, Universiteit van Amsterdam, Albert Egges van Giffen Instituut voor Prae- en Protohistorie, Amsterdam, 1987, vol. Cingula.
63
M. A. Courty and V. Roux, Journal of Archaeological Science, 1995, 22, 17–50.
64
Nicholas David, Judy Sterner and Kodzo Gavua, Current Anthropology, 1988, 29, 365–389.
65
Livingstone-Smith, Alexandre, Bosquet, Dominique, and International Congress of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences, Pottery manufacturing processes: reconstitution and interpretation, Archaeopress, Oxford, 2005, vol. BAR international series.
66
Helen L. Loney, American Antiquity, 2000, 65, 646–668.
67
M. C. Mahias, in Technological choices: transformation in material cultures since the Neolithic, Routledge, London, 1993, vol. Material cultures.
68
Shaw, Ian and Nicholson, Paul T., Ancient Egyptian materials and technology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2000.
69
P. M. Rice, in Pottery analysis: a sourcebook, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1987, pp. 113–167.
70
B. Sillar and M. S. Tite, Archaeometry, 2000, 42, 2–20.
71
Leeuw, Sander Ernst van der, Studies in the technology of ancient pottery, [University of Amsterdam], Amsterdam].
72
P. B. Vandiver, Archeomaterials, 1986, 2, 139–174.
73
O. P. Gosselain, Journal of Archaeological Science, 1992, 19, 243–259.
74
A. Livingstone Smith, Journal of Archaeological Science, 2001, 28, 991–1003.
75
D. Adan-Bayewitz and M. Wieder, Journal of Field Archaeology, 1992, 19, 189–205.
76
R. B. Heimann, in Archaeological ceramics, Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C., 1982, pp. 89–98.
77
M. Magetti, in Archaeological ceramics, Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C., 1982, pp. 121–134.
78
J. S. Johnson, J. Clark, S. Miller-Antonio, D. Robins, M. B. Schiffer and J. M. Skibo, Journal of Archaeological Science, 1988, 15, 403–414.
79
S. Paynter and M. Tite, in The social context of technological change: Egypt and the Near East, 1650-1550 B.C. : proceedings of a conference held at St Edmund Hall, Oxford, 12-14 September 2000, Oxbow, Oxford, 2001, pp. 239–254.
80
Rice, Prudence M., Pottery analysis: a sourcebook, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1987.
81
Rice, Prudence M. and American Ceramic Society, The prehistory & history of ceramic kilns, The American Ceramic Society, Westerville, Ohio, 1997, vol. Ceramics and civilization.
82
A. M. Robinson, Medieval ceramics, 1979, 3, 3–35.
83
R. S. Owen, in Pottery technology: principles and reconstruction, Taraxacum, Washington, D.C., 1981, vol. Manuals on archeology, pp. 96–122.
84
B. SILLAR, Archaeometry, 2000, 42, 43–60.
85
Swan, Vivien G., The pottery kilns of Roman Britain, H.M.S.O., London, 1984, vol. Royal Commission on Historical Monuments supplementary series.
86
M. S. Tite, in The aim of laboratory analyses of ceramics in archaeology, April 7-9, 1995 in Lund, Sweden, Kungl. Vitterhets historie och antikvitets akademien, Stockholm, 1995, vol. Konferenser / Kungl. Vitterhets, historie och antikvitets akademien, pp. 37–42.
87
Tomber, R., Dore, John, English Heritage, British Museum, National Roman Fabric Reference Collection, and Museum of London, The National Roman Fabric Reference Collection: a handbook, Museum of London Archaeology Service, London, 1998, vol. MoLAS monograph.
88
Prudêncio, M. Isabel, Dias, M. Isabel, Waerenborgh, J. C., and European Meeting on Ancient Ceramics, Understanding people through their pottery: proceedings of the 7th European Meeting on Ancient Ceramics (EMAC’03) : October 27-31, 2003 : Instituto Tecnológico e Nuclear, Lisbon, Portugal, Instituto Português de Arqueologia, Lisboa, 2005, vol. Trabalhos de arqueologia.
89
Patricia L. Crown, American Antiquity, 2007, 72, 677–690.
90
Karen G. Harry, American Antiquity, 2005, 70, 295–319.
91
Arnold, Dean E., Ceramic theory and cultural process, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1985, vol. New studies in archaeology.
92
Arnold, Dean E., Social change and the evolution of ceramic production and distribution in a Maya community, University Press of Colorado, Boulder, 2008, vol. Mesoamerican worlds.
93
Hoopes, John W. and Barnett, William, The emergence of pottery: technology and innovation in ancient societies, Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington [D.C.], 1995, vol. Smithsonian series in archaeological inquiry.
94
J. E. Clark, Research in economic anthropology, 1995, 16, 267–294.
95
Cathy Lynne Costin, Archaeological Method and Theory, 1991, 3, 1–56.
96
P. M. Day and E. E. Wilson, Aegaeum: annales d’archéologie égéenne de l’Université de Liège, 6, 1990, 16, 275–290.
97
Franken, H. J. and Kalsbeek, J., Potters of a medieval village in the Jordan Valley: excavations at Tell deir ʻAllā--a medieval tell, Tell Abu Gourdan, Jordan, North-Holland Pub. Co, Amsterdam, 1975, vol. North-Holland ceramic studies in archaeology.
98
K. Hirth, Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association, 2009, 19, 1–12.
99
M. B. Hagstrum, Journal of Field Archaeology, 1985, 12, 65–75.
100
Jordan, Peter and Zvelebil, Marek, Ceramics before farming: the dispersal of pottery among prehistoric Eurasian hunter-gatherers, Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, Calif, 2009, vol. Publications of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London.
101
G. A. London, News and Short Contributions, 1986, 4, 510–511.
102
McGovern, Patrick E., Notis, M. D., and American Ceramic Society, Cross-craft and cross-cultural interactions in ceramics, American Ceramic Society, Westerville, OH, 1989, vol. Ceramics and civilization.
103
Peacock, D. P. S., Pottery in the Roman world: an ethnoarchaeological approach, Longman, London, 1982, vol. Longman archaeology series.
104
David A. Phillips Jr., American Antiquity, 2006, 71, 397–398.
105
M. Rautman, Journal of Mediterranean archaeology, 11, 81–104.
106
P. M. Rice, in The ceramic legacy of Anna O. Shepard, University Press of Colorado, Niwot, Colo, 1991, pp. 257–279.
107
Shimada, Izumi, Craft production in complex societies: multicraft and producer perspectives, University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City, 2007, vol. Foundations of archaeological inquiry.
108
B. Sillar, in Not so much a pot, more a way of life: current approaches to artefact analysis in archaeology, Oxbow, Oxford, 1997, vol. Oxbow monograph, pp. 1–20.
109
Anne P. Underhill, Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, 2003, 10, 203–275.
110
C. Orton, in Pottery in archaeology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993, vol. Cambridge manuals in archaeology.
111
Carl Knappett, Vassilis Kilikoglou, Val Steele and Ben Stern, Anatolian Studies, 2005, 55, 25–59.
112
Dean E. Arnold, Hector Neff and Ronald L. Bishop, American Anthropologist, 1991, 93, 70–90.
113
Samuel V. Connell, Latin American Antiquity, 2002, 13, 401–417.
114
Ian Hodder, World Archaeology, 1974, 6, 172–189.
115
Howard, Hilary, Morris, Elaine L., and Technology and Trade colloquium, Production and distribution: a ceramic viewpoint, B.A.R., Oxford, 1981.
116
Lyne, M. A. B., Jefferies, R. S., and Council for British Archaeology, The Alice Holt/Farnham Roman pottery industry, The Council of British Archaeology, London, 1979, vol. CBA research report.
117
E. L. Morris and A. Woodward, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 69, 279–303.
118
M. Parker-Pearson, Cornish Archaeology, 1990, 29, 5–32.
119
Peacock, D. P. S. and Williams, D. F., Amphorae and the Roman economy: an introductory guide, Longman, London, 1986, vol. Longman archaeology series.
120
Rice, Prudence M., Pottery analysis: a sourcebook, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1987.
121
M. S. Tite, Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, 1999, 6, 181–233.
122
Bey, George J. and Pool, Christopher A., Pottery economics in Mesoamerica, University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 2007.
123
Tomber, R., Dore, John, English Heritage, British Museum, National Roman Fabric Reference Collection, and Museum of London, The National Roman Fabric Reference Collection: a handbook, Museum of London Archaeology Service, London, 1998, vol. MoLAS monograph.
124
Tyers, Paul, Roman pottery in Britain, Batsford, London, 1996.
125
L. Wilson and A. M. Pollard, in Handbook of archaeological sciences, John Wiley, Chichester, 2001, pp. 508–517.
126
P. M. Allison, in Not so much a pot, more a way of life: current approaches to artefact analysis in archaeology, Oxbow, Oxford, 1997, vol. Oxbow monograph, pp. 77–84.
127
Orton, Clive, Tyers, Paul, and Vince, A. G., Pottery in archaeology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993, vol. Cambridge manuals in archaeology.
128
J. J. Aimers, in Archaeological investigations in the eastern Maya lowlands: papers of the 2003 Belize Archaeology Symposium, Institute of Archaeology, National Institute of Culture and History, Belmopan, Belize, 2004, vol. 4.
129
J. C. Barrett, in Papers on the prehistoric archaeology of Cranborne Chase, Oxbow, Oxford, 1991, vol. Oxbow monograph, pp. 201–231.
130
A. Brooks, Antiquity, 2007, 81, 133–147.
131
English Heritage, 2006.
132
Gibson, Alex M. and Woods, A. J., Prehistoric pottery for the archaeologist, Leicester University Press, London, 2nd ed., 1997.
133
Willis, Steven and Hingley, Richard, Roman finds: context and theory : proceedings of a conference held at the Univeristy of Durham, Oxbow Books, Oxford, 2007.
134
Institute of Field Archaeologists, 2000.
135
Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group, The study of later prehistoric pottery: general policies, Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group, 1991, vol. Occasional paper / Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group.
136
Symonds, R. P., Wade, Sue, Roper, Andrew, Bird, Joanna, Bidwell, Paul T., Croom, Alexandra, Buxton, Fran, and Colchester Archaeological Trust, Roman pottery from excavations in Colchester, 1971-86, Colchester Archaeological Trust, Colchester, 1999, vol. Colchester archaeological report.
137
J. B. Wheat, in The ceramic legacy of Anna O. Shepard, University Press of Colorado, Niwot, Colo, 1991, pp. 121–131.
138
I. K. Whitbread, in Archaeometry: proceedings of the 25th international symposium, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1989, pp. 127–138.
139
Berg, Ina, Antiquity, 2004, 78, 74–85.
140
J. Goulder, Antiquity, 2010, 84, 351–362.
141
David Wengrow, World Archaeology, 2001, 33, 168–188.
142
D. Brown, in Consuming passions: dining from antiquity to the eighteenth century, Tempus, Stroud, 2005, pp. 87–100.
143
S. Charters, R. P. Evershed, L. J. Goad, and Et al., Archaeometry, 1993, 35, 211–223.
144
M. S. Tite, V. Kilikoglou and G. Vekinis, Archaeometry, 2001, 43, 301–324.
145
Allison, Penelope Mary, Pompeian households: an analysis of the material culture, Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, 2004, vol. Monograph.
146
John W. Arthur, Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, 2002, 9, 331–355.
147
E. Biddulph, Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 2005, 24, 23–45.
148
C. Bollong A., Journal of Field Archaeology, , DOI:10.1179/009346994791549254.
149
Cathy Lynne Costin and Timothy Earle, American Antiquity, 1989, 54, 691–714.
150
M. Deal and M. B. Hagstrum, in Expanding archaeology, University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City, 1995, pp. 111–125.
151
David Frankel and Jennifer M. Webb, Journal of Field Archaeology, 2001, 28, 115–129.
152
B. Hayden and A. Cannon, Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 1983, 2, 117–163.
153
Carl Heron and Richard P. Evershed, Archaeological Method and Theory, 1993, 5, 247–284.
154
J. N. Hill, in New perspectives in archeology, Aldine, Chicago, 1968, pp. 103–142.
155
M. B. Schiffer, in Quantifying diversity in archaeology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1989, vol. New directions in archaeology, pp. 37–58.
156
T. J. Wilkinson, Journal of Field Archaeology, 1989, 16, 31–46.
157
S. E. Rouillard, in Somerset Levels papers, Somerset Levels Project, Cambridge, 1987, vol. 13, pp. 183–221.
158
Coles, J. M., Minnitt, Stephen, Somerset Levels Project, and Somerset County Museums Service, ‘Industrious and fairly civilized’: the Glastonbury Lake Village, Somerset Levels Project and Somerset County Council Museums Service, [Somerset], 1995.
159
Cunliffe, Barry W., Iron Age communities in Britain: an account of England, Scotland and Wales from the seventh century BC until the Roman conquest, Routledge, London, 4th ed., 2005.
160
Cunliffe, Barry W., Brown, Lisa, Ambrose, Tim, and Council for British Archaeology, Danebury: an Iron Age hillfort in Hampshire, Council for British Archaeology, London, 1984, vol. CBA research report.
161
Gibson, Alex M., Prehistoric pottery in Britain & Ireland, Tempus, Stroud, 2002.
162
T. Moore, Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 2007, 26, 79–102.
163
B. J. Orme, J. M. Coles and C. R. Sturdy, in Somerset Levels papers, Somerset Levels Project, Cambridge, 1979, vol. 5, pp. 6–17.
164
D. P. S. Peacock, in Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, Prehistoric Society, London, 1968, vol. 34, pp. 414–427.
165
Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group, The study of later prehistoric pottery: general policies, Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group, 1991, vol. Occasional paper / Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group.
166
S. E. Rouillard, in Somerset Levels papers, Somerset Levels Project, Cambridge, 1987, vol. 13, pp. 183–221.
167
Hill, J. D., Woodward, Ann, and Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group, Prehistoric Britain: the ceramic basis, Oxbow, Oxford, 2002, vol. Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group. occasional publication.
168
Welcome to the PCRG, http://www.pcrg.org.uk/.