1.
Bowman, Sheridan. Science and the past. (British Museum Press, 1991).
2.
Henderson, Julian. Ancient glass: an interdisciplinary exploration. (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
3.
Janssens, Koen H. A. Modern methods for analysing archaeological and historical glass. (Wiley, 2013).
4.
Pollard, A. M., Heron, Carl, & Royal Society of Chemistry (Great Britain). Archaeological chemistry. (Royal Society of Chemistry, 2008).
5.
Shortland, Andrew J. Lapis lazuli from the kiln: glass and glassmaking in the late Bronze Age. vol. Studies in archaeological sciences (Leuven University Press, 2012).
6.
Tait, H. 5000 years of glass. (British Museum, 2012).
7.
Tite, M. S. & Shortland, Andrew J. Production technology of faience and related early vitreous materials. (School of Archaeology, 2008).
8.
Freestone, I. Looking into glass. in Science and the past 37–56 (British Museum Press, 1991).
9.
Henderson, J. The scientific analysis of ancient glass and its archaeological interpretation. in Scientific analysis in archaeology and its interpretation vol. Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, monograph 30–62 (Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, Institute of Archaeology, 1989).
10.
Pollard, M. & Heron, C. Chapter 5: The chemistry  and corrosion of archaeological glass. in Archaeological chemistry 144–192 (Royal Society of Chemistry, 2008).
11.
Anaf, W. Study on the formation of heterogeneous structures in leached layers during the corrosion process of glass. http://ceroart.revues.org/1561 (2010).
12.
Brill, R. H. A Note on the Scientist’s Definition of Glass. Journal of Glass Studies 4, 127–138 (1962).
13.
Brill, R. H. Physical properties of early Chinese glass. in Scientific research in early Chinese glass : proceedings of the Archaeometry of Glass Sessions of the 1984 International Symposium on Glass, Beijing, September 7, 1984, with supplementary papers (eds. Brill, R. H. & Martin, J. H.) 109–117 (Corning Museum of Glass, 1991).
14.
Freestone, I. Post-depositional changes in archaeological ceramics and glasses. in Handbook of archaeological sciences 615–625 (John Wiley, 2001).
15.
Ponting, M. The scanning electron microscope and the archaeologist. Physics Education 39, 166–170 (2004).
16.
Sax, M. The introduction of the lapidary engraving wheel in Mesopotamia. Antiquity 74, 380–387 (2000).
17.
Schreurs, J. W. H. & Brill, R. H. Iron and sulfur related colours in ancient glasses. Archaeometry 26, (1984).
18.
Schreiner, M., Melcher, M. & Uhlir, K. Scanning electron microscopy and energy dispersive analysis: applications in the field of cultural heritage. Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 387, 737–747 (2007).
19.
Turner, W. E. S. & Rooksby, H. P. Study of the Opalising Agents in Ancient Opal Glasses throughout Three Thousand Four Hundred Years. in V. Internationaler Glaskongress, München, 29. Juni bis 4. Juli 1959 vol. Glastechnische Berichte 17–27 (Deutsche Glastechniche Gesellschaft).
20.
Weyl, Woldemar A. & Society of Glass Technology. Coloured glasses. (Society of Glass Technology, 1976).
21.
Nicholson, P. T. Faience Technology. vol. UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology, Los Angeles http://escholarship.org/uc/item/9cs9x41z?query=nicholson%20faience#page-2 (2009).
22.
Nicholson, P. Glass Working, Use and Discard. vol. UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology, Los Angeles http://escholarship.org/uc/item/2w17t0cw (2001).
23.
Shortland, A. Glass Production. http://escholarship.org/uc/item/4jv3f665?query=shortland%20glass (2009).
24.
Tait, Hugh. Five thousand years of glass. (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004).
25.
Brill, R. H. The chemical interpretation of the texts. in Glass and glassmaking in ancient Mesopotamia: an edition of the cuneiform texts which contain instructions for glassmakers with a catalogue of surviving objects vol. Monographs / Corning Museum of Glass 105–128 (Corning Museum of Glass, 1970).
26.
Degryse, P., Boyce, A., Erb-Satullo, N., & Et al. Isotopic discriminants between late Bronze Age glasses from Egypt and the Near East. Archaeometry 52, 380–388 (2010).
27.
Friedman, Florence D. et al. Gifts of the Nile: ancient Egyptian faience. (Thames & Hudson, 1998).
28.
Hatton, G. D., Shortland, A. J. & Tite, M. S. The production technology of Egyptian blue and green frits from second millennium BC Egypt and Mesopotamia. Journal of Archaeological Science 35, 1591–1604 (2008).
29.
Kaczmarczyk, A. The source of cobalt in ancient Egyptian pigments. in Proceedings of the 24th International Archaeometry Symposium 369–376 (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1986).
30.
Kaczmarczyk, Alexander & Hedges, Robert E. M. Ancient Egyptian faience: an analytical survey of Egyptian faience from predynastic to Roman times. (Aris & Phillips, 1983).
31.
Lilyquist, Christine, Wypyski, M. T., & Brill, Robert H. Studies in early Egyptian glass. (Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1993).
32.
Matin, M. An Experimental Investigation into the Accidental Invention of Ceramic Glazes. Archaeometry 56, 591–600 (2014).
33.
Moorey, P. R. S. Ancient Mesopotamian materials and industries: the archaeological evidence. (Eisenbrauns, 1999).
34.
Nicholson, Paul T. Egyptian faience and glass. vol. Shire Egyptology (Shire, 1993).
35.
Nicholson, Paul T., Gerisch, Rainer, Brook, Elina, & Jackson, Caroline M. Brilliant things for Akhenaten: the production of glass, vitreous materials and pottery at Amarna Site O45.1. vol. Excavation memoir (Egypt Exploration Society, 2007).
36.
Nicholson, P. & Peltenburg, E. Egyptian faience. in Ancient Egyptian materials and technology 177–193 (Cambridge University Press, 2000).
37.
Paul T. Nicholson, Caroline M. Jackson and Katharine M. Trott. The Ulu Burun Glass Ingots, Cylindrical Vessels and Egyptian Glass. The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 83, 143–153 (1997).
38.
Pages-Camagna, S. & Colinart, S. The Egyptian green pigment: It’s manufacturing process and links to Egyptian blue. Archaeometry 45, 637–658 (2003).
39.
Paynter, S. & Tite, M. S. The evolution of glazing technologies in the ancient Near East and Egypt. 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 239–254 (Oxbow, 2001).
40.
Peltenburg, E. Early faience: recent studies, origins and relationships with glass. in Early vitreous materials vol. Occasional paper 5–29 (British Museum, 1987).
41.
Rehren, TH. Ramesside glass-colouring crucibles. Archaeometry 39, 355–368 (1997).
42.
Rehren, Th. A review of factors affecting the composition of early Egyptian glasses and faience: alkali and alkali earth oxides. Journal of Archaeological Science 35, 1345–1354 (2008).
43.
Rehren, T. Late Bronze Age Glass Production at Qantir-Piramesses, Egypt. Science 308, 1756–1758 (2005).
44.
Riederer, J. Egyptian blue. in Artists’ pigments: a handbook of their history and characteristics vol. 3 23–45 (National Gallery of Art, 1986).
45.
Shortland, A. J. The use and origin of antimonate colorants in early Egyptian glass. In: Archaeometry. Archaeometry 517–530 (2002) doi:10.1111/1475-4754.t01-1-00083.
46.
Shortland, Andrew J. Lapis lazuli from the kiln: glass and glassmaking in the late Bronze Age. vol. Studies in archaeological sciences (Leuven University Press, 2012).
47.
Shortland, A. J., Tite, M. S. & Ewart, I. Ancient exploitation and use of cobalt alums from the Western Oases of Egypt. Archaeometry 153–168 (2006) doi:10.1111/j.1475-4754.2006.00248.x.
48.
Shortland, A., Rogers, N. & Eremin, K. Trace element discriminants between Egyptian and Mesopotamian Late Bronze Age glasses. In: Journal of Archaeological Sciences. Journal of Archaeological Science 34, 781–789 (2007).
49.
Smirniou, M. & Rehren, TH. Direct evidence of primary glass production in late Bronze Age Amarna, Egypt. In: Archaeometry. Archaeometry 53, 58–80 (2011).
50.
Stern, E. M. & Schlick-Nolte, Birgit. Early glass of the ancient world, 1600 B.C.-A.D. 50: Ernesto Wolf Collection. (Verlag Gerd Hatje, 1994).
51.
Tite, M. S. Characterisation of early vitreous materials. Archaeometry 29, 21–34 (1987).
52.
Tite, M. S., Freestone, I. C. & Bimson, M. Egyptian Faience: an investigation of the methods of production. Archaeometry 25, 17–27 (1983).
53.
Tite, M. S., Shortland, A. J. & Paynter, S. The beginnings of vitreous materials in the Near East and Egypt. In: Accounts of Chemical Research. Accounts of Chemical Research 35, 585–593 (2002).
54.
M. S. Tite and M. Bimson. Glazed Steatite: An Investigation of the Methods of Glazing Used in Ancient Egypt. World Archaeology 21, 87–100 (1989).
55.
Tite, M. S., Manti, P. & Shortland, A. J. A technological study of ancient faience from Egypt. Journal of Archaeological Science 34, 1568–1583 (2007).
56.
Vandiver, P. Appendix A: The manufacture of faience. in Ancient Egyptian faience: an analytical survey of Egyptian faience from predynastic to Roman times A1–A139 (Aris & Phillips, 1983).
57.
Weatherhead, P. B. A review and proposal of new criteria for production technologies of Egyptian faience. in La couleur dans la peinture et l’émaillage de l’Égypte ancienne: actes de la table ronde, Ravello, 20-22 mars 1997 vol. Scienze e materiali del patrimonio culturale 202–239 (Edipuglia, 1989).
58.
Weatherhead, F. & Buckley, A. Artists’ pigments from Amarna. in Amarna reports vol. Occasional publications / Egypt Exploration Society 202–239 (Egypt Exploration Society, 1984).
59.
Wulff, H. E., Wulff, H. S. & Koch, L. Egyptian Faience: A Possible Survival in Iran. Archaeology 21, 98–107.
60.
Shortland, A., Schachner, L., Freestone, I. & Tite, M. Natron as a flux in the early vitreous materials industry: sources, beginnings and reasons for decline. Journal of Archaeological Science 33, 521–530 (2006).
61.
E. Marianne Stern. Roman Glassblowing in a Cultural Context. American Journal of Archaeology 103, 441–484 (1999).
62.
Tatton-Brown, V. Hellenistic and non-blown Roman glass and The Roman Empire. in Five thousand years of glass 46–97 (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1991).
63.
Foster, H.E. ‘A whiter shade of pale’? Chemical and experimental investigation of opaque white Roman glass gaming counters. Glass Technology - European Journal of Glass Science and Technology Part A 46, 327–333.
64.
Freestone, I. Laboratory studies of the Portland Vase. Journal of glass studies 32, 103–107 (1990).
65.
Grose, D. F. Innovation and change in ancient technologies. in High technology ceramics: past, present, and future : the nature of innovation and change in ceramic technology vol. Ceramics and civilization 65–79 (American Ceramic Society, 1986).
66.
Grose, David F. & Toledo Museum of Art. Early ancient glass: core-formed, rod-formed, and cast vessels and objects from the late Bronze Age to the early Roman Empire, 1600 B.C. to A.D. 50. (Hudson Hills Press in association with the Toledo Museum of Art, 1989).
67.
Henderson, J. Chemical characterisation of Roman glass vessels, enamels and tesserae. in Materials issues in art and archaeology II: symposium held April 17-21, 1990, San Francisco, California, U.S.A vol. Materials Research Society symposium proceedings 601–607 (Materials Research Society, 1991).
68.
Israeli, Y. The invention of blowing. in Roman glass: two centuries of art and invention vol. Occasional papers 46–55 (Society of Antiquaries of London, 1991).
69.
Israeli, Y. & Katsnelson, N. Refuse of a glass workshop of the second  Temple Period from area J. in Jewish Quarter excavations in the Old City of Jerusalem: conducted by Nahman Avigad, 1969-1982 411–460 (Israel Exploration Society, 2006).
70.
Liardet, F. Learning by hand: artefact consistency and craft tradition. in Annales du 17e Congrès de l’Association Internationale pour l’Histoire du Verre, Anvers, 2006 =: Annales of the 17th Congress of the International Association for the History of Glass, 2006, Antwerp 184–188 (University Press Antwerp, 2009).
71.
Jackson, C. M. Making colourless glass in the Roman period. Archaeometry 47, 763–780 (2005).
72.
Jackson, C. M., Hunter, J. R., Warren, S. E. & Cool, H. E. M. The analysis of blue-green glass and glassy waste from two Romano-British glass-working sites. in Archaeometry ’90 295–305 (Birkhäuser Verlag, 1991).
73.
Mass, J. L., Stone, R. E. & Wypyski, M. T. The mineralogical and metallurgical origins of Roman opaque coloured glasses. in The prehistory & history of glassmaking technology vol. Ceramics and civilization 121–144 (American Ceramic Society, 1998).
74.
Price, J. Glass-working and Glassworkers in cities and towns. in Roman working lives and urban living 167–190 (Oxbow Books, 2005).
75.
Price, J. & Cottam, Sally. Romano-British glass vessels: a handbook. vol. Practical handbooks in archaeology (Council for British Archaeology, 1998).
76.
Reade, W., Freestone, I. C. & Bourke, S. Innovation or continuity? Early first millennium bce glass in the Near East: the cobalt blue glasses from Assyrian Nimrud. in Annales du 16e Congrès de l’Association internationale pour l’histoire du verre, London, 2003 23–27 (AIHV, 2009).
77.
Reade, W., Freestone, I. C. & Bourke, S. Innovation and continuity in Bronze Age and Iron Age glass from Pella in Jordan. in Annales du 17e Congrès de l’Association Internationale pour l’Histoire du Verre, Anvers, 2006 =: Annales of the 17th Congress of the International Association for the History of Glass, 2006, Antwerp 47–54 (University Press Antwerp, 2009).
78.
E. V. Sayre and R. W. Smith. Compositional Categories of Ancient Glass. Science 133, 1824–1826 (1961).
79.
Sarye, E. V. & Smith, R. W. Some materials of glass manufacturing in antiquity. in Archeological chemistry: a symposium 279–311 (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1967).
80.
Sayre, E. V. The intentional use of antimony and manganese in ancient glasses. in Advances in glass technology: additional papers from the Sixth International Congress on Glass, held July 8-14, 1962, at Washington, D.C., sponsored by the International Commission of Glass, with the American Ceramic Society as host 263–282 (Plenum Press, 1963).
81.
Schlick-Nolte, B. & Werthmann, R. Glass Vessels from the burial of Nesikhons. Journal of glass studies 45, 11–34 (2003).
82.
Stern, E. M. & Schlick-Nolte, Birgit. Early glass of the ancient world, 1600 B.C.-A.D. 50: Ernesto Wolf Collection. (Verlag Gerd Hatje, 1994).
83.
Freestone, I., Gorin-Rosen, Y. & Hughes, M. Primary glass from Israel and the production of glass in Late antiquity and the Early Islamic period. in La route du verre: ateliers primaires et secondaires du second millénaire av. J.-C. au Moyen Âge vol. Travaux de la Maison de l’Orient méditerranéen 65–83 (Maison de l’Orient Méditerranéen, 2000).
84.
Freestone, I. C., Ponting, M. & Hughes, M. J. The origins of Byzantine glass from Maroni Petrera, Cyprus. In: Archaeometry. Archaeometry 44, 257–272 (2002).
85.
Baxter, M. J., Cool, H. E. M. & Jackson, C. M. Further studies in the compositional variability of colourless Romano-British vessel glass. Archaeometry 47, 47–68 (2005).
86.
Brems, D. et al. Western Mediterranean sand deposits as a raw material for Roman glass production. Journal of Archaeological Science 39, 2897–2907 (2012).
87.
Brill, R. H. Scientific investigations of the Jalame glass. in Excavations at Jalame: site of a glass factory in late Roman Palestine : excavations conducted by a joint expedition of the University of Missouri and the Corning Museum of Glass 257–294 (University of Missouri Press, 1988).
88.
Degryse, P. & Schneider, J. Pliny the Elder and Sr–Nd isotopes: tracing the provenance of raw materials for Roman glass production. Journal of Archaeological Science 35, 1993–2000 (2008).
89.
Degryse, P., Schneider, J. & Lauwers, V. Neodymium and strontium isotopes in the provenance determination of primary natron glass production. in Isotopes in vitreous materials vol. Studies in archaeological sciences (Leuven University Press, 2009).
90.
Foster, H. E. & Jackson, C. M. The composition of ‘naturally coloured’ late Roman vessel glass from Britain and the implications for models of glass production and supply. Journal of Archaeological Science 36, 189–204 (2009).
91.
Freestone, I. The provenance of ancient glass through compositional analysis. in Materials issues in art and archaeology VII: symposium held November 30-December 3, 2004, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. vol. Materials Research Society symposium proceedings (Materials Research Society, 2005).
92.
Freestone, I. Glass production in Late Antiquity and the Early Islamic period: a geochemical perspective. in Geomaterials in cultural heritage vol. Geological Society special publication 201–216 (The Geological Society, 2006).
93.
Freestone, I. Pliny on Roman glassmaking. in Archaeology, history and science: integrating approaches to ancient materials vol. Publications of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London 77–100 (Left Coast Press, 2008).
94.
Freestone, I. C., Leslie, K. A., Thirlwall, M. & Gorin-Rosen, Y. Strontium Isotopes in the Investigation of Early Glass Production: Byzantine and Early Islamic Glass from the Near East. Archaeometry 45, 19–32 (2003).
95.
Freestone, I., Price, J. & Cartwright, C. The batch: its recognition and significance. in Annales du 17e Congrès de l’Association Internationale pour l’Histoire du Verre, Anvers, 2006 =: Annales of the 17th Congress of the International Association for the History of Glass, 2006, Antwerp 130–135 (University Press Antwerp, 2009).
96.
Freestone, I. C., Wolf, S. & Thirlwall, M. The production of HIMT glass: elemental and isotopic evidence. in Annales du 16e Congrès de l’Association internationale pour l’histoire du verre, London, 2003 153–157 (AIHV, 2005).
97.
Freestone, I. C., Wolf, S. & Thirlwall, M. Isotopic composition of glass from the Levant and South-eastern Mediterranean region. in Isotopes in vitreous materials vol. Studies in archaeological sciences 31–52 (Leuven University Press, 2009).
98.
Ganio, M. Roman glass across the Empire: an elemental and isotopic characterization. Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry 27, 743–753 (2012).
99.
Gorin-Rosen, Y. The ancient glass industry in Israel: summary of finds and new discoveries. in La route du verre: ateliers primaires et secondaires du second millénaire av. J.-C. au Moyen Âge vol. Travaux de la Maison de l’Orient méditerranéen 49–63 (Maison de l’Orient Méditerranéen, 2000).
100.
Kock, Jan & Sode, Torben. Glass, glass beads and glassmakers in Northern India. (THOT).
101.
Nenna, M.-D., Picon, M., Thirion-Merle, V. & Vichi, M. Ateliers primaires du Wadi Natrun: novelles decouvertes. in Annales du 16e Congrès de l’Association internationale pour l’histoire du verre, London, 2003 59–63 (AIHV, 2005).
102.
Nenna, M.-D., Picon, M. & Vichy, M. Ateliers primaire et secondaires en Egypt a l’epoque greco-romaine. in La route du verre: ateliers primaires et secondaires du second millénaire av. J.-C. au Moyen Âge vol. Travaux de la Maison de l’Orient méditerranéen 97–112 (Maison de l’Orient Méditerranéen, 2000).
103.
Price, J., Freestone, I. C. & Cartwright, C. ‘All in a day’s work?’. The colourless cylindrical glass cups found at Stonea revisited. in Image, craft and the classical world: essays in honour of Donald Bailey and Catherine Johns vol. Monographies instrumentum 163–169 (Éditions Monique Mergoil, 2005).
104.
Sode, T. & Kock, J. Traditional raw glass production in Northern India: the final stage of an ancient technology. Journal of glass studies 43, 155–169 (2001).
105.
Wedepohl, K. H. & Baumann, A. The Use of Marine Molluskan Shells for Roman Glass and Local Raw Glass Production in the Eifel Area (Western Germany). Naturwissenschaften 87, 129–132 (2000).
106.
Freestone, I. & Gorin-Rosen, Y. The great glass slab at Bet Shearim, Israel: an early Islamic glassmaking experiment? Journal of glass studies 41, 105–116 (1999).
107.
Pinder-Wilson, R. The Islamic lands and China. in Five thousand years of glass 112–143 (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004).
108.
Shortland, A., Schachner, L., Freestone, I. & Tite, M. Natron as a flux in the early vitreous materials industry: sources, beginnings and reasons for decline. In: Journal Archaeological Science. Journal of Archaeological Science 33, 521–530 (2006).
109.
Arletti, R., Fiori, C. & Vandini, M. A study of glass tesserae from mosaics in the monesteries of Daphni and Hosios Loukas (Greece). Archaeometry 52, 796–815 (2010).
110.
Barber, D. J. & Freestone, I. C. An investigation of the origin of the colour of the Lycurgus Cup by analytical transmission electron microscopy. Archaeometry 32, 33–45 (1990).
111.
Freestone, I. C., Bimson, M. & Buckton, D. Compositional categories of Byzantine glass tesserae. in Annales du 11e Congrès de l’Association internationale pour l’histoire du verre: Bâle, 29 août, 3 septembre 1988 271–280 (The Association, 1990).
112.
Freestone, I., Meeks, N., Sax, M. & Higgitt, C. The Lycurgus Cup — A Roman nanotechnology. Gold Bulletin 40, 270–277 (2007).
113.
Gratuze, B. & Barrandon, J.-N. Islamic glass weights and stamps: analysis using nuclear techniques. Archaeometry 32, 155–162 (1990).
114.
Greiff, S. & Schuster, J. Technological study of enamelling on Roman glass: The nature of opacifying, decolourizing and fining agents used with the glass beakers from Lübsow (Lubieszewo, Poland). Journal of Cultural Heritage 9, e27–e32 (2008).
115.
Gudenrath, W. Enameled glass vessels, 1425 BCE - 1800: The decorating process. Journal of glass studies 48, 23–70 (2006).
116.
Henderson, J. Investigations into marvered glass 2. in Islamic art in the Ashmolean Museum vol. Oxford studies in Islamic art 31–50 (Oxford University Press for the Board of Faculty of Oriental Studies, University of Oxford, 1995).
117.
Henderson, J. An investigation of early glass production at Raqqa, Syria. in Materials issues in art and archaeology IV: symposium held May 16-21, 1994, Cancun, Mexico vol. Materials Research Society symposium proceedings 433–443 (Materials Research Society, 1995).
118.
Henderson, Julian. Archaeological and Scientific Evidence for the Production of Early Islamic Glass in al-Raqqa, Syria. Levant 31, 225–240 (1999).
119.
Henderson, J. Tradition and Experiment in First Millennium A.D. Glass ProductionThe Emergence of Early Islamic Glass Technology in Late Antiquity. Accounts of Chemical Research 35, 594–602 (2002).
120.
Mirti, P., Pace, M., Malandrino, M. & Ponzi, M. N. Sasanian glass from Veh Ardašīr: new evidences by ICP-MS analysis. Journal of Archaeological Science 36, 1061–1069 (2009).
121.
Sayre, E. V. & Smith, R. W. Analytical studies of ancient Egyptian glass. in Recent advances in science and technology of materials: [proceedings] 47–70 (Plenum Press, 1974).
122.
Schibille, N., Marii, F. & Rehren, Th. Charaterization and provenance of late antique window glass from the Petra church in Jordan. Archaeometry 50, 627–642 (2008).
123.
Silvestri, A., Tonietto, S. & Molin, G. The palaeo-Christian glass mosaic of St. Prosdocimus (Padova, Italy): archaeometric characterisation of ‘gold’ tesserae. Journal of Archaeological Science 38, 3402–3414 (2011).
124.
Smith, R. W. Archaeological evaluation of analyses of ancient glass. in Advances in glass technology: additional papers from the Sixth International Congress on Glass, held July 8-14, 1962, at Washington, D.C., sponsored by the International Commission of Glass, with the American Ceramic Society as host 283–290 (Plenum Press, 1963).
125.
Verità, M. & Santopadre, P. Analysis of Gold-Coloured ruby glass tesserae in roman church mosaics of the fourth to 12th Centuries. Journal of glass studies 52, 11–24 (2010).
126.
Hilgner, Alexandra, Zorn, Bettina, Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum Mainz, & Shanxi Sheng kao gu yan jiu suo (Xi’an Shi, China). Glass along the silk road from 200 BC to AD 1000: international conference within the scope of the ‘Sino-German Project on Cultural Heritage Preservation’ of the RGZM and the Shaanxi Provincial Institute of Archaeology, December 11th-12th 2008. vol. RGZM-Tagungen (Verlag des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums, 2010).
127.
Freestone, Ian & Gaimster, David R. M. Pottery in the making: world ceramic traditions. (British Museum Press, 1997).
128.
Tite, M. S., Freestone, I., Mason, R., & Et al. Lead glazes in antiquity - methods of production and reasons for use. In: Archaeometry. Archaeometry 40, 241–260 (1998).
129.
Bernsted, Anne-Marie Keblow. Early Islamic pottery: materials and techniques. (Archetype, 2003).
130.
Mason, Robert B. Shine like the sun: lustre-painted and associated pottery from the medieval Middle East. vol. Bibliotheca Iranica (Mazda Publishers in association with Royal Ontario Museum, 2004).
131.
Mason, R. B. & Tite, M. S. The beginnings of Islamic stonepaste technology. Archaeometry 36, 77–91 (1994).
132.
Mason, R. B. & Tite, M. S. The beginnings of tin-opacification of pottery glazes. Archaeometry 39, 41–58 (1997).
133.
Paynter, S. Links between glazes and glass in mid-2nd millennium BC Mesopotamia and Egypt. in From mine to microscope: advances in the study of ancient technology (eds. Shortland, A. J., Freestone, I. & Rehren, T.) 93–108 (Oxbow Books, 2009).
134.
Walton, M. S. & Tite, M. S. Production technology of Roman lead-glazed pottery and its continuance into late antiquity. Archaeometry 52, 733–759 (2010).
135.
Lankton, J. W. & Dussubieux, L. Early glass in Asian Maritime Trade: a review and an interpretation of compositional analyses. Journal of glass studies 48, 121–144 (2006).
136.
Wood, N. The influence of glass technology on Chinese ceramics. http://www.haughton.com/system/files/articles/2010/01/27/86/icf_s_2001_4th.pdf (2001).
137.
Vandiver, P. B. Ancient Glazes. Scientific American 262, 106–113 (1990).
138.
An, J. The early glass of China. in Scientific research in early Chinese glass: proceedings of the Archaeometry of Glass Sessions of the 1984 International Symposium on Glass, Beijing, September 7, 1984, with supplementary papers 1–19 (Corning Museum of Glass, 1991).
139.
Braghin, Cecilia. Chinese glass: archaeological studies on the uses and social context of glass artefacts from the Warring States to the Northern Song period; (fifth century B.C. to twelfth century A.D.). vol. Orientalia Venetiana (Leo S. Olschki, 2002).
140.
Martin, John H., Brill, Robert H., Archaeometry of Glass Sessions, International Commission on Glass, & International Symposium on Glass. Scientific research in early Chinese glass: proceedings of the Archaeometry of Glass Sessions of the 1984 International Symposium on Glass, Beijing, September 7, 1984, with supplementary papers. (Corning Museum of Glass, 1991).
141.
Brill, R. H., Tong, S. S. C. & Dohrenwend, D. Chemical analyses of some early Chinese glasses. in Scientific research in early Chinese glass: proceedings of the Archaeometry of Glass Sessions of the 1984 International Symposium on Glass, Beijing, September 7, 1984, with supplementary papers 31–58 (Corning Museum of Glass, 1991).
142.
Cheng, Z. & Zhou, C. A glass garment from a Western Han tomb in Jiangsu province. in Scientific research in early Chinese glass: proceedings of the Archaeometry of Glass Sessions of the 1984 International Symposium on Glass, Beijing, September 7, 1984, with supplementary papers 21–26 (Corning Museum of Glass, 1991).
143.
Curtis, E. B. European contributions to the Chinese Glass of the Early Qing Period. Journal of glass studies 35, 91–101 (1993).
144.
Dussubieux, L., Robertshaw, P. & Glascock, M. D. LA-ICP-MS analysis of African glass beads: Laboratory inter-comparison with an emphasis on the impact of corrosion on data interpretation. International Journal of Mass Spectrometry 284, 152–161 (2009).
145.
Dussubieux, L., Gratuze, B. & Blet-Lemarquand, M. Mineral soda alumina glass: occurence and meaning. Journal of Archaeological Science 37, 1646–1655 (2010).
146.
Dussubieux, L., Kusimba, C. M., Gogte, V., & Et al. The trading of ancient glass beads: new analytical data from South Asian and East African soda-alumina glass beads. In: Archaeometry. Archaeometry 50, 797–821 (2008).
147.
Elisabeth West FitzHugh and Lynda A. Zycherman. An Early Man-Made Blue Pigment from China: Barium Copper Silicate. Studies in Conservation 28, 15–23 (1983).
148.
Elisabeth West FitzHugh and Lynda A. Zycherman. A Purple Barium Copper Silicate Pigment from Early China. Studies in Conservation 37, 145–154 (1992).
149.
Glover, I. & Henderson, J. Early glass in South and South east Asia and China. in South East Asia & China: art, interaction & commerce vol. Colloquies on art&archaeology in Asia 141–169 (University of London, Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art, School of Oriental and African Studies, 1995).
150.
Kock, J. & Sode, T. Medieval glass mirrors in Southern Scandinavia and their technique, as still practiced in India. Journal of glass studies 44, 79–94 (2002).
151.
Kowzuka, T. & Yamasaki, K. Scientific study on the glass beads found in the Yayoi period of Japan. in Scientific research in the field of Asian art: proceedings of the first Forbes Symposium at the Freer Gallery of Art 183–191 (Archetype, 2003).
152.
Lee, I. S. Chemical analyses of some ancient glasses from Korea. in Annales du 12e Congrès de l’association internationale pour l’histoire du verre: Vienne-Wien, 26-31 août 1991 163–175 (The Association, 1993).
153.
Pinder-Wilson, R. The Islamic Lands and China. in Five thousand years of glass 112–143 (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1991).
154.
Wiedemann, H. G., Bayer, G. & Reller, A. Egyptian blue and Chinese blue. Production technologies and applications of two historically important blue pigments. in La couleur dans la peinture et l’émaillage de l’Égypte ancienne: actes de la table ronde, Ravello, 20-22 mars 1997 vol. Scienze e materiali del patrimonio culturale 195–203 (Edipuglia, 1998).
155.
Wood, M. A glass bead sequence for Southern Africa from the 8th to the 16th Century AD. Journal of African archaeology 9, 67–84 (2011).
156.
Wood, N. New discoveries in Chinese ceramics. http://www.haughton.com/system/files/articles/2010/01/27/102/icf_s_1997_4th.pdf (1997).
157.
Wood, Nigel. Chinese glazes: their origins, chemistry, and re-creation. (A & C Black, 1999).
158.
Yin, M., Rehren, T. & Zheng, J. The earliest high-fired glazed ceramics in China: the composition of the proto-porcelain from Zhejiang during the Shang and Zhou periods (c. 1700–221 BC). Journal of Archaeological Science 38, 2352–2365 (2011).
159.
Freestone, I. Theophilus and the composition of Medieval glass. in Materials issues in art and archaeology III : symposium held April 27-May 1, 1992, San Francisco, California, U.S.A vol. 267 739–745 (Materials Research Society, 1992).
160.
Freestone, I. & Hughes, M. J. Origins of the Jarrow glass. in Wearmouth and Jarrow monastic sites vol. 2 147–155 (English Heritage, 2006).
161.
Wolf, S., Kessler, C. M., Stern, W. B. & Gerber, Y. Early medieval glass from Sion, Sous-le-Scex (Valais, Switzerland) – Roman glass-making traditions or innovative craftsmanship? Archaeometry 47, 361–380 (2005).
162.
Wolf, S., Kessler, C. M., Stern, W. B. & Gerber, Y. The composition and manufature of early Medieval coloured window glass from Sion (Valais, Switzerland) - A Roman glass-making tradition or innovative craftmanship? Archaeometry 47, 361–380 (2005).
163.
Henderson, J. Aspects of early medieval glass production in Britain. in Annales du 12e Congrès de l’association internationale pour l’histoire du verre: Vienne-Wien, 26-31 août 1991 247–259 (The Association, 1993).
164.
Henderson, J. Technological characteristics of Roman enamels. Jewellery studies: volume 5: 1991 65–77 (1991).
165.
Kreuger, I. Glass-mirrors in medieval times. in Annales du 12e Congrès de l’association internationale pour l’histoire du verre: Vienne-Wien, 26-31 août 1991 319–332 (The Association, 1993).
166.
Jackson, C. M. From Roman to early medieval glasses. Many happy returns or a new birth? in Annales du 13e Congrès de l’association internationale pour l’histoire du verre: Pays Bas, 28 août-1 septembre 1995 289–301 (The Association, 1996).
167.
Mirti, P., Lepora, A. & Sagui, L. Scientific analysis of Seventh-Century glass fragments from the Crypta Balbi in Rome. Archaeometry 42, 359–374 (2000).
168.
Mirti, P., Davit, P., Gulmini, M. & Sagui, L. Glass Fragments from the Crypta Balbi in Rome: the Composition of Eighth-Century Fragments. Archaeometry 43, 491–502 (2001).
169.
Rohrs, S., Biron, I. & Stege, H. About Limoges painted enamels - chronological evolution of the glass chemical composition. in Annales du 17e Congrès de l’Association Internationale pour l’Histoire du Verre, Anvers, 2006 =: Annales of the 17th Congress of the International Association for the History of Glass, 2006, Antwerp 500–509 (University Press Antwerp, 2009).
170.
Verità, M. & Santopadre, P. Analysis of Gold-Coloured ruby glass tesserae in roman church mosaics of the fourth to 12th Centuries. Journal of glass studies 52, 11–24 (2010).
171.
Verità, M. & Zecchini, S. Thousand years of Venetian glass: the evolution of chemical composition from the origin to the 18th Century. in Annales du 17e Congrès de l’Association Internationale pour l’Histoire du Verre, Anvers, 2006 =: Annales of the 17th Congress of the International Association for the History of Glass, 2006, Antwerp 602–613 (University Press Antwerp, 2009).
172.
Wolf, S. & Kessler, C. Early medieval window glass from Switzerland and a brief history of glass production in Europe in the first millennium AD. in Glass along the silk road from 200 BC to AD 1000: international conference within the scope of the ‘Sino-German Project on Cultural Heritage Preservation’ of the RGZM and the Shaanxi Provincial Institute of Archaeology, December 11th-12th 2008 vol. RGZM-Tagungen 29–37 (Verlag des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums, 2010).
173.
Bimson, M. & Freestone, I. C. ‘Rouge Clair’ and other late 14th Century enamels on the Royal Gold cup of the Kings of France and England. in Annales du 9e Congrès international d’étude historique du verre: Nancy (France), 22-28 mai 1983 209–222 (Centre de Publications de l’A.I.H.V, 1985).
174.
Biron, I. & Beauchoux, S. bastien. Ion beam analysis of Mosan enamels. Measurement Science and Technology 14, 1564–1578 (2003).
175.
Biron, I., Dandridge, P. & Wypski, M. T. Techniques and materials in Limoges enamels. in Enamels of Limoges, 1100-1350 48–62 (Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1996).
176.
Brun, N. & Pernot, M. The opaque red glass of Celtic enamels from continental Europe. Archaeometry 34, 235–252 (1992).
177.
Craddock, P. T. Scientific investigation of copies, fakes and forgeries. (Butterworth-Heinemann, 2009).
178.
Dandrige, P. & Wypuski, M. T. Preliminary technical study on Medieval Limoges enamels. in Materials issues in art and archaeology III: symposium held April 27-May 1, 1992, San Francisco, California, U.S.A vol. 267 817–826 (Materials Research Society, 1992).
179.
Freestone, I. C. Compositions and origins of glasses from Romanesque champleve enamels. in Catalogue of medieval enamels in the British Museum vol. 2 37–45 (Published for the Trustees of the British Museum by British Museum Press, 1993).
180.
Henderson, J. Technological Characteristics of Roman Enamels. Jewellery Studies 5, 65–76 (1991).
181.
Joyner, L., Freestone, I. & Robinson, J. Crowning glory:  the identification of gems on the head reliquary of St Eustace from the Basle Cathedral Treasury. Gem-A | The Gemmological Association of Great Britain 30, 169–182 (2006).
182.
Monique Perez y Jorba, Monique Rommeluere and Léo Mazerolles. Etude de la deterioration d’une plaque d’email peint de Limoges. Studies in Conservation 38, 206–212 (1993).
183.
Rika Smith, Janice H. Carlson and Richard M. Newman. An Investigation into the Deterioration of Painted Limoges Enamel Plaques c. 1470-1530. Studies in Conservation 32, 102–113 (1987).
184.
Stapleton, C. P., Freestone, I. C. & Bowman, S. G. E. Composition and Origin of Early Mediaeval Opaque Red Enamel from Britain and Ireland. Journal of Archaeological Science 26, 913–921 (1999).
185.
Tait, H. & Freestone, I. Painted enamel ‘patches’: a nineteenth century virtuoso restorer’s technique. in New research on Limoges enamels 117–122 (2004).
186.
Verita, M., Cagnini, A., Galeotti, M., Cavalca, N. & Porcinai, S. Compositional Analysis of 14th-15th Century Enamels from the Altar of San Giovanni in Florence: an Integrated Study by Portable X-Ray Fluorescence and Electron Probe Microanalysis. Archaeometry 55, 1048–1066 (2013).
187.
Wypyski, M. T. Renaissance Enameled Jewelry and 19th century Renaissance Revival: Characterization of Enamel Compositions. MRS Proceedings 712, (2002).
188.
Berrera, J. & Velde, B. A study of French medieval glass composition. Journal of Glass Studies 31, 48–54 (1989).
189.
Cable, M. The operation of wood-fired glass-melting furnaces. in The prehistory & history of glassmaking technology / editor Patrick McCray. 315–330 (1998).
190.
Cox, G. A. & Gillies, K. J. S. The x-ray fluorescence analysis of Medieval durable blue soda glass from York Minster. Archaeometry 28, 57–68 (1986).
191.
Cox, G. A., Heavens, O. S., Newton, R. G. & Pollard, A. M. A study of the weathering behaviour of medieval glass from York Minster. Journal of glass studies 21, 54–75 (1979).
192.
Freestone, I. C. & Bimson, M. Early Venetian enamelling on glass: technology and origins. in Materials issues in art and archaeology IV : Cancun, Mexico, May 16-20, 1994 : abstracts 54–75 (1995).
193.
Freestone, I. & Bimson, M. Multi-disciplinary Investigation of the Windows of John Thornton, focusing on the Great East Window of York Minster. in The art of collaboration: stained-glass conservation in the Twenty-First Century 151–158 (2010).
194.
Jackson, C.M. Medieval and post-medieval glass technology: seasonal changes in the composition of bracken ashes from different habitats through a growing season. Glass Technology - European Journal of Glass Science and Technology Part A 49, 240–245 (2008).
195.
Jackson, C. M. & Smedley, J. W. Theophilus and the use of beech ash as a glassmaking alkali. in Archaeology, history and science: integrating approaches to ancient materials vol. Publications of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London 117–130 (Left Coast Press, 2008).
196.
Jacoby, D. Raw materials for the glass industries of Venice and the Terraferma, about 1370 - about 1460. Journal of glass studies 35, 65–90 (1993).
197.
Marks, R. Stained glass in England during the Middle Ages. (Routledge, 1993).
198.
Stern, W. B. & Gerber, Y. Potassium-Calcium Glass: New Data and Experiments. Archaeometry 46, 137–156 (2004).
199.
Smedley J.W. Medieval and post-medieval glass technology: a review of bracken in glassmaking. Glass Technology - European Journal of Glass Science and Technology Part A 43, 221–224 (2002).
200.
Smedley J.W. Medieval and post-medieval glass technology: batch measuring practices. Glass Technology - European Journal of Glass Science and Technology Part A 43, 22–27 (2002).
201.
Verita, M. Comments on W.B. Stern and Y. Gerber’s ‘Postassium-calcium glass: new data and experiments’, Archaeometry, 46 (1) (2004), 137-56. Archaeometry 47, 667–669 (2005).
202.
Mecking, O. Medieval lead glass in Central Europe. Archaeometry 55, 640–662 (2013).
203.
Verità, M. Analytical investigation of European enamelled beakers of the 13th and 14th centuries. Journal of glass studies 37, 83–98 (1995).
204.
Verita, M. Analyses of Early Enamelled Venetian Glass: A Comparison with Islamic Glass. in Gilded and enamelled glass from the Middle East 129–134 (Published for the Trustees of the British Museum by British Museum Press, 1998).
205.
Wedepohl, K. H. Chemical Composition of Medieval Glass from Excavations in West Germany. Glass science and technology 70, 246–255.
206.
Wedepohl, K. H. & Baumann, A. Isotope composition of Medieval lead glasses reflecting early silver production in Central Europe. Mineralium Deposita 32, 292–295 (1997).
207.
Wedepohl, K. H., Krueger, I. & Hartmann, G. Medieval lead glass from North-Western Europe. Journal of glass studies 37, 65–82 (1995).
208.
Wedepohl, K. H. & Simon, K. The chemical composition of medieval wood ash glass from Central Europe. Chemie der Erde - Geochemistry 70, 89–97 (2010).
209.
Wedepohl, K. H., Simon, K. & Kronz, A. Data on 61 chemical elements for the characterization of three major glass compositions in late Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Archaeometry 53, 81–102 (2011).
210.
Biron, I. & Verità, M. Analytical investigation on Renaissance Venetian enamelled glasses from the Louvre collections. Journal of Archaeological Science 39, 2706–2713 (2012).
211.
Cable, M. & Smedley, I. W. Liquidus Temperatures and Melting Characteristics of Some Early Container Glasses. Glass technology 28, 94–98 (1987).
212.
Craddock, P. T. Scientific investigation of copies, fakes and forgeries. (Butterworth-Heinemann, 2009).
213.
Crossley, D. W. & Huguenot Library. The performance of the glass industry in sixteenth-century England. vol. Economic history review. [Offprint].
214.
Crossley, D. An introduction to the archaeology of the glass industry: The monuments protection. Industrial Archaeology Review 34, 24–36 (2012).
215.
De Raedt, I., Janssens, K. & Veekman, J. Compositional distinctions between 16th century ‘facon-de-Venise’ and Venetian glass vessels excavated in Antwerp, Belgium. Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry 14, 493–498 (1999).
216.
De Raedt, I., Jansses, K. & Veekman, J. On the distinction between 16th and 17th century Venetian and ‘Facon de Venise’ glass. in The prehistory & history of glassmaking technology / editor Patrick McCray. (2002).
217.
Dungworth, D. The Value of Historic Window Glass. The Historic Environment 2, 21–48 (2011).
218.
Dungworth, D. Historic window glass. The use of chemical analysis to date manufacture. Journal of architectural conservation. 18, 7–25 (2012).
219.
Dungworth, David. Historic windows: investigation of composition groups with nondestructive pXRF. Glass Technology - European Journal of Glass Science and Technology Part A 53, 192–197 (2012).
220.
Eramo, G. The glass-melting crucibles of Derrière Sairoche (1699–1714 AD, Ct. Bern, Switzerland): a petrological approach. Journal of Archaeological Science 33, 440–452 (2006).
221.
Dungworth, D. Three and a half centuries of bottle manufacture. Industrial Archaeology Review 34, 37–50 (2012).
222.
Freestone, I. The Science of Early British Porcelain. International Ceramics fair and seminar 19–27 http://www.academia.edu/3122772/The_Science_of_Early_British_Porcelain (2000).
223.
Freestone, I. The Hope Goblet Reconsidered: I Technological Considerations. Journal of Glass Studies 50,.
224.
International Association for the History of Glass. Congress 2003 : London, England). The Bonus Eventus plaque - changing materials, changing perceptions. in Annales du 16e Congrès de l’Association internationale pour l’histoire du verre, London, 2003. 391–395 (2005).
225.
Gratuze, B. & Janssens, K. Provenance analysis of glass artefacts. in Non-destructive microanalysis of cultural heritage materials / edited by K. Janssens, R. Van Grieken. 663–712 (2004).
226.
Kingery, W. P. & P. B. Vandiver. The 18th century change in technology and style from the Famille-Verte to the Famille-Rose palette. in Technology and style vol. Ceramics and civilization 363–381 (American Ceramic Society, 1985).
227.
Christine MacLeod. Accident or Design? George Ravenscroft’s Patent and the Invention of Lead-Crystal Glass. Technology and Culture 28, 776–803 (1987).
228.
Verità, M. L’invenzione del cristallo muranese: una verifica analitica delle fonti storiche. RIVISTA DELLA STAZIONE SPERIMENTALE DEL VETRO 15, 17–29 (1985).
229.
Wypyski, M. T. Technical study of Renaissance Venetian enamelled glass. in Annales du 17e Congrès de l’Association Internationale pour l’Histoire du Verre, Anvers, 2006 = Annales of the 17th Congress of the International Association for the History of Glass, 2006, Antwerp / K. Janssens ... [et al.], éditeurs. 529–535 (2009).
230.
Wypyski, M. T. Renaissance Enameled Jewelry and 19th century Renaissance Revival: Characterization of Enamel Compositions. MRS Proceedings 712, (2002).
231.
Essay titles and suggested reading lists.
232.
Nicholson, Paul T., Gerisch, Rainer, Brook, Elina, & Jackson, Caroline M. Brilliant things for Akhenaten: the production of glass, vitreous materials and pottery at Amarna Site O45.1. vol. Excavation memoir (Egypt Exploration Society, 2007).
233.
Paul T. Nicholson, Caroline M. Jackson and Katharine M. Trott. The Ulu Burun Glass Ingots, Cylindrical Vessels and Egyptian Glass. The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 83, 143–153 (1997).
234.
Smirniou, M. & Rehren, TH. Direct evidence of primary glass production in late Bronze Age Amarna, Egypt. Archaeometry 53, 58–80 (2011).
235.
Henderson, J. Localised production or trade?  Advances in the study of cobalt blue and Islamic glasses in the Levant and Europe. in Patterns and Process: A Festschrift in Honor of Dr. Edward V. Sayre 227–245 (Smithsonian Center for Materials Research and Education (2003), 2003).
236.
Gratuze et al., B. The origin of cobalt blue pigments in French glass from the thirteenth to the eighteenth centuries. in Trade and discovery: the scientific study of artefacts from Post-Medieval Europe and beyond vol. Occasional paper / British Museum 123–133 (Department of Scientific Research, British Museum, 1995).
237.
Shortland, A. J., Tite, M. S. & Ewart, I. Ancient exploitation and use of cobalt alums from the Western Oases of Egypt. Archaeometry 153–168 (2006) doi:10.1111/j.1475-4754.2006.00248.x.
238.
Wood, N., Tite, M. S., Doherty, C. & Gilmore, B. A Technological examination of Ninth-Tenth Century Ad Abbasid blue-and-white ware from Iraq, and its comparison with Eighth Century Ad Chinese blue-and-white Sancai Ware. Archaeometry 49, 665–684 (2007).
239.
Degryse, P. & Schneider, J. Pliny the Elder and Sr–Nd isotopes: tracing the provenance of raw materials for Roman glass production. Journal of Archaeological Science 35, 1993–2000 (2008).
240.
Freestone, I. C., Leslie, K. A., Thirlwall, M. & Gorin-Rosen, Y. Strontium Isotopes in the Investigation of Early Glass Production: Byzantine and Early Islamic Glass from the Near East. Archaeometry 45, 19–32 (2003).
241.
Wedepohl, K. H. & Baumann, A. The Use of Marine Molluskan Shells for Roman Glass and Local Raw Glass Production in the Eifel Area (Western Germany). Naturwissenschaften 87, 129–132 (2000).
242.
Dussubieux, L., Kusimba, C. M., Gogte, V., & Et al. The trading of ancient glass beads: new analytical data from South Asian and East African soda-alumina glass beads. In: Archaeometry. Archaeometry 50, 797–821 (2008).
243.
Lankton, J., Ige, A. & Rehren, T. Early primary glass production in southern Nigeria. Journal of African Archaeology 4, 111–138 (2006).
244.
Robertshaw, P. & Weise, C. Chemical Analysis of Glass from Nupe, Nigeria. Tribus 58, 83–95 (2009).
245.
Dungworth, D. & Brain, C. Late 17th-Century Crystal Glass: An Analytical Investigation. Journal of glass studies 51, 111–137 (2009).
246.
Christine MacLeod. Accident or Design? George Ravenscroft’s Patent and the Invention of Lead-Crystal Glass. Technology and Culture 28, 776–803 (1987).
247.
Moody, B. E. Life of George Ravenscroft. Glass technology 29, 198–210 (1988).
248.
The life of George Ravenscroft: an adendum. Glass Technology 30, (1989).
249.
Moretti, C. & Zecchin, P. English lead crystal and Ravenscroft’s formulation: additional information from Venetian sources. in Annales du 17e Congrès de l’Association Internationale pour l’Histoire du Verre, Anvers, 2006 =: Annales of the 17th Congress of the International Association for the History of Glass, 2006, Antwerp 431–434 (University Press Antwerp, 2009).
250.
Allen, D. Roman Window Glass. in Artefacts and archaeology: aspects of the Celtic and Roman world 102–111 (University of Wales Press, 2002).
251.
DeLaine, J. The baths of Caracalla: a study in the design, construction, and economics of large-scale building projects in imperial Rome. vol. Journal of Roman archaeology (Journal of Roman Archaeology, 1997).
252.
James W. Ring. Windows, Baths, and Solar Energy in the Roman Empire. American Journal of Archaeology 100, 717–724 (1996).
253.
Dungworth, D. Three and a half centuries of bottle manufacture. Industrial Archaeology Review 34, 37–50 (2012).
254.
Dugworth, D., Degryse, P. & Schneider, J. Kelp in historic glass: the application of strontium isotope analysis. in Isotopes in vitreous materials vol. Studies in archaeological sciences 113–130 (Leuven University Press, 2009).
255.
Thomas C. McErlean. Archaeology of the Strangford Lough Kelp Industry in the Eighteenth- and Early-Nineteenth Centuries. Historical Archaeology 41, 76–93 (2007).
256.
Rymer, L. The Scottish kelp industry. Scottish Geographical Magazine 90, 142–152 (1974).