A geochemical study of Roman to early Byzantine Glass from Sagalassos, South-west Turkey
暂无分享,去创建一个
J. Poblome | M. Waelkens | P. Degryse | P. Muchez | J. Schneider | U. Haack
[1] M. Waelkens,et al. The evolution of the settlement pattern from prehistoric until recent times , 2003 .
[2] V. Kilikoglou,et al. ROMAN GLASS‐MAKING AT COPPERGATE, YORK? ANALYTICAL EVIDENCE FOR THE NATURE OF PRODUCTION* , 2003 .
[3] J. Price. Broken bottles and quartz-sand : glass production in Yorkshire and the North in the Roman period. , 2003 .
[4] J. Poblome,et al. Geoarchaeological investigations of the “potters' quarter” at Sagalassos, southwest Turkey , 2003 .
[5] J. Henderson. Tradition and experiment in first millennium a.d. glass production--the emergence of early Islamic glass technology in late antiquity. , 2002, Accounts of chemical research.
[6] Ian C. Freestone,et al. The origins of Byzantine glass from Maroni Petrera, Cyprus , 2002 .
[7] M. Waelkens. Romanization in the East: a case study: Sagalassos and Pisidia (SW Turkey) , 2002 .
[8] Patrick Degryse,et al. A preliminary interdisciplinary reconnaissance of the glass found at Roman Sagalassos , 2002 .
[9] S. Kingsley,et al. Economy and Exchange in the East Mediterranean during Late Antiquity , 2001 .
[10] Julian Henderson,et al. The Science and Archaeology of Materials: An Investigation of Inorganic Materials , 2001 .
[11] K. H. Wedepohl,et al. The Use of Marine Molluskan Shells for Roman Glass and Local Raw Glass Production in the Eifel Area (Western Germany) , 2000, Naturwissenschaften.
[12] M. Picon,et al. Ateliers primaires et secondaires en Egypte à l'époque gréco-romaine , 2000 .
[13] I. Freestone,et al. Primary glass from Israel and the production of glass in Late Antiquity and the early Islamic period , 2000 .
[14] Julian Henderson,et al. The science and archaeology of materials , 2000 .
[15] I. Freestone,et al. The great glass slab at Bet-She'Arim, Israel: An early Islamic glassmaking experiment? , 1999 .
[16] Jeroen Poblome,et al. Sagalassos Red Slip Ware: Typology and Chronology , 1998 .
[17] H. Cool,et al. The manufacture of glass in Roman York , 1998 .
[18] J. Poblome,et al. Sagalassos and Alexandria. Exchange in the Eastern Mediterranean , 1998 .
[19] T. Rehren. RAMESSIDE GLASS‐COLOURING CRUCIBLES* , 1997 .
[20] R. Newton,et al. Conservation of glass , 1992 .
[21] W. Todt. Isotope dilution measurements of Pb, U and Th concentrations in lorandite from Allchar , 1988 .
[22] Julian Henderson,et al. THE RAW MATERIALS OF EARLY GLASS PRODUCTION , 1985 .
[23] J. Drever,et al. The geochemistry of natural waters , 1988 .
[24] K. Ludwig. Calculation of uncertainties of U-Pb isotope data , 1980 .
[25] J. Bayley,et al. Glass and other vitreous materials , 1979 .
[26] F. Strelow,et al. Separation of lead from tin, antimony, niobium, tantalum, molybdenum, and tungsten by cation exchange chromatography in tartaric-nitric acid mixtures , 1975 .
[27] S. Saleh,et al. STUDY OF GLASS AND GLASS-MAKING PROCESSES AT WADI EL-NATRUN, EGYPT IN THE ROMAN PERIOD 30 B.C. TO 359 A.D. , 1972 .
[28] David Gilead,et al. Handaxe industries in Israel and the Near East , 1970 .
[29] F. Toerien,et al. Separation of Lead(II), from Bismuth(III), Thallium(III), Cadmium(II), Mercury(II), Gold(III), Platinum(IV), Palladium(II), and Other Elements by Anion Exchange Chromatography. , 1966 .