4.1 Article

Approaches to interrogate the erased histories of recycled archaeological objects

Journal

ARCHAEOMETRY
Volume 64, Issue -, Pages 187-205

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/arcm.12756

Keywords

dilution; glass; glazed pottery; lead isotopes; log ratios; mixing; silver

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This article presents several approaches to identify recycling in the archaeological record, contributing to a better understanding of motivations behind recycling in prehistory.
Any archaeological artefact made from recyclable material may have been recycled before deposition. Three approaches are presented which have identified recycling in the archaeological record: (1) the application of log ratio analyses to investigate compositional data indicates that Roman glass was recycled and reapplied as a glaze on Parthian pottery, thereby suggesting that the paucity of Parthian and Sasanian glass in the archaeological record is due to recycling; (2) linear mixing lines on plots that combine compositional and isotopic data suggest that most silver found in the Iron Age hoards of the southern Levant was mixed, with vertical mixing lines indicating that some of it was melted down hastily in times of unrest; and (3) histograms of compositional data provide evidence of recycling accompanied by dilution of cobalt-blue glass in New Kingdom Egypt, potentially because the colourant was not available in later periods, thereby questioning the accepted provenance of the cobalt source. It is considered that application of these approaches can contribute to a better understanding of the motivations behind recycling in prehistory.

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