4.7 Article

Pottery kiln and drying oven from Aventicum (2nd century AD, Ct. Vaud, Switzerland): Raw materials and temperature distribution

Journal

APPLIED CLAY SCIENCE
Volume 82, Issue -, Pages 16-23

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.clay.2013.06.015

Keywords

Roman Empire; Aventicum; Pottery kiln; Drying oven; Temperature distribution

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Fireboxes of two pottery structures, excavated in 2002 at Aventicum (at present Avenches), the capital of Roman Switzerland, were studied to understand their function in the artisan quarter. Twenty-one oriented samples underwent petrographical, mineralogical and chemical analyses to determine the nature of the raw materials and the temperature distribution. Both structures are typologically different and show differing degrees of thermal impacts. Inferred maximum temperatures for kiln Structure 6, as deduced from phase associations, were as high as 1050-1200 degrees C. Such high temperatures are typically recorded in fireboxes of ceramic kilns. Structure 180 is proposed to have been a drying oven, as evidenced by: (1) its phase associations, pointing to maximum firing temperatures of c. 950-1050 degrees C, and (2) its unusual shape. Six out of seven clays from the artisan quarter revealed Ca-rich composition, but the Ca-poor one was preferentially used by Roman potters for bricks and clay binders to build the two structures. Such refractory clays are obviously better suited to withstand higher firing temperatures and for a longer period than Ca-rich clays. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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