Chemical composition of clays as indicator of the raw material sources

The paper presents the results of study on the chemical composition of unglazed pottery from the excavations of the Bulgar fortified settlement site and the clay, selected from the modern deposits of ceramic raw materials located near the medieval settlement sites. Significant differences in macro-...

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Main Author: Khramchenkova Rezida Kh.
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: TAS 2014-06-01
Series:Povolžskaâ Arheologiâ
Subjects:
Online Access:http://archaeologie.pro/archive/8/148/
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spelling doaj-ec2a867954b44c43932db4979fa968132020-11-24T20:41:28ZrusTASPovolžskaâ Arheologiâ2306-40992500-28562014-06-012817620410.24852/pa2014.2.8.176.204Chemical composition of clays as indicator of the raw material sourcesKhramchenkova Rezida Kh. 0Institute of Archaeology named after A. Kh. Khalikov, Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Tatarstan. Butlerov St., 30, Kazan, 420012, the Republic of Tatarstan, Russian FederationThe paper presents the results of study on the chemical composition of unglazed pottery from the excavations of the Bulgar fortified settlement site and the clay, selected from the modern deposits of ceramic raw materials located near the medieval settlement sites. Significant differences in macro- and microelement composition of different groups of ceramics have been revealed. The difference in the macroelemental composition is largely determined by the ceramic fabric recipe. Thus, the high calcium content corresponds to the addition of river shells, the high content of silicon results from sand addition. A more interesting picture has been revealed in the course of studies of the so-called “trace elements” (microelements). Nine groups of ceramics with different elemental set have been distinguished. The first two groups consist of imported ceramics; other groups have demonstrated a rather pronounced elemental composition. The most notable variations are observed in chromium, vanadium and nickel content. Similar microelement composition variety has been observed in clays from deposits of different localization, while the concentration of the mentioned elements in a variety of clays also differs considerably. Therefore, marker elements typical of different clays have been identified. A comparative analysis of the data obtained for clay raw materials and ceramics has been conducted. The results demonstrate the potential of studying the elemental composition in order to determine the localization of the raw material sources for ceramic production.http://archaeologie.pro/archive/8/148/the Middle Volga regionthe Bulgar fortified settlement sitemedieval ceramicschemical compositionmicroelementssources of ceramic raw materials
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Khramchenkova Rezida Kh.
spellingShingle Khramchenkova Rezida Kh.
Chemical composition of clays as indicator of the raw material sources
Povolžskaâ Arheologiâ
the Middle Volga region
the Bulgar fortified settlement site
medieval ceramics
chemical composition
microelements
sources of ceramic raw materials
author_facet Khramchenkova Rezida Kh.
author_sort Khramchenkova Rezida Kh.
title Chemical composition of clays as indicator of the raw material sources
title_short Chemical composition of clays as indicator of the raw material sources
title_full Chemical composition of clays as indicator of the raw material sources
title_fullStr Chemical composition of clays as indicator of the raw material sources
title_full_unstemmed Chemical composition of clays as indicator of the raw material sources
title_sort chemical composition of clays as indicator of the raw material sources
publisher TAS
series Povolžskaâ Arheologiâ
issn 2306-4099
2500-2856
publishDate 2014-06-01
description The paper presents the results of study on the chemical composition of unglazed pottery from the excavations of the Bulgar fortified settlement site and the clay, selected from the modern deposits of ceramic raw materials located near the medieval settlement sites. Significant differences in macro- and microelement composition of different groups of ceramics have been revealed. The difference in the macroelemental composition is largely determined by the ceramic fabric recipe. Thus, the high calcium content corresponds to the addition of river shells, the high content of silicon results from sand addition. A more interesting picture has been revealed in the course of studies of the so-called “trace elements” (microelements). Nine groups of ceramics with different elemental set have been distinguished. The first two groups consist of imported ceramics; other groups have demonstrated a rather pronounced elemental composition. The most notable variations are observed in chromium, vanadium and nickel content. Similar microelement composition variety has been observed in clays from deposits of different localization, while the concentration of the mentioned elements in a variety of clays also differs considerably. Therefore, marker elements typical of different clays have been identified. A comparative analysis of the data obtained for clay raw materials and ceramics has been conducted. The results demonstrate the potential of studying the elemental composition in order to determine the localization of the raw material sources for ceramic production.
topic the Middle Volga region
the Bulgar fortified settlement site
medieval ceramics
chemical composition
microelements
sources of ceramic raw materials
url http://archaeologie.pro/archive/8/148/
work_keys_str_mv AT khramchenkovarezidakh chemicalcompositionofclaysasindicatoroftherawmaterialsources
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