Studies focusing on the provenance and manufacturing technology of these types of artefacts rely on the identification of characteristic petrographic.
Ceramic petrographic thin sections.
Samples are ground to a thickness of 0 03 mm and mounted on a glass slide.
Ceramic petrography or ceramic petrology is a laboratory based scientific archaeological technique that examines the mineralogical and microstructural composition of ceramics and other inorganic materials under the polarised light microscope in order to interpret aspects of the provenance and technology of artefacts.
Grain mount thin section.
Grain mount thin section with red or blue epoxy.
Data from the thin section petrographic analysis of archaeological pottery and other ceramic materials such as brick tile daub and clay pipes is not well represented in the published literature.
Standard 27x46mm large 3 x2 thin sections.
Ceramic petrography analytical service.
A cover slip is glued onto the exposed surface.
Fundamentally petrography employs techniques borrowed from geology to examine ancient pottery to identify the materials used to manufacture the ceramic objects.
Ceramic thin section petrography petrology archaeology mineralogy.
Professional thin section petrographic and geochemical analysis of archaeological pottery cbm metallurgical ceramics building stone plaster and lithics for the interpretation of provenance and craft technology.
Thin section ceramic petrography is a versatile interdisciplinary analytical tool for the characterization and interpretation of archaeological pottery and related artefacts including ceramic building materials refractories and plaster.
The interpretation of archaeological pottery related artefacts in thin section.
Ceramic petrography analytical service professional thin section petrographic and geochemical analysis of archaeological pottery cbm metallurgical ceramics building stone plaster and lithics for the interpretation of provenance and craft technology.
Mary ownby with the petrographic microscope that is specifically designed to examine rock and pottery thin sections.
Alternatively non cubic ceramics can be prepared as thin sections also known as petrography for examination by polarized transmitted light microscopy in this technique the specimen is sawed to 1 mm thick glued to a microscope slide and ground or sawed e g by microtome to a thickness x approaching 30 µm.