Moijabana Rocks-Pilikwe Pots: The Acceleration of Clay Formation by Potters Employing Simple Mechanical Means

IF 1.8 0 ARCHAEOLOGY Ethnoarchaeology Pub Date : 2016-07-02 DOI:10.1080/19442890.2016.1215885
E. Wilmsen, A. Griffiths, P. Thebe, D. Killick, G. Molatlhegi
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

Throughout the history of potting in Botswana, from about CE200 to the present, potters have used a variety of clays. Alluvial clays are favored by most potters today, but petrographic analyses show that prehistoric potters preferred primary clays directly derived from granite and basalt. Fortunately, a few potters in the region today still use granite-derived clays. We trace the processes by which potters of Pilikwe village mine weathered granite from a source at Moijabana and transform it through a series of crushing, pounding, sifting, and wetting actions into a paste that can be used the following day to form pots. These mechanical operations accelerate natural rock weathering processes that form clays and in a single day achieve what in nature takes thousands of years. Successive stages of clay collection and processing were observed, recorded, and filmed; samples from each stage were subsequently analyzed by thin-section optical petrography. Fabrics of pots made from this processed clay were analyzed by identical means and compared with the raw materials.
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Moijabana岩石- pilikwe罐:陶工使用简单机械手段加速粘土形成
在博茨瓦纳的整个制陶历史中,从公元200年到现在,陶工使用了各种各样的粘土。冲积粘土受到今天大多数陶工的青睐,但岩石学分析表明,史前陶工更喜欢直接来自花岗岩和玄武岩的原始粘土。幸运的是,今天该地区的一些陶工仍然使用花岗岩制成的粘土。我们追踪了Pilikwe村的陶工从Moijabana的一个来源开采风化花岗岩的过程,并通过一系列的粉碎、撞击、筛选和润湿动作将其转化为可以在第二天用来制作罐子的糊状物。这些机械操作加速了形成粘土的自然岩石风化过程,在一天内就完成了自然界需要数千年才能完成的任务。粘土收集和加工的连续阶段被观察、记录和拍摄;每个阶段的样品随后用薄片光学岩石学进行分析。用相同的方法分析了用这种粘土制成的陶器的织物,并与原料进行了比较。
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来源期刊
Ethnoarchaeology
Ethnoarchaeology ARCHAEOLOGY-
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: Ethnoarchaeology, a cross-cultural peer-reviewed journal, focuses on the present position, impact of, and future prospects of ethnoarchaeological and experimental studies approaches to anthropological research. The primary goal of this journal is to provide practitioners with an intellectual platform to showcase and appraise current research and theoretical and methodological directions for the 21st century. Although there has been an exponential increase in ethnoarchaeological and experimental research in the past thirty years, there is little that unifies or defines our subdiscipline. Ethnoarchaeology addresses this need, exploring what distinguishes ethnoarchaeological and experimental approaches, what methods connect practitioners, and what unique suite of research attributes we contribute to the better understanding of the human condition. In addition to research articles, the journal publishes book and other media reviews, periodic theme issues, and position statements by noted scholars.
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