|
Date: |
|
Description: | Pottery body sherd with two parallel linear grooves, about 8 mm apart, running horizontally across the width of the sherd. The sherd is made of gabbroic clay that weathers over the gabbro outcrop on the Lizard in Cornwall. The fabric has inclusions of pale felspars, dark augite and mica and is orangey-brown on the exterior and dark brown on the interior of the sherd. This gabbroic fabric and type of decoration are seen on Grooved Ware vessels, dating from c.2900-2400 BC (Henrietta Quinnell, forthcoming).Anna Brindley in Cleal & MacSween (1999) illustrates similar parallel grooves spaced apart on a Grooved Ware vessel from Spong Hill in Norfolk, on page 140, Fig.14.2, No.17.
Original Image | Publisher: | http://finds.org.uk | Source: | Portable Antiquities | Identifier: | http://finds.org.uk/database/artefacts/r... | Go to resource |
|
More Like this...
-
POT
Pottery body sherd made of…
-
POT
Pottery rim sherd made of…
-
POT
Pottery body sherd with a…
-
POT
Pottery body sherd with a…
-
POT
Pottery body sherd made of…
-
POT
Pottery body sherd with a…
-
POT
Pottery body sherd made of…
-
POT
Pottery body sherd made of…
-
POT
Pottery body sherd made of…
-
POT
Pottery body sherd made of…
|