Ageing of low-firing prehistoric ceramics in hydrothermal conditions

Remains of a prehistoric ceramic object, a moon-shaped idol from the Bronze Age found in archaeological site Zdiby near Prague in the Czech Republic, were studied especially in terms of the firing temperature. Archaeological ceramics was usually fired at temperatures below 1000 °C. It contained unst...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Petra Zemenová, Alexandra Kloužková, Martina Kohoutková
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Novi Sad 2012-03-01
Series:Processing and Application of Ceramics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tf.uns.ac.rs/publikacije/PAC/pdf/PAC%2015%2007.pdf
Description
Summary:Remains of a prehistoric ceramic object, a moon-shaped idol from the Bronze Age found in archaeological site Zdiby near Prague in the Czech Republic, were studied especially in terms of the firing temperature. Archaeological ceramics was usually fired at temperatures below 1000 °C. It contained unstable non-crystalline products, residua after calcination of clay components of a ceramic material. These products as metakaolinite can undergo a reverse rehydration to a structure close to kaolinite. The aim of this work was to prove whether the identified kaolinite in archaeological ceramics is a product of rehydration. The model compound containing high amount of kaolinite was prepared in order to follow its changes during calcination and hydrothermal treatment. Archaeological ceramics and the model compound were treated by hydrothermal ageing and studied by XRF, XRD and IR analyses. It was proved that the presence of kaolinite in the border-parts of the archaeological object was not a product of rehydration, but that it originated from the raw materials.
ISSN:1820-6131