Archaeometry Workshop on
"Ancient Ceramics and their Pigments"
March 22nd to 26th 2021 in Tübingen

Bild von Mikroskop
Szenen aus der Archäometrie 3

This workshop offers a broad introduction to the technological study of pigments and decoration techniques in archaeological ceramics through a material science approach. It provides training in the principles of optical microscopy, X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, X-ray fluorescence and scanning electron microscopy, as needed for the interpretation of pottery decorations.

At the end of the workshop, the participants will have a good understanding of the foundations of the most established archaeometric techniques employed in the study of different types of pottery pigments and decorations. In addition, they will acquire practical experience with these archaeometric techniques and their application to the study of pigments and decoration and the ability to design research projects that employ instrumental analyses to address archaeological questions.

  • Program

  • Speakers

    • Amicone

      Dr. Silvia Amicone

      Coordinator and speaker

      Silvia Amicone is a research scientist at the University of Tübingen (CCA-BW) and Honorary Research Fellow at the archaeological institute of the University College London. Her research focuses on archaeomaterials, particularly on the analysis of pottery technology in contexts of intense socio-cultural innovation.

    • Berthold

      Dr. Christoph Berthold

      Dr. Christoph Berthold is the head of the Competence Center Archaeometry – Baden-Wuerttemberg (CCA-BW) at the Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen. His research covers a wider range of material science issues regarding ancient and modern materials and the development of analytical methods to study such objects.

    • Heinze

      Dr. Lars Heinze

      Lars Heinze holds a doctorate in classical archaeology and is a lecturer at the Goethe University of Frankfurt. As part of the company ArchaeoConnect GmbH, Tübingen he is, among other things, currently responsible for artefact analyses. His work focuses on the cultural-historical study of Greek and Roman ceramic finds as well as their scientific investigation, especially with the help of portable X-ray fluorescence devices.

    • Lauxmann

      Frieder Lauxmann, M.Sc.

      Frieder Lauxmann, M.Sc. is doctoral student at the Competence Center Archaeometry – Baden-Wuerttemberg (CCA-BW) at the Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen since 2018. In addition to the characterisation of inorganic materials, he is also working on the properties of additively manufactured plastics as part of his doctorate.

    Special guests

    • Siotis

      Dr. Eleni Aloupi Siotis

      Dr. Eleni Aloupi Siotis is a Chemist and an Archaeological Scientist, but also an entrepreneur with a research interest in ancient knowledge transfer and manufacturing processes. She specialises in the analysis of ancient ceramic techniques and artefacts and their fully functional reproductions.

    • Cavallo

      Dr. Giovanni Cavallo

      Dr. Giovanni Cavallo is a senior researcher and lecturer at the University of Applied Sciences and Arts of Southern Switzerland (SUPSI). His research activities focus on historic and archaeological materials, including the technologies of production and provenance studies.

    • Maritan

      Dr. Lara Maritan

      Dr. Lara Maritan is an associated professor in Georesources and minero-petrographic applications for the environment and cultural heritage at the Department of Geosciences, University of Padova. Her research activity mainly focused on the application of petrography to the study of cultural heritage materials, on experimental petrology with the aim to model firing processes of traditional ceramics and on microstructural and physical-mechanical analysis of modern bricks.

    • Siddall

      Dr. Ruth Siddall

      Dr. Ruth Siddall is a geologist who studies the mineralogy of cultural materials, pigments, stones, ceramics and cements in archaeological and contemporary contexts. Educated at the University of Birmingham and at University College London, she has conducted research into materiality in classical and medieval archaeological contexts and has recently held the post of Scientist in Residence at the Slade School of Fine Art working with contemporary fine artists. She is a co-author of “Pigment Compendium: A Dictionary and Optical Microscopy of Historic Pigments”.

    Students

    • Frenken

      Marcel Frenken, B.Sc.

    • Koutouvaki

      Eirini Koutouvaki, M.A.

    • Solard

      Baptiste Solard, M.Sc.

  • Associates

      Logo von Klaus Tschira

      Klaus Tschira Foundation

      The Klaus Tschira Foundation (KTS) promotes natural sciences, mathematics and computer science and aims to contribute to the appreciation of these subjects. It was established in 1995 by the physicist and SAP co-founder Klaus Tschira with private funds. The nationwide commitment begins in kindergarten and continues in schools, universities and research institutions. The foundation advocates new ways of communicating scientific content.

      www.klaus-tschira-stiftung.de
      Logo der Universität Tübingen

      University of Tübingen

      The University of Tübingen is one of eleven German universities which in 2012 and now again in 2019 has been honoured as excellent. In the life sciences, it offers cutting-edge research in the fields of neurosciences, translational immunology and cancer research, microbiology and infection research as well as molecular biology. Other research priorities are machine learning, geo- and environmental research, archaeology and anthropology, language and cognition as well as education and media. More than 27,600 students from all over the world are currently enrolled. They can choose from more than 330 courses of study.

      In archaeometry, the University has a unique breadth with the Competence Center Archaeometry - Baden Wuerttemberg (CCA-BW), the Institute of Natural Science Archaeology (INA) and the course of studies "Natural Science Archaeology" as main and subsidiary subject in material science analytics, geoarchaeology and the biologically oriented fields of palaeoanthropology, archaeobotany or archaeozoology.

      www.uni-tuebingen.de
      Logo der Universität Tübingen

      CEZA gGmbH

      The Curt-Engelhorn-Zentrum für Archöometrie (CEZA) is a subsidiary of the Curt-Engelhorn-Foundation for the Reiss-Engelhorn-Museums and a nationally and internationally operating research institute, which answers questions of natural and cultural history with most modern, innovative technology and research. In addition to its role as a renowned research institution, CEZA also acts as a service provider for public institutions, companies and private individuals. The portfolio of scientific research includes authenticity, material identification, origin, technology, age determination, bioarchaeology and climate research. Through its participation in EU projects, international cooperation and publications in internationally recognised journals, CEZA's work is also visible internationally.

      www.ceza.de
Logo der Klaus Tschira Stiftung Logo der Universität Tübingen Logo der Curt-Engelhorn-Zentrum Archäometrie gGmbH
  • Privacy
  • Imprint