skip to navigation
ADS Main Website
Help
|
Login
/
Browse by Series
/
Series
/ Journal Issue
Geoarchaeology 18 (8)
Title
The title of the publication or report
Title:
Geoarchaeology 18 (8)
Series
The series the publication or report is included in
Series:
Geoarchaeology
Volume
Volume number and part
Volume:
18 (8)
Publication Type
The type of publication - report, monograph, journal article or chapter from a book
Publication Type:
Journal
Editor
The editor of the publication or report
Editor:
Rolfe D Mandel
Paul Goldberg
Publisher
The publisher of the publication or report
Publisher:
John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Year of Publication
The year the book, article or report was published
Year of Publication:
2003
Source
Where the record has come from or which dataset it was orginally included in.
Source:
BIAB (The British & Irish Archaeological Bibliography (BIAB))
Relations
Other resources which are relevant to this publication or report
Relations:
URI:
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/jtoc/36011/2003
Created Date
The date the record of the pubication was first entered
Created Date:
17 Feb 2005
Please click on an Article link to go to the Article Details.
Article Title
Access Type
Author / Editor
Page
Start/End
Abstract
From London to Liverpool; evidence for a Limehouse-Reid porcelain connection...
J V Owen
Maurice Hillis
851 - 882
The diversity of Brownlow Hill porcelains of the Wm Reid & Co. era is due to the remarkably wide range in the composition of their pastes and glazes and inferred firing conditions relative to the initial vitrification temperature. Sixteen of twenty-one analyzed sherds from the factory site are bone-ash wares that display large variations in their bulk chemical composition. The remaining samples have silicious-aluminous and silicious-aluminous-calcic (S-A-C) compositions that resemble Limehouse (London) and Pomona (Staffordshire) porcelains produced during the 1740s. The mineralogy of the Brownlow Hill S-A-C sherds suggests firing at a relatively high temperature, thereby obscuring the identity of some of the ingredients used in their manufacture. Limehouse and Brownlow Hill may have been linked through the activities of William Ball, who is mentioned in connection with both factories, or indirectly via former Limehouse staff later employed at the Pomona factory, located not far from a Wm Reid & Co. branch factory in Shelton, Stoke-on-Trent. In terms of a time line, knowledge of these pastes appears to have spread first from London to Staffordshire, and then to Liverpool.
A very remote period indeed: Papers on the Palaeolithic presented to Derek Roe
Keith N Wilkinson
Keith N Wilkinson
901 - 903