Pottery invention and innovation in East Asia and the Near East

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Abstract

The invention of ceramic objects made from fire-hardened clay represents an important and early step in the development of pyrotechnology. This paper examines pottery invention and innovation by hunter-gatherers in East Asia and by farmers in the Near East to examine how prehistoric communities in different socio-economic systems came to rely heavily on fired-clay containers. Drawing on advances in archaeological science, it examines from a comparative perspective early pottery's broader entanglements related to technology and use and argues that early pottery production by farmers in the Near East can be viewed as a process of innovation in a longer tradition of container technology, while the first hunter-gatherer pottery production in East Asia provides a better case for independent invention.

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APA

Gibbs, K. (2015, March 4). Pottery invention and innovation in East Asia and the Near East. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774314001139

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