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Zuliskandar Ramli
  • Kajang, Selangor, Malaysia
The aim of this study was to determine whether pottery shards from Dahan-e Ghulaman were locally made or imported from elsewhere. Dahan-e Ghulaman is one of the most ancient settlements in Iran’s Sistan during the Achaemenid period. The... more
The aim of this study was to determine whether pottery shards from Dahan-e Ghulaman were locally
made or imported from elsewhere. Dahan-e Ghulaman is one of the most ancient settlements in Iran’s
Sistan during the Achaemenid period. The study shows that the antiquity of the site goes back to the
6th and 5th centuries BC, the earthenware found in Dahan-e Ghulaman being simple and unpainted in
buff and buffish red colours. However, another type of pottery also can be observed in the Dahan-e
Ghulaman collection; these are painted red inside and milky outside, and are similar to ceramics from
the Nadali site in Afghanistan. The dishes include short cups with wide mouths in red and orange.
Archaeologists believe that most of the pottery shards are locally made; hence, to test this hypothesis,
a scientific analysis was done to determine the chemical composition of the pottery shards. X-Rays
Fluorescence (XRF) was applied to determine the major and trace elements of the pottery shards. The
results demonstrate that most of the pottery shards are in the same group and this strongly suggests that
they are local products. Additionally, based on the major and trace elements, it can be suggested that
five samples are not locally made.
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ABSTRACT
Page 1. X-ray fluorescent analysis on Indo-Pacific glass beads from Sungai Mas archaeological sites, Kedah, Malaysia Zuliskandar Ramli • Nik Hassan Shuhaimi Nik Abdul Rahman • Abdul Latif Samian Received: 18 August ...