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Natural Science Forum / Biology / Paleontology / June 2005



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Article: New Light Shed on Ancient Egyptian Glassmaking

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Robert Karl Stonjek - 21 Jun 2005 08:53 GMT
New Light Shed on Ancient Egyptian Glassmaking
a.. Findings on the Nile Delta reveal details about the process and indicate that large-scale works existed earlier than thought, study says.

By Thomas H. Maugh II, Times Staff Writer

New excavations on the eastern Nile Delta show that ancient Egyptians had large-scale glass-making operations several hundred years earlier than researchers had believed, and the archeological remains provide the first solid evidence about how they did it, British and German researchers report today.

The glass factory at Piramesses, which probably began production around 1250 BC, about a century after the reign of King Tutankhamun, used a two-step process in which pulverized quartz was heated with plant ash in ceramic jars to form a crude solid.

Crushed again, the raw glass was heated to higher temperatures and colorized to form valuable ingots that were shipped to fabricators in Egypt and throughout the Mediterranean region, the research team reports in the journal Science.

"For the first time, we can actually demonstrate that people made glass there and how they did it," said archeologist Thilo Rehren of University College, London, one of the paper's authors. "We're confirming what previously we could only guess about."

Glassmaking is thought to have originated in Mesopotamia - now Iraq and Syria - about 1550 BC.

By 1250, the technology had improved substantially, although artisans could produce only opaque colored glass used to make small items such as perfume containers, figurines and other decorative objects.

Researchers knew that craftsmen at several sites in Egypt were working with glass ingots and using them to fabricate objects of art. But most assumed the ingots were brought in from Mesopotamia or elsewhere. A famous wrecked cargo vessel from about the same era discovered in the 1980s off Ulu Burun on Turkey's southern coast carried 175 such ingots, and researchers had assumed that they were destined for Egypt.

The discovery reported today, however, strongly suggests that the ingots were manufactured in Egypt and bound for the Middle East, said glass expert Robert Brill of the Corning Museum of Glass in Corning, N.Y. Remains of the ceramic vessels used to manufacture ingots at Piramesses were virtually identical to those found on the Ulu Burun wreck, Brill said.

Full Text at the LA Times
http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-sci-glass17jun17,1,424359.story?ctrack=1&
cset=true


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Robert Karl Stonjek

pete - 21 Jun 2005 13:18 GMT
> pulverized quartz

With all of the available extra fine sand in the Sahara,
I wouldn't have expected them to use anything else but sand.

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pete

 
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