Programme

PROGRAMME

First Day : 29th May

Venue : University of Namur, Faculty of Arts

 

8.30-9.00 - Coffee/tea reception and registration

9.00-9.15 - Welcome and Introduction. Laurence Burnez-Lanotte (University of Namur, Belgium), Barbara van Doosselaere (University of Namur,  Belgium)

 

SESSION 1 : Ethnoarchaeology and technology reconstructions microb

Session leader : Alexandre Livingstone Smith (Royal Museum for Central Africa, Belgium)

9.15-9.45 - Raw material selection, landscape, engagement, and paste recipes: insights from ethnoarchaeology. Dean E. Arnold (The Field Museum of Natural History, USA)

9.45-10.15 - Clay pastes and recipes: relating people to landscapes and territories. Alexandre Livingstone Smith (Royal Museum for Central Africa, Belgium), Agnes Vokaer (Free University of Brussels, Belgium), Olivier Gosselain (Free University of Brussels, Belgium)

10.15-10.45 -Traditions techniques et artisanat potier chez les groupes Woloyta et Oromo d’Éthiopie. Des référentiels actualistes pour le perfectionnement des protocoles analytiques des céramiques préhistoriques. Jesse Cauliez (CNRS, France), Claire Manen (CNRS, France), Vincent Ard (CNRS, France), Joséphine Caro (University of Toulouse Le Mirail-Jean Jaurès, France)

 

10.45-11.00 : Coffee Break

 

SESSION 2 : Raw materials acquisition and processing from east to south

Session leader : Claire Manen (CNRS, France)

11.00-11.30 - Continuity and change: the Neolithic ceramics of south and southern-eastern Europe. Michela Spataro  (The British Museum, University College London, UK)

11.30-12.00 - Ceramic raw material preferences from the Early to the late Neolithic in Hungary (6000 – 4500 BC). Attila Kreiter (Hungarian National Museum, Hungary)

 

12.00-13.40 : Lunch Break - Arsenal of Namur

 

SESSION 2 (cont'd) : Raw materials acquisition and processing from east to south

Session leader : Mark Golitko (The Field Museum of Natural History, USA)

13.40-14.10 - Ceramic raw materials acquisition and transfer of technological ideas among the Early Neolithic communities around the Western Carpathians. Agnieszka Czekaj-Zastawny (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland), Anna Rauba-Bukowska (Archeometria, Poland), Sławomir Kadrow (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland)

14.10-14.40 - Pottery making recipes at the dawn of the metal age: selection and processing of raw materials at Belovode and Pločnik. Amicone Silvia (University College London, UK), Patrick Quinn (University College London, UK), Radivojević Miljana (University College London, UK), Thilo Rehren (University College London, Qatar)

14.40-15.10 - Matières premières et technologie : l’exemple de la Céramique Imprimée à Colle Santo Stefano (Italie). Lucia Angeli (University of Pisa, Italia), Cristina Fabbri (University of Pisa, Italia)

 

15.10-15.40 : Coffee Break

 

SESSION 3 : Production modes and models : a household perspective

Session leader : Mikael Ilett (University Paris 1, France)

15.50-16.20 - Ceramic fabrics as indicators of household identity? The multicoloured pots of the Starcevo-Criş settlement at Tăşnad, Romania. Ulrike Sommer (University College London, UK), Silvia Amicone (University College London, UK), Patrick Quinn (University College London, UK), Hannah Woodfield (University College London, UK)

16.20-16.50 - Ceramic productions and village communities during the early Neolithic in France and Belgium: some questions about tempers and forming processes. Louise Gomart (Paris 1 University, France), Claude Constantin (CNRS, France)

16.50-17.20 - Compositional analysis of LBK ceramics from the Hesbaye region of Belgium: Progress, problems, and prospects. Mark Golitko (The Field Museum of Natural History, USA)

17.20-17.50 - Exploring compositional variability of Early Neolithic pottery: a case study from Vaux-et-Borset (Blicquy/Villeneuve-Saint-Germain, 4950 - 4650 cal BC, central Belgium). Barbara van Doosselaere (University of Namur, Belgium), Mark Golitko (The Field Museum of Natural History, USA), Laurence Burnez-Lanotte (University of Namur, Belgium), Dammien Deldicque (Ecole Normale Supérieure, France)

 

18.00 : Drink at the Café Le Chapitre

 

19h 30 : Dinner “Brasserie François”

 

Second Day : 30th May

Venue : University of Namur, Faculty of Arts

 

SESSION 4 : Temper, clays and tools : methodological perspectives

Session leader : François Giligny (University Paris 1, France)

9.00-9.30 - The use of microtomography for studying  LBK pottery samples from Bylany and Tesetice sites (Czech Republic). Klara Neumannova (Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic), Jan Petrik (Masaryk University, Czech Republic) 

9.30-10.00 - Etude pétrographique des dégraissants ajoutés dans les céramiques du néolithique ancien et moyen en basse-normandie. Denis Jan (Conseil général du Calvados, France), Xavier Savary (Conseil général du Calvados, France)

10.00-10.30 -Connecting paste recipes with other activities: middle Neolithic pottery in the Paris basin. Mélodie Barray (Paris 1 University, France)

 

10.40-11.00 : Coffee Break

 

SESSION 4 (cont'd)larson

11.00-11.30 -Chemical signatures of mineral inclusions as a tracer of the origin of ceramics: the contribution of LA-ICP-MS analysis. Gehres Benjamin (University Rennes 2, France), Guirec Querré (University Rennes 1, France), with the collaboration of Jean-Christophe Le Bannier (CNRS, France) and François Pustoc’h (University Rennes 1, France)

 

11.30-12.30 - Final Discussion

 

12.30-14.00 : Lunch Break “Au bon vin”

 

14.00-17.00 : OM session at the Department of Geology 

Or

14.15-15.15 – Guided tour of church of Saint-Loup (Namur) with Thierry Lanotte (architecte, Commission royale des Monuments, Sites et Fouilles, Belgium) and Mikael Ilett (University Paris 1, France)

15.15-16.30 – Guided tour of the city of Namur with Jean-Philippe Collin (University of Namur) and Julien Adam (University of Namur)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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