Ceramic ecology emphasizes the importance of environmental context and resource availability in the production of pottery (Arnold Reference Arnold1975, Reference Arnold1985; Kolb and Lackey Reference Kolb and Lackey1988; Matson Reference Matson and Matson1965; Rice Reference Rice2015; Sillar Reference Sillar2000). Whereas material choices are largely shaped by culture, resource selection is also constrained by natural availability. Therefore, a comparative database of raw materials is essential to archaeological considerations of vessel production and provenance (Bishop and Blackman Reference Bishop and Blackman2002). Toward this end, natural clay deposits have long been studied by archaeologists as a way to understand spatial variation in chemistry and mineralogy, which is relevant to performance characteristics of pottery fabrics as well as useful as provenance markers (e.g., Jorge et al. Reference Jorge, Dias and Day2013; Kelly et al. Reference Kelly, Watkins and Abbott2011; Michelaki et al. Reference Michelaki, Braun and Hancock2015; Neff and Bove Reference Neff and Bove1999; Rice Reference Rice2015; Stark et al. Reference Stark, Bishop and Miksa2000). Although most comparative clay studies in archaeology are project specific and limited in scope, there are distinct benefits to studying clays on a large scale with consistent protocols. Unlike archaeological material culture that is the mainstay of museum collections, procedures and protocols for curating clay samples for archaeological research are not well documented.
This article outlines the ceramic ecology program at the Florida Museum of Natural History (FLMNH), which is the culmination of decades of work and brings together materials from many different independent projects to provide a robust comparative clay inventory in Florida and adjacent regions. We outline the history of the clay sample collection at FLMNH's Ceramic Technology Laboratory (FLMNH-CTL), established in 1977 by Prudence Rice,Footnote 1 and detail the standard operating procedure by which samples are processed and curated. We offer this as a “how-to of best practices” for processing and curation. We also describe how the samples have been used in research projects and some of the challenges inherent to studies using comparative clay samples.
BACKGROUND
The FLMNH-CTL is equipped for basic paste characterization studies: binocular microscope for gross identification of temper or paste constituents, a petrographic microscope for precise mineral identification in thin section, a rock saw for cutting specimens for thin sectioning or for refiring, and an electric furnace for firing and refiring experiments.
The FLMNH-CTL also houses an extensive type collection of prehistoric and historic-period aboriginal pottery from Florida and the southeastern United States (view our website: http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/ceramiclab/home/). We have also established a comparative “library” of pottery and clay sample thin sections, generated primarily from characterization studies conducted here at FLMNH-CTL. We currently house over 800 thin sections of potteryFootnote 2 and 303 of curated fired clay samples,Footnote 3 mostly from Florida.
Research conducted in the lab addresses research questions regarding chronology, provenance or manufacturing origins, processes of production, patterns of vessel use, culture change, and the development of sociopolitical and economic complexity in prehistoric Florida, the southeastern United States, and the Caribbean Basin. Collection and comparative analysis of clays from the vicinity of archaeological sites of interest, à la Frederick R. Matson's ceramic ecological approach (Reference Matson and Matson1965; Rice Reference Rice2015:209–211) have been part of lab endeavors since its inception. Targeted collecting was directed toward assessing the “effective ceramic environment” (Rice Reference Rice1987:314–315) of a given site area or region, at least in terms of availability and variability in clayey resources. An assemblage of collected sample clays may not actually have been used by prehistoric potters in question, but they may be considered to approximate the range of mineralogical and chemical variation of a given area or region of interest.
COMPARATIVE CLAY SAMPLE COLLECTION AT FLMNH-CTL
Over the years, we have accumulated more than 350 clay or clayey soil samples. Two hundred and fifty-one samples are from 40 Florida counties, representing 60 percent of Florida's 67 counties. In addition, we have 66 samples from Georgia, 21 from elsewhere in the southeastern United States, and 25 from other locales, mostly from the Caribbean and South America. This collection has been steadily augmented each year through the efforts of FLMNH staff as well as by unaffiliated Florida researchers, graduate students, and, occasionally, members of the general public. Many samples came through targeted collecting near specific sites or regions. Many others were encountered and collected during cultural resource management projects.
Our definition of “clay” follows that described by Rice: “a fine-grained earthy material that becomes plastic or malleable when moistened” (1987:36). Therefore, we consider comparative samples to be viable clays if there is evidence of plasticity, the property that allows a wetted clay to be shaped by pressure and to retain form when the pressure is relaxed. A soil sediment containing as little as 15 percent clay-sized particles may exhibit plasticity. By this criterion, potentially viable clay resources, in USDA (1951) Soil Conservation Service terms, include clay loam, sandy clay loam, silty clay loam, sandy clay, silty clay, and clay. Mucky and peaty sediments are also of interest owing to their apparent association with sponge spicules, a siliceous microfossil that is common to some types of Florida pottery (Borremans and Shaak Reference Borremans and Shaak1986; Cordell Reference Cordell, Saunders and Hayes2004, Reference Cordell2007; Lollis et al. Reference Lollis, Wallis and Cordell2015; Wallis et al. Reference Wallis, Cordell, Deagan and Sullivan2014).
Collecting protocols are discussed in Quinn (Reference Quinn2013) and Rice (Reference Rice1987, Reference Rice2015). For targeted collecting, we consult USDA Soil Conservation Service maps and U.S. Geological Survey publications to locate clayey subsoils and deposits (e.g., Cordell Reference Cordell1984; Saffer Reference Saffer1979). The Florida soils maps and geological publications are available online, expediting targeted searches: http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/detail/fl/soils/?cid=nrcs141p2_014982 and http://ufdc.ufl.edu/fgs. A searchable database has also been created from Florida soil survey data (http://soils.ifas.ufl.edu/flsoils/index.asp) and the actual Florida soil survey samples are stored on the University of Florida's (UF) campus. For us, field collecting may become unnecessary in some cases, as it may be possible to subsample from the UF soils archive for comparative study, although we have yet to take advantage of this resource.
Samples collected or sent to FLMNH-CTL are accompanied by a sample collection record (Table 1). This document describes the context of collection, form, thickness, extent of the deposits, and characteristics in situ. Ideally, sampling of different areas of a deposit is recommended in order to evaluate horizontal and/or vertical variation in physical properties (e.g., aplastics, primary colorants) (Quinn Reference Quinn2013:132; Rice Reference Rice2015:254–255), but this has been attained in only a few cases (Cordell Reference Cordell1984; Saffer Reference Saffer1979). Rice recommends sampling a bucketful or about 5 kg of a deposit for experimentation, but most samples donated to our collection represent smaller quantities. The minimum volume required for the processing described below is 1.5 kg to 2 kg, or enough to fill a quart-sized commercial plastic zipper bag or half of a gallon-sized zipper bag.
Note: Form adapted from Rice (2015:255 [Table 14.2]; data adapted from Cordell and Koski Reference Cordell and Koski2003:118 [Table 2]).
Incoming samples are assigned an FLMNH accession number and a clay sample number that denotes state and county of collection (e.g., “c8VO1” refers to the first sample accessioned from Volusia County, Florida). The “c” prefix has been added so that clay sample number designations are not mistaken for Florida archaeological site numbers. Clay samples from targeted studies were processed to make test bars and analyze grain size, and clay briquettes were fired and thin sectioned to characterize the samples in terms of physical properties that could be compared to pottery. Until 2012, only those targeted samples, or about 20 percent of our collection, had been processed (e.g., Cordell Reference Cordell1984, Reference Cordell and Marquardt1992; Espenshade Reference Espenshade1985; Mitchem Reference Mitchem1986).
Since 2012, the FLMNH-CTL has made a concerted effort to process and thin section the backlog of comparative clay samples as part of an ongoing project to evaluate compositional and textural variability of clayey resources in Florida and adjacent regions of interest, with momentum from grant-funded pottery provenance projects. This effort has benefited from the able assistance of volunteers, one of whom is our coauthor (Kidder), a retired UF Soil Sciences professor.Footnote 4 As of this writing, we have completed processing of more than 90 percent of our accessioned collection of Florida samples. What follows is our standard operating procedure (SOP) for sample processing. The methods are also appropriate for processing of cached clays recovered archaeologically. The Appendix provides a list of equipment and supplies that relate to our SOP.
STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURE FOR FLMNH-CTL CERAMIC ECOLOGICAL SAMPLE CLAY ANALYSIS
The SOP for processing our sample clays is adapted from lab instruction provided by Rice as part of her UF Anthropology Seminar in Ceramic Analysis,Footnote 5 which she learned from her mentor, Dr. Fred Matson. After an FLMNH accession number and clay sample number have been assigned, incoming field samples are fumigated, an FLMNH policy.Footnote 6 A given sample clay (of sufficient quantity) is then divided into two portions. The first is made into test bars, which are cut into briquettes for firing. The second is for grain-size analysis in which a sample is wet-sieved through a graduated series of ASTM International approved sieves (see Appendix). Both steps are taken to assess the sample's plasticity, shrinkage, and firing behavior; particle size and proportion; and aplastic composition. The recommended minimum sample is generally more than sufficient for making two test bars and subsampling for grain-size analysis.
Handling Characteristics, Plasticity, and Shrinkage
In making test bars, samples are evaluated in terms of handling characteristics, plasticity, and shrinkage. In Rice's seminar, clay samples were dried, crushed, and sieved through a #8 sieve (opening 2.36 mm).Footnote 7 This process provides some indication of how much time and effort is required to crush and render a sample fine enough for use in pottery making and has many examples in the ethnographic literature on pottery making (e.g., Rice Reference Rice2015:133). At FLMNH-CTL, our mode of processing depends on whether the sample is dried or still damp and plastic. If a sample comes into the lab damp and plastic, or if it is damp and plastic at the time of processing, we form test bars directly from the plastic, unaltered sample with minimal processing, usually limited to the addition of a little water and brief kneading and wedging. Large, obvious aplastics such as pebbles, shells, or plant material may be picked out by hand during this process. This choice of method allows us to expedite the processing of our backlog of samples. It also provides insight into the kinds of problems a potter might encounter in working with the clay in its unaltered, natural state.
If still damp at the time of processing, a baseball-sized handful is sufficient for making two test bars. Otherwise, 200 g of a dried, crushed, sieved sample is needed to make two test bars. Our bulk crushing “apparatus” is a homemade stanchion (a concrete-filled coffee can with a 0.61-m long handle) and samples are double-bagged in 4-mil zipper bags. Sealed processing contains dust generated during crushing/pounding, and reduces sample loss. A glass mortar and pestle is used for small samples.
Measured quantities of deionized water are added to the dried, crushed, sieved sample (Figure 1) until it is transformed into a workable, plastic mass (Figure 2). The amount of water added is recorded as a measure of Water of Plasticity, which refers to the amount of water required for clays to develop optimal plasticity (Rice Reference Rice2015:68–69). During this process, one can evaluate a sample's relative plasticity, texture, and working range. We wear nitrile gloves when working with samples to protect our hands from aplastics that may be irritants.
Test bars are formed after brief kneading and wedging. If the quantity of sample is insufficient for two test bars, then one test bar is made, with any leftover reserved for grain-size analysis. Test bars are made by pressing a short rope or log of plastic clay into a template (ours is made of plastic, 16.7 × 4.3 × 0.9 cm; Figures 2 and 3). Lining the template with strips of parchment paper and using a wood block extruder make removing the bar from the template relatively easy. This is helpful with very plastic, sticky samples. The test bar surface is scored along five roughly equidistant segments (Figure 4) to make cutting dried bars into briquettes for firing easier. Any kind of pointed stylus or edged tool will work. We have recycled a hair comb for this purpose, with all but five equally spaced tines removed to mark the distances. Then we use an edged tool for scoring the lines. Each completed test bar is labeled with a pointed stylus, carefully marked with 10-cm lengthwise distances (Figure 5) and weighed (Figure 6).
Test bars are next air-dried in the lab on an open rack and covered with paper towels for the first three days of drying, so that direct exposure to air is limited and the risk of warping and cracking is reduced (Rice Reference Rice2015:89–94). After several days, any cracking or warping is noted. In terms of traditional pottery making, the addition of temper would likely be necessary to counteract excessive warping and shrinkage (Rice Reference Rice2015:79; Rye Reference Rye1981:31; Shepard Reference Shepard1976:25).
Test bars are further dried in a drying oven (temperature of 105°C) for about one hour, and then allowed to cool to room temperature. Dried test bars are next re-weighed and marked distances re-measured. These steps provide data for another measure of Water of Plasticity and for a measure of Linear Drying Shrinkage (Rice Reference Rice2015:68 [Box 3.1] and 93 [Box 5.1], respectively). Linear Drying Shrinkage is a measure of the loss of adsorbed or mechanically combined water during air-drying. An example of %WP and %LDS data is presented in Table 2.
Note: Adapted from Cordell and Koski 20003:118 (Table 2).
Firing Behavior
After %WP and %LDS are recorded, the dried test bars are cut or broken into small briquettes (approximately 3 cm × 2 cm in size) for firing. A hacksaw or hammer and chisel may be required in some cases, but scoring facilitates this process. In some cases, scored bars snap apart along score lines with minimal effort. Briquettes are then fired in an electric furnace to a series of increasing temperatures to record change in color and oxidation of primary colorants (organic materials and iron compounds) with temperature (Rice Reference Rice2015:288–289). Five firing temperatures are used, ranging from 400°C to 800°C at intervals of 100°C, and each temperature level is maintained for 30 minutes (soak or dwell period). The atmosphere is oxidizing and is not intended to replicate conditions of original pottery firings. The furnace temperature is initially set at 275°C and held for 10 minutes with the furnace door opened slightly to allow for escape of residual mechanically combined water as vapor. The furnace door is then shut completely after the 10-minute dwell, and the temperature is increased to the desired temperature.Footnote 8 The kiln door is opened slightly again after completion of the firing. When firing briquettes of a given sample together, a briquette is pulled from the furnace with tongs after completion of each desired temperature (draw trials) and placed in the drying oven to cool slowly. In our initiative to process our backlog of samples, briquettes of many samples are fired together at one temperature at a time (Figures 7a and 7b). The total firing time for 800°C firing is approximately 85 minutes from start to finish. Total firing times for the 400°C through 700°C firings range from approximately 65 to 80 minutes, respectively.
Upon completion of firing, briquettes are broken for recording Munsell colors and the presence or absence of dark coring to note when constituent organics appear to be completely oxidized (Figure 8). An example of color data is presented in Table 3. The 800°C briquettes are often used in color comparisons with pottery that has been refired to 800°C. Refiring the pottery is necessary to eliminate the effects of original firing conditions, thereby standardizing the basis for color comparisons between samples. This allows us to assess the relative iron content of clay samples and pottery as a way to infer gross clay resource differences (Beck Reference Beck2006; Rice Reference Rice2015:288–289; Shepard Reference Shepard1976:105). The 800°C/30-minute dwell firing represents conditions that likely exceeded those of the original firings of most prehistoric and early historic aboriginal pottery in Florida and the southeastern United States.
Note: Adapted from Cordell and Koski Reference Cordell and Koski2003:118 (Table 4).
Fired briquettes are labeled with firing temperature and boxed or bagged for curation. Firing temperature is written directly on fired briquettes with archival pens or a pen and India ink. But it is usually necessary first to paint a swatch of clear coat lacquer on the briquette before labeling. Firing temperature and sample clay number are written on zipper bags for crumbly or disintegrated briquettes.
Grain-Size Analysis
This procedure obtains the particle size distribution of inclusions in a, and captured fractions can be used for mineral analysis (Rice Reference Rice2015:76 [Box 4.1]). A 100-g portion (or less, depending on amount available) of dry or dried, uncrushed sample is reserved for grain-size analysis, without removing obvious impurities. A given sample is soaked in tap water for a few days before it is wet-sieved through a graduated series of sieves. Sieves used in our lab bracket the range of Wentworth size categories (Wentworth Reference Wentworth1922),Footnote 9 listed in Table 4, which also presents an example of sieving results. By passing the sample through the finer sieves one at a time (instead of stacked) (Figure 9), we can conserve the amount of water required for the process. The volume of water used has been reduced from up to 34 liters (three 12-quart plastic basins) to no more than 4 liters (one or two 2-liter beakers) with this method. We place the sieves on a rack lined with paper toweling to air dry for about one week (Figure 10). When dry, the captured sediments are weighed and bagged for curation (in 4-mil zipper bags; Figure 11). The fine fraction, which passed through all sieves, is captured in a plastic basin or 2-liter glass beaker. After settling, most of the excess water is siphoned off. The fine fraction is then transferred to a smaller glass beaker, covered with aluminum foil, and dried thoroughly in the drying oven (Figure 12). The dry weight of the fine fraction is obtained by subtracting the beaker weight from the weight of beaker with the sediment. The fine fraction is then extracted and bagged for curation. Some clay samples may be very slow to settle (a deflocculated colloidal suspension of clay particles in water). In these cases, the suspension is siphoned from the settled fine fraction and flocculated with the addition of table salt (about one to three teaspoons). The flocculated portion is then combined with the rest of the fine fraction and dried, weighed, and bagged, as described above. The captured sieved sediments are then examined under a binocular microscope with 10–70X magnification and fiber optic illumination to record gross composition, which can be tested/corroborated by thin-section analysis and compared to pottery samples.
Note: Adapted from Cordell and Koski Reference Cordell and Koski2003:118 (Table 3).
Thin Sectioning and Other Initiatives
In recent years, as funding has permitted, we have thin-sectioned processed samples for petrographic analysis. We use the 600°C briquette for thin sectioning, as it most closely approximates, or just exceeds, the suspected maximum firing temperature of much of the pottery that is analyzed at FLMNH-CTL. Half of the 600°C briquette is sent off for thin sectioning,Footnote 10 and the other half is retained for curation. We currently have thin sections for about 85 percent of our curated clay samples and plan to have thin sections made of our entire collection as time and funding permit. We also now have comparative petrographic data (including point counts) for 162 of 304 thin-sectioned samples, assembled from some 18 different projects, many of which have been cited in this article. A portion of the 800°C briquette is reserved for Neutron Activation Analysis (NAA). We currently have NAA data for 150 samples, nearly all of which are from clays currently curated at the museum (Wallis et al. Reference Wallis, Gilmore, Cordell, Pluckhahn, Ashley and Glascock2015). A few clay samples have been entirely consumed by NAA and/or petrographic thin sections. In future initiatives, we intend to analyze the fine fractions of sieved samples by X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) for clay mineral identification.
Curation
Leftover test bars, the set of fired briquettes, and sieved sediments are boxed together for curation (Figure 13) and labeled with our FLMNH accession number and clay sample number. Semi-rectangular polyethylene containers with lids are used for storing processed components of the sample clays. Gladware Soup & Salad™ containers, or a generic equivalent (Appendix), are the perfect size. Any leftover clay is generally discarded. The excess of a few samples have been retained for experiments involving differing tempers or removal of excess aplastics (e.g., Lollis et al. Reference Lollis, Wallis and Cordell2015), but space limitations prohibit routine curation of additional sample leftovers.
COMPARATIVE CLAY SAMPLES IN ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH: POTENTIALS AND LIMITATIONS
A primary use of the comparative samples is for provenance research. In order to correlate variation in pottery composition with the spatial distribution of resources, raw materials must be sampled (e.g., Arnold et al. Reference Arnold, Neff and Glascock2000; Hein et al. Reference Hein, Day, Ontiveros and Kilikoglou2004; Masucci and Macfarlane Reference Masucci and Macfarlane1997; Ruby and Shriner Reference Ruby, Shriner, Carr and Case2005). Countless studies of pottery provenance have proceeded without comparative data from sampled clays, but limited or no sampling of clayey sediments inevitably reduces the confidence of provenance assignments and the range of questions that can be investigated (Neff et al. Reference Neff, Bove, Lou P., Piechowski and Neff1992). Collection of clays proximate to archaeological sites under investigation is fairly common, and this is the source of most FLMNH-CTL accessions. Although intensive clay sampling around an archaeological site by itself can give a good approximation of a local signature, the geographic origins of compositional outliers in a pottery assemblage will remain highly speculative. In a region like Florida, where pottery was frequently transported hundreds of kilometers (e.g., Ashley et al. Reference Ashley, Wallis and Glascock2015; Gilmore Reference Gilmore2016; Pluckhahn and Cordell Reference Pluckhahn and Cordell2011; Wallis Reference Wallis2011; Wallis and Cordell Reference Wallis and Cordell2013; Wallis et al. Reference Wallis, Pluckhahn and Glascock2016), a much broader sample is essential.
In Florida, we have found that clays exhibit broad geographic patterns in mineral inclusions and bulk chemistry that are useful markers for pottery provenance studies (Wallis et al. Reference Wallis, Gilmore, Cordell, Pluckhahn, Ashley and Glascock2015). More than a dozen elements measured by NAA and mineral inclusions such as muscovite, calcareous matrix, phosphatic nodules, and siliceous microfossils observed in petrographic thin section show patterned distributions. These data are used to define compositional regions—geographic zones with clays that can be reliably distinguished from other zones. These compositional regions range from 50 km to more than 400 km in maximum dimension, thus dictating the scale at which “nonlocal” and “local” archaeological pottery can be differentiated. In other words, pottery transported less than 50 km in Florida is, in all cases, below the threshold of resolution for distinguishing it from vessels made at the site of archaeological excavation. In certain directions of transport, a vessel carried 400 km could look “local” in terms of its composition.
Another common use of clay samples has been in experimental studies. Although commercial clays offer the ability to conduct standardized experiments concerning performance characteristics (e.g., Schiffer and Skibo Reference Schiffer and Skibo1987), native clays are also useful for understanding the range of challenges faced by past potters in a specific region. For example, astoundingly few clay samples among the hundreds now curated at FLMNH-CTL approximate the extremely fine texture of St. Johns series pottery, ubiquitous across much of the state (Goggin Reference Goggin1952). Even processing the clays by pounding, sieving, and levigating has failed to replicate the texture of St. Johns pastes (Lollis et al. Reference Lollis, Wallis and Cordell2015). This incongruity between clays and St. Johns pottery indicates that we have yet to discover either the particular clay sources used or the techniques by which they were processed. We have also noted, in general, that many samples have excessive aplastics compared to the pottery, such that some excess would need to be removed to approximate suitable resources if comparable finer resources were not available.
The use of comparative clays is not without its problems. It would be difficult to determine whether clays had been mixed for pottery manufacture, for example, or processed to remove excess aplastics. For purposes of provenance research, sampling density is rarely completely adequate. Outliers within compositional regions tend to indicate that the entire range of compositional diversity is not well represented everywhere. As clays can vary compositionally even within a single deposit (Rice Reference Rice2015:346–347), more sampling would strengthen our modeling of the ceramic landscape. Another, and related, challenge stems from the use of legacy data, that is, samples and records made at various times in the past and using a variety of protocols. Many samples are associated with very precise geographic coordinates and descriptions of the environmental setting while some others are merely associated with a dot on a USGS quad map. Likewise, a minimum sample size is not always present, and therefore not all data can be collected for every sample.
SUMMARY/CONCLUSIONS
The FLMNH-CTL curates pottery type collections and pottery thin sections and also an extensive collection of comparative clay samples, as well as thin sections of processed, fired samples. The SOP for processing and analysis of clay samples has been outlined. Curation and analysis of comparative clay samples at FLMNH-CTL spans nearly 40 years and myriad individual projects. Our comparative clay collection and data represent a valuable resource for ongoing and future lab endeavors and are available for other researchers focusing on Florida and adjacent regions. Our collection of processed samples and thin sections are curated in perpetuity.
Acknowledgments
We dedicate this article to mentor, friend, and colleague Pru Rice, with fondness and respect. Her close association with FLMNH colleagues (especially the late William R. Maples and Jerald T. Milanich) allowed FLMNH-CTL to actually “happen” and to endure after her departure from UF in 1991. The article benefited from Pru's thoughtful feedback. We also thank four anonymous reviewers for their most helpful consideration. Grants from the National Science Foundation (BCS-1356961 and BCS-1111397) and Wenner-Gren Foundation (Post-Ph.D. Research Grant 8337) provided funding for our ongoing projects. No permits were required for this research.
Data Availability Statement
Curated clays and thin sections are available at the Florida Museum of Natural History Ceramic Technology Laboratory for in-house study or for short-term loan to researchers at other institutions. Excel lists of curated clays and thin sections will soon be available on our website.
Supplementary Material
To view supplementary material for this article (the Appendix), please visit http://doi.org/10.1017/aap.2016.6.