Historic Ceramic and Glassware Type Collection
Passaic River, New Jersey and Southwest Ecuador

Passaic River Ceramic Collection

This collection represents ceramics obtained from multiple surface collections ( 2001-2006) conducted along the Passaic River in the Chatham/Summit, NJ area. The Passaic River, beginning in the late 18th century, was highly significant in the early industrial development of New Jersey. It was also an early source of hydropower, resulting in the early emergence of the area as the center of industrial mills. Over the decades, the area faced a rapid decline of industrial activity. Numerous areas of flood plains were transformed in the late twentieth century into local parks. Surface scatters of historic materials have been heavily impacted by the use of the parks by local residents. Nevertheless, the history of the river can still be discerned through the range of ceramics and glassware visible. The majority of these artifacts date from the late eighteenth century to the mid 1950s. The results of the analysis of the ceramics and glassware reflect the history of the river.

Passaic River Glassware Collection

Glassware obtained from multiple surface collections from 2001-2006 along the Passaic River in the Chatham/Summit, NJ region.

Ecuador Ceramic Collection

This collection represents historic ceramic materials obtained during settlement pattern survey in El Azucar Valley, Ecuador, 1986-1988 (for more information see Masucci 1992).

For further information on Historical Archaeology, ceramic and glassware identification, and Ecuadorian majolica wares, visit:

Society for Historical Archaeology--Bottle Identification

Historical Archaeology at the Florida Museum of Natural History--Digital Type Collection

JSTOR--Majolica in the Early Colonial Andes: The Role of Panamanian Wares by Ross W. Jamieson

Latin American Antiquity , Vol. 12, No. 1 (Mar., 2001), pp. 45-58

Masucci, Maria
1992 Ceramic Change in the Guangala Phase, Southwest Ecuador: A Typology and Chronology. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.

 

 

Laura MacBride
Anth 150: Indepedendent Study
Professor Maria Masucci
Spring Semester 2008