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and suitable for heated liquid substances. Later examples are usually finer and more carefully burnished and decorated. Designs included rounded, inverted or straight sided bowls with plain rims, some with basic handles under the rims along with ring bases in the later pieces. Decorations included
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incised or impressed chevrons or motifs with pattern burnishing appearing in later periods. Other types of pottery were produced around the same time including coarse impressed ware, dark faced unburnished ware and washed impressed ware but these were less prevalent.
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Insularity and identity in prehistoric Cyprus, in : Le néolithique de Chypre: actes du colloque international organisé par le Dé partement des antiquités de Chypre et l'École française d'Athènes, Nicosie, 17–19 mai
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and takes its name from the often dark coloured choice of clays from which it is made. Vessels are often coarse, tempered with grit or sand, burnished to a shiny finish and made with a variety of
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where comparative studies were made defining different categories of ware that have been generally grouped as DFBW. It is thought to have come as a development of
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Council for
British Research in the Levant; British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem; British Institute at Amman for Archaeology and History (1994).
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in different areas. The grit or sand is thought to have made the vessels easier to fire and the burnishing made them less
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The development of 'cultural regions' in the neolithic of the Near East: the 'dark faced burnished ware horizon'
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The archaeology of Syria: from complex hunter-gatherers to early urban societies (c. 16,000-300 BC)
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Friederike, Jesse (October 2010). "Early
Pottery in Northern Africa - An Overview".
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DFBW has long been considered the forebear of the more polished examples such as
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Plato prehistorian: 10,000 to 5000 B.C. : myth, religion, archaeology
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77:. Some notable examples of dark faced burnished ware were found at
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Windows on the
Japanese past: studies in archaeology and prehistory
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It was produced after the earliest examples from the independent
443:. Oxford University, Unpublished Ph.D. Thesis. pp. 192–198.
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Climate change: environment and civilization in the Middle East
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Richard J. Pearson; Gina Lee Barnes; Karl L. Hutterer (1986).
248:. Center for Japanese Studies, University of Michigan.
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and is predominantly found at archaeological sites in
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Peter M. M. G. Akkermans; Glenn M. Schwartz (2003).
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161:. Cambridge University Press. pp. 134–.
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418:. British School of Archaeology in Jerusalem
20:Vessel of 'dark faced burnished ware' from
211:Jomon of Japan: the world's oldest pottery
464:in the plain of Amuq - Bryn Mawr College
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40:pottery developed in the western world
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330:. École Française d’Athènes, Athens.
378:Francesca Balossi Restelli (2006).
344:A. Issar; Mattanyah Zohar (2004).
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291:Mary Settegast (1 January 2000).
97:. Other finds have been made at
278:The Neolithic of the Near East
191:Journal of African Archaeology
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38:is the second oldest form of
214:. Kegan Paul International.
81:(and nearby Tell Dhahab) in
440:The Neolithic of the Levant
208:Douglas M. Kenrick (1995).
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350:. Springer. pp. 71–.
458:dark faced burnished ware
32:Dark faced burnished ware
280:, p. 64, Scribner, 1975.
44:Dotted wavy line pottery
437:Moore, A.M.T. (1978).
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297:. Lindisfarne Press.
127:ancient Greek pottery
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42:, the oldest being
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391:978-1-84171-917-7
357:978-3-540-21086-3
304:978-0-940262-34-8
255:978-0-939512-23-2
221:978-0-7103-0475-9
168:978-0-521-79666-8
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95:Tell Boueid
57:culture in
472:Categories
133:References
111:White Ware
91:Ras Shamra
69:southwest
51:phenomenon
119:permeable
99:Yumuktepe
422:9 April
397:9 April
363:9 April
310:9 April
261:9 April
227:9 April
174:8 April
63:Lebanon
53:of the
415:Levant
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107:Turkey
103:Mersin
75:Cyprus
67:Israel
460:from
115:clays
71:Syria
59:Japan
55:JĹŤmon
26:Syria
24:, in
424:2011
399:2011
386:ISBN
365:2011
352:ISBN
328:2001
312:2011
299:ISBN
263:2011
250:ISBN
229:2011
216:ISBN
176:2011
163:ISBN
93:and
83:Amuq
73:and
36:DFBW
22:Shir
101:in
85:by
34:or
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