Greater Pittsburgh Section Hosts Lecture on Smart Materials
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Acknowledgments Many individuals and institutions have contributed to the research carried out on majolica ceramics. We want to thank Richard Alhborn (Smithsonian Institution), whose interest and encouragement brought the topic to our attention. We also thank Florence Lister, David Hurst Thomas, Kathleen Deagan, and Stanley South for providing ceramic samples for these studies. We remember and gratefully acknowledge the contributions of Charles Fairbanks and Robert Lister. Numerous contributors to the research have authored papers which are included in the references. These include M. James Blackman (Smithsonian Institution), Marino Maggetti (University of Fribourg), Albert Jornet (Beinwil am See, Switzerland), Emile Joel (Smithsonian Institution), Bonnie McEwan (San Luis Archaeological and Historic Site), Fernando Amores (University of Seville), and Alfonso Plezguezuelo (University of Seville). The research was supported by the Conservation Analytical Laboratory, the U.S.Spain Joint Committee for Cultural and Educational Cooperation, and the Smithsonian Institution's Scholarly Studies Program. Neutron activation analysis was carried out at Brookhaven National Laboratory under contract with the U.S. Department of Energy during the 1970s. More recent neutron activation analysis and lead isotope analysis have been conducted at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). At NIST, analysis was car-
p. 235. 11. Ibid., p. 253. 12. J.M. Goggin, Spanish Majolica in the New World: Types of the Sixteenth to Eighteenth Centuries (Yale University Press, New Haven, 1968). 13. C. Fortnum, E. Drury, Majolica, London, n.d. 14. E. Rosenthal, Pottery and Ceramics from Common Brick to Fine China, London (1949). 15. C.F. Binns, Potter's Craft (Van Nostrand, Princeton, 1967). 16. W.W. Perkins, Ceramic Glossary (American Ceramic Society, Columbus, Ohio, 1984) p. 38. 17. E.A. Cervantes, Loza blanca y azulejo de Puebla, 2 vols., Mexico City (1939). 18. Lister, see Reference 2, p. 265. 19. J.S. Olin, G. Harbottle, and EV. Sayre, Archaeological Chemistry II, edited by G.F. Carter (American Chemical Society, Washington, DC, 1978) p. 200. 20. J.E. M y e r s , F. A m o r e s , J.S. Olin, and A. Pleguezuelo, Historical Archaeology 26 (1) (1992) in press. 21. M. Maggetti, H. Westley, and J.S. Olin, Archaeological Chemistry III, edited by J.B. Lambert (American Chemical Society, Washington, DC, 1984) p. 151. 22. Kathleen Deagan, Artifacts of the Spanish Colonies of Florida and the Caribbean, 1500-1800 (Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC, 1987). 23. J.S. Olin and M.J. Blackman, Archaeological Chemistry IV, edited by R.O. Allen (American Chemical Society, Washington, DC, 1989) p. 87. 24. Maggetti, see Reference 21, p. 169. 25. E.C. Joel, J.S. Olin, and M.J. Blackman, Proceedings of the 26th International Archaeometry Symposium (University of Toronto, 1988), p. 188. 26. R.K. Skowronek, Historical Archaeology 21 (2) (1987) p. 101. •
ried out with support of personnel from the Nuclear Methods Group and the Mass Spectrometry
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