The aim of the "Immensa Aequora" database is to provide web access to the data collected as part of the Immensa Aequora project, regarding the pottery production sites of Central and Southern Tyrrhenian Italy (Tuscany, Lazio, Campania and Sicily are the regions mapped so far) and the shipwrecks of the Western Mediterranean that carried amphorae and ceramics produced in the same areas between the 4th Century B.C. and the 1st Century A.D. Chemical and mineralogical analyses on pottery produced in these regions have also been included in the database, together with information on the geographical position, the characteristics of the context, workshops and kilns, the classes/forms/types of the ceramics, epigraphic data and the related bibliography. A wide section of this contribution is aimed at illustrating the structure of the database created by the CILEA (Milan) in close cooperation between IT experts and archaeologists.
IMMENSA AEQUORA. Una banca dei dati archeologici e archeometrici delle ceramiche prodotte in Italia centro-meridionale / Olcese, GLORIA ANGELA; C., Cortese; C., Coletti; Giunta, Stefania; Manzini, Ilaria. - STAMPA. - (2013), pp. 29-33. (Intervento presentato al convegno IMMENSA AEQUORA Workshop. Ricerche archeologiche, archeometriche e informatiche per la ricostruzione dell’economia e dei commerci nel bacino occidentale del Mediterraneo (metà IV sec. a.C. – I sec. d.C.) tenutosi a Roma nel 24-26 gennaio 2011).
IMMENSA AEQUORA. Una banca dei dati archeologici e archeometrici delle ceramiche prodotte in Italia centro-meridionale.
OLCESE, GLORIA ANGELA;GIUNTA, STEFANIA;MANZINI, ILARIA
2013
Abstract
The aim of the "Immensa Aequora" database is to provide web access to the data collected as part of the Immensa Aequora project, regarding the pottery production sites of Central and Southern Tyrrhenian Italy (Tuscany, Lazio, Campania and Sicily are the regions mapped so far) and the shipwrecks of the Western Mediterranean that carried amphorae and ceramics produced in the same areas between the 4th Century B.C. and the 1st Century A.D. Chemical and mineralogical analyses on pottery produced in these regions have also been included in the database, together with information on the geographical position, the characteristics of the context, workshops and kilns, the classes/forms/types of the ceramics, epigraphic data and the related bibliography. A wide section of this contribution is aimed at illustrating the structure of the database created by the CILEA (Milan) in close cooperation between IT experts and archaeologists.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.