M. James Blackman
Smithsonian Institution
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Featured researches published by M. James Blackman.
Latin American Antiquity | 2006
Hector Neff; Jeffrey P. Blomster; Michael D. Glascock; Ronald L. Bishop; M. James Blackman; Michael D. Coe; George L. Cowgill; Ann Cyphers; Richard A. Diehl; Stephen D. Houston; Arthur A. Joyce; Carl P. Lipo; Marcus Winter
We are glad that Sharer et al. (this issue) have dropped their original claim that the INAA data demonstrate multidirec tional movement of Early Formative pottery. Beyond this, however, they offer nothing that might enhance understanding of Early Formative ceramic circulation or inspire new insights into Early Formative cultural evolution in Mesoamerica. Instead, their response contains fresh distortions, replications of mistakes made in their PNAS articles, and lengthy pas sages that are irrelevant to the issues raised by Neff et al. (this issue). We correct and recorrect their latest distortions and misunderstandings here. Besides showing why their discussion of ceramic sourcing repeatedly misses the mark, we also correct a number of erroneous assertions about the archaeology of Olmec San Lorenzo. New evidence deepens understanding of Early Formative Mesoamerica but requires that some researchers discard cherished beliefs.
Journal of Field Archaeology | 2009
Christina T. Halperin; Ronald L. Bishop; Ellen Spensley; M. James Blackman
Abstract Archaeologists studying ancient state societies often divide political economic models into separate prestige goods and subsistence goods systems. For the Maya during the Late Classic period (ca. A.D. 600–900), scholars have suggested that the elite centrally controlled the production and circulation of prestige goods while local communities and households were responsible for subsistence goods manufacture and exchange, which operated in a largely decentralized fashion. We examine an alternative to this dichotomous system through a festival market model that postulates a wide array of social groups engaged in material goods exchange during ceremonial events and public festive gatherings. This model is investigated using modal, petrographic, and Instrumental Neutron Activation analyses (INAA) of Late Classic ceramic figurines from the Motul de San José region, Petén, Guatemala. Ceramic figurines are frequently associated with household affairs because of their presence in household middens. We find that paste types crosscut different household status groups and communities within the region and argue that figurines were exchanged within the context of festival markets. This exchange pattern has important implications for linking households to larger political and regional spheres of social and economic life.
Ancient Near Eastern Studies | 2005
M. James Blackman; Scott Redford
Excavation in medieval levels at the site ofKinet in southern Turkey has yielded evidence for the production of Port Saint Symeon ware, a widely, if not the most widely, distributed glazed ceramic ware in the Mediterranean in the I3 t h century. This article uses instrumental neutron activation analysis of excavated ceramics from Kinet, I930s excavations at another medieval port in the region, Port Saint Symeon/al-Mina, and selected museum pieces, to examine this phenomenon. It also examines other widely traded ceramics from the period: ones thought to originate in the Aegean. The authors attempt to gauge the cultural weight of maritime exchange of ceramics in the medieval Mediterranean, arguing that they were an essential part of the creation of a common taste in diverse societies in the central and eastern Mediterranean basin.
Journal of Field Archaeology | 1997
Scott Redford; M. James Blackman
AbstractThe production of glazed fritware (artificial paste bodied) ceramics in medieval Syria is examined in the light of neutron activation analysis of an excavated sample from the site of Gritille. Reevaluation casts doubt on two main commonplaces of Islamic ceramic history: 1) the decorative technique of lustering, used on some of these fritwares, was highly restricted; and 2) the production of such luxury ceramics in the medieval Islamic world in general was centralized. We propose that regional ceramic production corresponded to the decentralized system of government then current in Syria and other geographic and demographic factors there.
Oxford Journal of Archaeology | 1999
Robert C. Henrickson; M. James Blackman
Recent excavation at the ancient city of Gordion in central western Turkey has recovered part of the collapsed terracotta tile roof of a large Hellenistic building built in the third century BC. The roofing system consisted of large rectangular pan tiles and long half-round cover tiles. The evidence from ethnographic and historical accounts of tile production, forming and finishing methods, and chemical composition determined by neutron activation analysis has yielded insights into the organization of this coarse-ware ceramic industry, its use of local resources, and its relationship to the other ceramic industries serving the city and the local economy.
American Antiquity | 1993
M. James Blackman; Gil Stein; Pamela B. Vandiver
Latin American Antiquity | 2006
Hector Neff; Jeffrey P. Blomster; Michael D. Glascock; Ronald L. Bishop; M. James Blackman; Michael D. Coe; George L. Cowgill; Richard A. Diehl; Stephen D. Houston; Arthur A. Joyce; Carl P. Lipo; Barbara L. Stark; Marcus Winter
American Antiquity | 1996
Vincas P. Steponaitis; M. James Blackman; Hector Neff
Accounts of Chemical Research | 2002
Ronald L. Bishop; M. James Blackman
Latin American Antiquity | 1993
Mary G. Hodge; Hector Neff; M. James Blackman; Leah Minc