Alba Regia. Annales Musei Stephani Regis. – Alba Regia. Az István Király Múzeum Évkönyve. 16. 1975 – Szent István Király Múzeum közleményei: C sorozat (1978)

Tanulmányok – Abhandlungen - Makkay János: Excavations at Bicske. I, 1960. The Early Neolithic – The Earliest Linear Band Ceramic. p. 9–60.

Fig. 3 : Oven 2 in trench V. 1972, the ground plan and two cross-sections. The Finds In this section the finds from the three Early Neo­lithic features (г. e. house 1. 1971, pit „a" in trenches 1—II. 1974 and pit 1. in trench III. 1976) are treated together and classified by types, since these features contained very similar and contemporary material. This is especially so in the case of the material from house 1. 1971 and pit 1. from trench III. 1976, where the ceramic technique, pottery forms and decoration were almost identical. Pit „a" from trenches I —II. 1974 contained partly contemporary material, but is slightly separated from the other two, since it also contains Notenkopf-like pottery. The provenience of every find published here may be found in the Cata­logue of Finds (abbreviated as Cat. No.) at the end of this work. The Pottery Ceramic technique : temper and surface finish Fine and coarse ware are not separable on the basis of temper type alone. The materials used for temper (chaff, finely chopped straw, micaceous sand and very fine gold mica flakes, small stones, mineral particles, crushed limestone cobbles, small grains of white quartz, very small pebbles up to 5-7 mms in diameter, and ground-up sherds) were the same in both types of pottery. The vessels with fine surface finish in general were of a smaller size than those with a rough surface. With the exception of a few pieces of fine pottery all sherds contained organic temper. The two fabric types are also not separable on the basis of the wall thickness, since the majority of the ceramic material is thick-walled, irrespective 2 Alba Regia 17

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