Found these after a good gullywasher! Actually it was ten + inches of rain from a hurricane. Strewn over three gravel bars, I pieced together 40 pieces on two hunts and I worked for a week to get half the puzzle done. Pretty easy with four large rim shards..sherds? Used elmers glue and tacked it at the start, after a meltdown or two I ended using the whole bottle by filling in the cracks. The half is still super fragile. I think it may have come from a trash pit that had eroded out of a bank, because the pieces did not seem recently broken. Several rhyolite waste flakes were found at the same time with most having the same parent stone. The pot is 7 in. Wide, 8 in. Tall and rim diameter is 8 in.
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That is impressive. I had a favorite ceramic vessel of 3-dimensional faces that shattered into gazillion pieces. Put bigger pieces back together with regular white glue, then filled in cracks and empty spaces with mixture silicon and molding clay. Took a really long time, and not the same, but all the faces have whole noses, eyes, mouths, etc, and still intriguing piece of art. To put something back together as old and precious as your piece must have been more daunting, and intimidating, even.. You did good job, that’s understatement.Last edited by Cecilia; 09-10-2019, 12:09 PM.Digging in GA, ‘bout a mile from the Savannah River
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Wonderful find!!! Middle to late woodland I suppose considering the nice collar.
I use masking tape and Elmer's. Peel off the masking tape the next day when the glue is dry. With Elmer's use water to unglue a mistake, or if you find another piece of the puzzle and you need to unglue a piece to get it to fit. For a large crack that needs strength mix glue and sand into a paste and apply. Then apply some powdered pottery scraps to match color if possible. Rare and kool find congrats. Pottery is facinating to study. P.S. more photos please
New Jersey
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That’s amazing. Putting one together when you have all the pieces is hard enough...doing it with a fair percentage missing is impressive.Wandering wherever I can, mostly in Eastern Arkansas, always looking down.
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Probably messed up on bottom left but had an idea of the outline. Local anthropology professor got the first run of rim sections I had glued together...apparently there is a CPU program that scans rim sherds and gives full diameter.
Thanks for the comments, I have a strong connection with that single piece with the fingertip impressions in the other post. That and 8,000 year old steak knives!2 PhotosNorth Carolina
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Well that’s exciting ! I knew someone was going to score from that hurricane . Now I feel your melt down . Getting it just looking at it . Looks great .. love it
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