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Bug Club
Frames
Bell Jars
Natural History
Replicas
Contact
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Frames
Bell Jars
Natural History
Replicas
Contact
Ancient History Neolithic Pottery
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Neolithic Pottery

£48.99

This Neolithic Pottery fragment has been displayed in a museum quality glass dome bell jar and dates to the Neolithic period, around 3000–2000 BC, and was recovered from an early settlement site in southern Britain.

Hand-formed from local clay and fired in an open hearth, the sherd shows traces of surface smoothing and possible decorative markings. Its thickness and curvature suggest it was once part of a domestic vessel used for storage or food preparation.

Carefully cleaned and conserved, the fragment offers a direct material link to early agricultural life and the development of permanent human communities.

Base: Solid Oak Wood
Dome: Handblown 2mm tempered glass
Dimensions: 100x150mm

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This Neolithic Pottery fragment has been displayed in a museum quality glass dome bell jar and dates to the Neolithic period, around 3000–2000 BC, and was recovered from an early settlement site in southern Britain.

Hand-formed from local clay and fired in an open hearth, the sherd shows traces of surface smoothing and possible decorative markings. Its thickness and curvature suggest it was once part of a domestic vessel used for storage or food preparation.

Carefully cleaned and conserved, the fragment offers a direct material link to early agricultural life and the development of permanent human communities.

Base: Solid Oak Wood
Dome: Handblown 2mm tempered glass
Dimensions: 100x150mm

This Neolithic Pottery fragment has been displayed in a museum quality glass dome bell jar and dates to the Neolithic period, around 3000–2000 BC, and was recovered from an early settlement site in southern Britain.

Hand-formed from local clay and fired in an open hearth, the sherd shows traces of surface smoothing and possible decorative markings. Its thickness and curvature suggest it was once part of a domestic vessel used for storage or food preparation.

Carefully cleaned and conserved, the fragment offers a direct material link to early agricultural life and the development of permanent human communities.

Base: Solid Oak Wood
Dome: Handblown 2mm tempered glass
Dimensions: 100x150mm

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