Contextualizing a Collection of Rare Cambodian Glass Ornaments Within Contemporaneous Trade Networks

Presenter: Kelby Beyer − Anthropology, Spanish

Faculty Mentor(s): Alison Carter

(In-Person) Poster Presentation

Though archaeological glass ornament research in Iron Age Southeast Asia is a well-established field, the current body of work excludes morphologically and numerically rare objects (Carter 2016). This research uses compositional data to contextualize a looted collection of rare glass ornaments within a likely Phum Snay, Cambodia context situated within Iron Age Southeast Asian glass trade networks and interaction spheres. Laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LAICP-MS) compositional analysis of six of the collection’s 12 total glass earrings, bangles, and a spiral ornament forms the basis of this research. This work found that this collection’s glass ornaments were likely circulated within a local South China Sea potash glass trade network operating in the early Iron Age as well as a long-distance high-alumina mineral soda glass exchange network with South Asia during the late Iron Age. This previously unstudied collection’s novel compositional data of understudied rare prestige glass ornaments and contextualization of those artifacts within exchange networks contributes to previously sparse understandings of Iron Age Southeast Asian glass composition, exchange networks, and interaction spheres of several rare ornament types.

A Preliminary Analysis of Cambodian Spindle Whorls

Presenter(s): Marie LeRoux—Anthropology

Faculty Mentor(s): Alison Carter

Session: Prerecorded Poster Presentation

A collection of 362 ceramic spindle whorls purchased in Cambodia has been donated to University of Oregon’s Anthropology Department . These artifacts likely date to between 500 BCE and 500 CE and are thought to have been looted from Angkor Borei, although it is possible that other neighboring sites are represented as well . Few studies have been conducted on spindle whorls from Southeast Asia . As such, this project focused on conducting a preliminary analysis of this collection by categorizing, weighing, and measuring them . In this poster, I present my findings and a preliminary typology including four distinct types . Two of these types have each had multiple subtypes identified .