BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN SCHOOLS OF ORIENTAL RESEARCH
Abstract
This article presents a preliminary study of the pottery collected during the 2012 and 2013
campaigns of the Land of Nineveh Archaeological Project in Iraqi Kurdistan. The report examines
the morphology, distribution, and relative implications of a wide spectrum of ceramic types, spanning
from the Early Pottery Neolithic to the Sasanian period. In particular, it focuses on the local
aspects of the material culture, as well as on regional and transregional connections, and thus
aims at placing the pottery assemblages in the broader perspective of upper Mesopotamia’s diverse
ceramic traditions. Despite its preliminary nature, this report embodies a substantial overview
of the ceramics surveyed, which will serve as a departure point for future inquiries and more
detailed analyses of the ceramic traditions of the upper Tigris region between the seventh millennium
b.c. and the seventh century a.d.