“…With regard to the forming techniques used, modern scholars normally talk in terms of either hand-building techniques or wheel throwing. However, forming techniques are better understood as two points along a spectrum ranging from purely hand-built to purely wheelthrown vessels with most methods lying somewhere in between these extremes or indeed utilising both at diVerent stages of the manufacturing process (Blandino, 2003;Bresenham, 1985;Courty and Roux, 1995;Foster, 1959;Franken and Kalsbeek, 1975;Gelbert, 1999;Mahias, 1993;Miller, 1985;Nicholson and Patterson, 1985;Roux, 2003;Roux and Courty, 1998;Saraswati and Behura, 1966;van der Leeuw, 1993). The fact that a potter may combine diVerent techniques in the making of a single vessel (Saraswati and Behura, 1966, p. 61) and evidence of diVerent potters producing the same vessel type by diVerent methods undermines the functionalist paradigm (Miller, 1985, pp.…”