“…Analysis of excavation records and the remaining ceramic lots in the Northern Sector and in Area B have demonstrated that coarse, plain wares made up the majority of discarded pottery, regardless of chronological period (Gorogianni 2008, 351; Abell 2014b, 10–12). Given the relatively coarse nature of local Keian fabrics, this pattern of discard probably affected primarily local plain wares, especially larger – and, correspondingly – coarser vessels, particularly when chronologically or typologically diagnostic features like rims or bases were not preserved (Gorogianni 2008, 351; Abell 2014b, 10–12). The preserved dataset, which is made up primarily of feature and/or decorated sherds in imported and local ceramic wares, should, nevertheless, be reasonably well suited to a discussion of Minoanisation in the ceramic assemblage, since the major category of missing evidence – plain and coarse local sherds with few distinctive shape or decorative characteristics – is a ceramic category that is unlikely to be especially sensitive to changes in ceramic fashions.…”