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[Bronze Age Text]
 
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  Bell-shaped unglazed funerary urns were introduced into the Iberian
  Peninsula toward the close of the European Bronze Age, around 800
  BC.  Archeologists of Spain, Portugal
  and France believe that these vessels were brought to Spain by Celts of the
  Urnfield culture in France.  They
  usually have an incised geometric pattern, especially around the rim.  Of the pair of urns shown here, the one on
  the left was excavated from pre-Iroquois site at Owasco, New York.  The one on the right is from Marles, near
  Barcelona.  Pottery of this type appears
  abruptly in New England sites at about the same time as its introduction into
  Spain.  As pottery is lacking from
  sites of earlier date in the northeastern states, its sudden appearances,
  replacing carved soapstone bowls, points to an influx of people with a new
  culture, and the style of the vessels points to a probable origin in Iberia
  (Fell 1982).   |