Ding ware: porcelaneous white stoneware with pale yellow glaze over incised and carved decoration
11th-12th centuryChineseLow-fired blackened gray earthenware, the surface burnished before firing
3rd millennium BCEChineseLight gray earthenware
3rd millennium BCEChineseLongquan celadon ware: pale gray stoneware with lustrous, lightly crackled, transparent, bluish green celadon glaze. From the Longquan kilns in Zhejiang province
12th-13th centuryChineseProbably Ru ware: light gray stoneware body with pale bluish green glaze, the interior glaze with white to buff cloudiness due either to under firing or to burial (in the waste heap at the kiln site). Probably from the Ru kilns, Henan province
12th centuryChineseYue ware: light gray stoneware with celadon glaze over carved and incised (or stamped) decoration; with Chinese character "ji" incised under the glaze on the underside
10th-11th centuryChineseLongquan celadon ware: light gray stoneware body with transparent celadon glaze over carved decoration. From the Longquan kilns, Zhejiang province
13th-14th centuryChineseProbably Xing ware; white stoneware with pale celadon glaze
6th-7th centuryChineseGray earthenware
3rd millennium BCEChineseLow-fired gray earthenware blackened with a thin layer of black wash
3rd millennium BCEChineseDing ware: porcelaneous white stoneware with pale yellow glaze over incised and carved decoration
11th centuryChineseLow-fired blackened gray earthenware
3rd millennium BCEChinese