Kyme was a long-lived center for pottery production, including for some of the most elaborate of painted Archaic wares such as East Greek Wild Goat style. In 1924, E.R. Price first identified a group of vessels of this style, which he termed the London Dinos group, after its name vase in the British Museum. Although most vessels made in Kyme were used locally, vessels belonging to the London Dinos group have been found as far away as Naukratis, in Egypt, and sites around the Black Sea (Kerschner 2006, 113:8). Michael Kerschner’s 2006 NAA study of vessels of the London Dinos Group alongside vessels and wasters from Kyme, Larisa, Phokaia, and Smyrna identified a single chemical provenance group called G and subgroup g whose composition matched vessels of various stylistic groups and eras, as well as wasters from Kyme, thus demonstrating that this was a long-lived center for pottery manufacture, and may have dominated the production of Archaic Aiolian fine ware.