Sorry to disagree, we are getting into detail here, sand is mostly silica (silicon dioxide, as you say), quartz is considered an impurity, though its quantity will vary depending on the geology of the source. If faience is made from quartz I can't see how it's primary material can be sand. I suspect there is a difference between talking about material and chemistry and describing archaeological objects.
I'm an archaeologist....but my degree is from the faculty of science
Quartz is silicon dioxide, most sand is quartz, not all, but in some areas it most certainly is. Heat and compress it, and you get a fused material.
There are analogies with heating clay and it fusing into ceramics.
Doesn't mean that it's good ceramics, or glass, but it's no longer either something that crumbles to dust (sand) or something that washes into fine particles again (clay)
TeeDee asked about rudimentary glass....well that's just heated sand....quartz/ silicon dioxide, SIO
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Window glass, as in large panes has to be poured and rolled....it can as has been said, by
@Pattree, be made by spinning it out (think pizza, sort of) and again laying it down on something flat. It's a marvellous public demo that one
and is oft repeated. Small panes and a lot of waste I was told....don't know, I think if you've gone to all that effort you make use of everything you can....but that's situation dependant.
Here in a land which ended up with fuel poverty, we didn't waste fuel, once we had good coal coming up, dirty though it was, it truly fueled industrialisation....but that's not the 'rudimentary glass' that TeeDee asked about....elsewhere, warmer climes, etc., once you're up to heat, it's easier to keep that than it is here and their plant growth rate means that they have more to burn.
We often forget that 20˚C is not a
normal temperature for British homes in the past. Now it's common, but really we're a cool climate.
The Romans used glass for windows in Herculaneum and Pompeii as well as for important buildings in Rome itself. It was expensive, high status, but it was glass in windows, and it was pretty clear. Dates somewhere from around 100AD.
Asteroids crashing into deserts produce glass....pressure and heat again....volcanoes can produce glass if the magma is silicon rich, and it cools quickly.....but it's very, very rarely clear enough to see through. Obsidian for instance, or Arran Pitchstone.
Watching someone make glass, or faience, from literally dust and heat, is fascinating
It's one of those things that kind of defines the whole 'someone made this', for me