Patera bowl (damaged)

From the RuneScape Wiki, the wiki for all things RuneScape
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Patera bowl (damaged) detail.png

A patera bowl (damaged) is a damaged Saradominist artefact which can be restored at an archaeologist's workbench after being excavated from the Oikos studio debris excavation hotspot at the Everlight Dig Site with level 72 Archaeology.

Sources[edit | edit source]

For an exhaustive list of all known sources for this item, see here.
  1. ^ There is further information on this drop; see the associated page for details.

Products[edit | edit source]

This is an auto-generated list (update now), and shows the first 100 items alphabetically. For all items, click here.

Restored artefact info[edit | edit source]

The Patera bowl in the journal.

The below information is for the restored variant of this damaged artefact (see products above).


Patera bowl
Chronotes[art 1] 606 (242)
Alignment Saradomin symbol.png Saradominist
Dig site Everlight Dig Site.png: RS3 Inventory image of Everlight Dig SiteEverlight
Excavation hotspot Oikos studio debris
Collections
Description Evidence suggests these bowls were primarily used for cleaning activities such as the washing of hands and wings. Residues suggest the water within them was scented with flower petals.
  1. ^ This is amount for trading in the artefact at the listed collectors. A part of the collections give an additional amount of chronotes upon completion. The amount in the parentheses is the amount obtained when donating to the museum donation bin, which will give only 40% of the amount one would get from a collector.

Update history[edit | edit source]

This information has been compiled as part of the update history project. Some updates may not be included—see here for how to help out!

Trivia[edit | edit source]

  • A patera was a kind of bowl used in the ancient world. Unlike other artefacts and points of interest found at Everlight Dig Site, whose names come from Ancient Greek, patera is of Latin origin. The Ancient Greek term is φιάλη (phiale).