The present paper emphasizes the importance of measuring the oxygen isotopic and chemical compositions of ancient glass, in
order to constrain some features such as age, raw materials, and production technologies and to identify the \u201cfingerprint\u201d of local
productions. In this context, thirty-nine Roman and late Antique glass samples and eight chert samples fromnorthern Greece were
selected and analysed for their oxygen isotopic and chemical compositions. Results show that the majority of glass samples are
produced using natron as flux and have 18O values of about 15.5\u2030, plus or minus a few tenths of one per mil, suggesting that raw
materials probably come from Levantine area. Four samples are heavily enriched in 18O, and their chemical composition clearly
shows that they were made with soda plant ash as flux. Isotopic and chemical data of Greek chert samples support the hypothesis
of local production of the above samples. About half of the glass samples have chemical compositions, which allow their age to be
constrained to the late Antique period. For the remaining glass, similarities with literature compositional groups are reported and
discussed