actually Kip says they were set into sand, about 1/3 of the way up their sides--and even carried on ships this way--apparently because ancient Greece didn't have a whole lot of flat surfaces to set large liquid-holders down on.
Hrm, interesting. That could be a bias of modern thinking on my part. Still seems a bit odd for the Romans, though. They were so obsessed with right angle architecture.
The article at the URL below seems to confirm my first thought, that they are stacked on their sides in interlocking rows, each layer with necks pointing outward on both sides. Also, easy to carry.
I remember seeing an amphora stand somewhere, but I get the impression that the usual attitude in which they were stored was horizontal. You'd need an airtight plug to ship them by sea anyway, right?
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-B.
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http://www.davidgibbins.com/Museums.htm
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