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The Archaeological Record. Context and Variability Transformation Processes Modification. What is the Archaeological Record?. Traces of the Human past. Affected by the age of the material, preservational environment, excavation technique.
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The Archaeological Record Context and Variability Transformation Processes Modification
What is the Archaeological Record? • Traces of the Human past. • Affected by the age of the material, preservational environment, excavation technique. • The archaeological record is patterned by human activities and the natural environment. • Includes artifacts, ecofacts, features.
Soil vs. Sediment • Soil develops during stable periods of a landscape. • Paleosols are soil profiles that formed in the past and are buried by more recent deposition. • These paleosols represent stable surfaces in the past and can have archaeological sites associated with them. • Sediments are soils that are brought to an area through wind, water, etc.
Artifacts • Anything used, made or modified by humans. • Includes stone tools, pottery, bone objects, etc.
Ecofacts • Material that provides information about the environments of the past. • These are usually things that were used but not modified by humans in the past. • Includes nutshells, animal bone, botanical remains, etc.
Human Remains http://www.ikonosheritage.org/introCourse/theory/archaeology/spring/documents/04-ArchaeologySession2-01.pdf
Roman Cemetery, Italy http://www.ips.siu.edu/SA/bioarchaeology.html
Microscopic Analysis http://www.le.ac.uk/ulas/services/human_remains.html
Features • Non-portable evidence of past human activity. • These include things like hearths, structures, burials, etc.
http://www.ikonosheritage.org/introCourse/theory/archaeology/spring/documents/04-ArchaeologySession2-01.pdfhttp://www.ikonosheritage.org/introCourse/theory/archaeology/spring/documents/04-ArchaeologySession2-01.pdf
Sites • The previously mentioned materials make up what archaeologists call sites. • Sites are areas of past human activity and can vary from being very small and ephemeral to very large.
Context • Context is one of the most important concepts in archaeology. • Context is a the relationship of archaeological materials at a site and is comprised of provenience, matrix and association. • Provenience is the exact location of an artifact. • Matrix is the material in which something is found. • Association is the spatial relationships between artifacts, ecofacts, features, structures and sites.
Variability • Variability in the archaeological record is affected by preservation and scale. • Some variability is reflected well in the archaeological record-like the variability of pyramids in Egypt. • Other variability is not-like the variability in moccasin styles of prehistoric people.
Taphonomy • The study of natural processes from the time something dies and is deposited until it is recovered as part of an archaeological site. • Takes into account all of the materials to understand why the materials/objects are they way they are. • Note: Not everything from an archaeological site is necessarily part of that site’s occupation or use.
Transformation Processes • Cultural • Recycling • Reuse • Loss • Discard • Abandonment • Burial • Natural • Weathering • Erosion • Deposition
Cultural Transforms (C-Transforms) • Applying uniformitarianism: processes acting today acted the same in the past. • Recycling • Recycling a discarded object into something new. • Reuse • Reusing a discarded object. • Also Loss, Discard, Abandonment, Burial
Natural Transforms (N-Transforms) • Natural processes (weathering, erosion, soil deposition) affect cultural materials. • These processes are usually very dynamic, but can also apply the concept of uniformitarianism.
Natural Transforms • Environment can affect color, weight, size, etc. • Objects can be more through wind, water and soil movements. • Weathering affects objects and operates at different rates. • Deposition, erosion and deflation are all natural processes.
http://www.ikonosheritage.org/introCourse/theory/archaeology/spring/documents/04-ArchaeologySession2-01.pdfhttp://www.ikonosheritage.org/introCourse/theory/archaeology/spring/documents/04-ArchaeologySession2-01.pdf