Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Intro to Archaeology
- GOALS OF MODERN ARCHAEOLOGY
- Cultural
History
- Reconstructing Past
Lifeways
- Documenting Cultural
Change
- Explaining Cultural
Change
- Stewardship
- What gives VALUE or MEANING to an archaeological site
- What gives VALUE or MEANING to an archaeoligical site
- How BEST do you CONSERVE that MEANING or VALUE in the
FUTURE? WHO GETS TO DECIDE?
- WHATS DRIVING THOSE CHANGES U DOCUMENTED BRUV
- MECHANISMS OF CULTURE CHANGE
- INNOVATION
- DIFFUSION
- ACCULTERATION
- Migration may lead to an exchange
of traits with the host society
- spread of religious beliefs or an artifact or
spread of a culture trait through
borrowing
- Invention, which give s birth to...
- DISPLAYING how a culture CHANGES using ARTIFACTS
- SERIATION - method for plotting the
popularity of an artifact over time
- Uses battleship curve
- FUNCTION OF SITES AND ARTIFACTS
- When reconstructing a site, think about...
- SPATIAL ASSOCIATION: proximity and context
- "When was this site occupied? For how
long?"
- RELATIVE
DATING
- ABSOLUTE
DATING
- CHRONOMETRIC
DATING
- STATEMENTS OF PROBABLITY about
date
- Radiocarbon Dating
- Potassium Argon Dating
- PRECISE CALENDER REFERENCE
POINT
- Dendochronology - Tree ring
dating
- Historical
Records
- Ice cores
- Skinny ring = dry year,
wide ring = wet year
- Putting events in a SEQUENCE
without reference to PRECISE
DATES
- Stratigraphy - study of strata (rock layers) and their
relationship to the geological time scale
- COMPONENTS OF THE
ARCHAEOLOGICAL RECORD
- ARTIFACTS
- FEATURES
- ECOFACTS
- SOIL PROPERTIES
- HUMAN REMAINS
- Straight up.
- the chemical signatures can tell you alot about
what was happening on that soil
- Phosphurous for livestock and dung
- PH - acidic, or nah? Ash changes PH to be more basic
- TEXTURE. How rocky?
- Plant and animal remains that are related to human activity
- Not a tool - more like a pile of bones from a kill site
- charred seeds tell us flora used for diet
- pollen preserves in waterlogged environments
- Phytoliths - microscopic silica particles left behind when plants decompose
- Pieces of archaeological record that cannot be moved w/o damage
- for example: an arrangement of stones, fashioned together as a foundation
- SPECIFIC EXAMPLE: Great Serpent Mound in Ohio - straight up just the ground
- Aquaducts, Huacas, Temples
- Any MOVEABLE OBJECT, easily transportable
- MADE or MODIFIED or USED by humans in some way
- TRANSFORMATIONAL PROCESSES
- Natural
- Catastrophic events
- Volcanoes,
earthquakes,
floods
- Events that occur over time
- Wind and water
erosion, thawing
and freezing
- Cultural
- Abandonment
- Burial
- War
- Burial
- Re-occuption
- Modern tourism and construction
- looting