Topic 5: Fieldwork Flashcards

1
Q

Archaeological research is a ________, not ________

A

Archaeological research is a feedback loop, not linear

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2
Q

What are some of the basic steps to archaeological research? what is part of the “loop”?

A
  • research design
  • fieldwork
  • analysis
  • interpretation
  • hypothesis
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3
Q

what are some of the key things needed to be done before fieldwork?

A
  • research proposal/design
  • grant applications
  • ethics clearance approvals
  • travel arrangements
  • assembling a team
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4
Q

How are sites found?

A
  • foot survey, ground inspection
  • aerial reconnaissance
  • archival study, discuss with locals
  • research local geology/geomorphology
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5
Q

Why do archaeologists need maps?

A
  • identify areas of high potential for site discovery!
  • develop survey strategies
  • to record/interpret/report artifacts or material culture (like recording provenience of an artifact)
  • Site grids- for context
  • to know important natural features of the land such as rivers, lakes, vegetation, ect.
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6
Q

Why do we excavate? What are the two goals?

A
  1. recover as much evidence as possible
  2. record the horizontal and vertical location (provenience) for the evidence with as much precision as possible
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7
Q

What does excavation tell us? What information does it yield?

A

yields reliable information for
- human activities at a particular period in the past
- changes in those activities from period to period

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8
Q

Why do we overkill in recording information?

A
  • archaeology is a destructive science, and we destroy through excavation. We need to record as much information as possible because once we excavate, we destroy any future chances as research for that particular area
  • also, limited time, limited funding, ect.
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9
Q

If archaeology is destructive then why excavate at all?

A
  • in many cases excavation is the only way to truly known what material culture is preserved in an archaeological site
  • excavations allow us to collect and analyze material culture while maintaining control over context
  • facilitates interpretation of site formation processes
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10
Q

What is stratigraphy?

A
  • studying the different layers of soil/rock
  • An archaeologist will slowly dig down through these layers of soil to look for artifacts.
  • As a rule, the deeper they dig, the farther back in time they go
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11
Q

what is Taphonomy?

A
  • processes affecting remains from the time of death of an organism (or the discard of shed parts) through cultural and natural processes (decomposition, burial, and preservation ect)
  • through c-transforms (cultural, man-made transforms) or n-transforms (natural transforms)
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12
Q

What are constructive c-transforms?

A
  • artifacts entered in the archaeological records through deliberate discard or burial
  • artifacts entered in the archaeological record through unintentional human activity (discard or loss)
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13
Q

what are destructive c-transforms?

A

site/material culture transformed through:
- ancient people destroying them (on purpose or accident)
- modern development
- warfare

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14
Q

What are N transforms? What are some examples?

A
  • natural processes that alter (preserve or destroy) the archaeological record
  • include soil formation, water, wind, animals, weathering, and mechanical erosion
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15
Q

what is the key to preserving organic material?

A
  • very dry conditions, with little climate change (either very hot or very cold)
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16
Q

How does organic preservation vary? What does organic preservation depend on?

A
  • varies significantly based on material and context, especially the matrix
  • depends on the climate of the area!
17
Q

What is the golden rule of preservation?

A
  • the absence of evidence is NOT evidence of absence
  • ex. just because only stone tool remains are found at a site does NOT mean they were the only tools used.
  • because of preservation and climate, different types of materials will preserve and others will not!
18
Q

What are site formation processes? Why are they so important to understand?

A

Site formation processes are events that create and affect an archaeological site POST creation. The study of site formation processes is called Taphonomy. It is so important to understand them because site formation processes convert the original context in archaeological context!

19
Q

What are some differences in how organic vs inorganic materials preserve?

A

inorganic materials typically preserve much better than organic. Inorganic materials such as stone, clay, metals generally can survive much longer in the material record (metals to a lesser extent)
How organic materials preserve depends greatly on the material and context (matrix!)

20
Q

How have natural disasters shaped the archaeological record?

A

they can often preserve sites (such as pompei and Ozette), or destroy them.

21
Q

who was michael sciffer?

A

An archaeologist who worked with taphonomy, named cultural processes c-transforms and natural processes n-transforms.

22
Q

What was Ozette? Pompei?

A

Ozette site in northwest US had a mudslide, with wet preservation. there were over 50k artifacts recovered in good states of preservation, due to the mud.
Pompei was a Roman site that was preserved from volcanic disaster, that killed many in the area. It is generally thought of as a good preservation model that shows the daily life of romans.

23
Q

What is the Pompei premise?

A
  • The “Pompeii premise” is the assumption that an archaeological site represents the complete and unaltered remains of past human activity.
  • this is never the case!