Topic 7: Reconstructing Environment Flashcards
Why do we reconstruct past environments? How do we do it?
- reconstruct past environments to know what people were adapting to, to know where to look for sites, and to reconstruct site formation and disturbance processes
- we do this with geoarchaeology
What is sedimentology?
- the study of natural forces that explain how and why sediments move
- through things such as glacial till, fluvial movement, and eolian movement
What is geomorphology? What do we need to recognize about the landscape?
- The study of landforms and the processes that shape them (broadscale changes over time)
- we need to recognize that the landscape is always changing, and that the landscape of the present is not the landscape of the past!
- this could be due to natural processes and human activites.
what is paleoarchaeology? What are some of the proxies used?
- the study of plants and animals found in the past, and how they operate at a global and local level
- uses microfossils, macrofossils, animals (small and large)
What is tree growth dependent on? Why is this information useful?
- tree ring growth is dependent on climate (temperature, sunlight, ect) and environment.
- this information is useful to determine tree age, and the climate and environment reconstruction of the area.
What is palynology? Why is it important, what can it tell us?
Microbotanical study of pollen from the past.
- useful as it preserves very well in most environments, and can tell us the relative abundance on vegetation history and climate.
- can tell us the general trends in landscape over time, including when farming or agriculture was introduced to an area
What are some examples of macrobotanicals?
- Seeds and fruits, plant residues, and remains of wood
what is zooarchaeology?
- study of animal remains in the past
- it is the living landscape, and a key portion of processual archaeology
What are microfauna? What are they good indicators of? why?
- microfauna= small animals such as rodents, birds, fish, insects ect.
- they are very good indicators of climate and environmental change, because many birds are migratory and show variation over time. Snail shells can be tested for calcium carbonate, indicating the environment, and insect entomology can show climatic and seasonal change over time
what are macrofauna? Why ae they important?
- study of large animal remains.
- important cause it can provide a picture of past human diet
What is subsidence and diet? what is the focus?
- subsidence studies plant or animal remains based on what communities ate- essentially what humans ate in the past based on social structure (agriculturists, hunter gatherers, ect)
- diet refers to long term eating habits.
- there was no “one” common diet in prehistoric times, what humans ate reflected where they lived and what resources were available to them.
differences between generalized foragers (hunter-gatherers), specialized foraging, pastoralism, horticulture, and agriculture
Generalized foragers = subsistence based on wide variety of plants and animals. No reliance on any particular source
Specialized foragers = subsistence based on wide variety of plants and animals, but primary dependence on a single resource
Pastoralism = subsistence based on the herding of animals
Horticulture = subsistence based on plant cultivation, using only hand tools
Agriculture = intensive plant cultivation, often with the aid of animals and irrigation
What are the 5 pieces of evidence we use to reconstruct diet?
- plants remains in cultural context
- animal remains in cultural context
- residues on artifacts
- human waste
- human soft tissue
What is domestication? some of the characteristics of domesticated plants?
- domestication is the selected breeding of plants to produce desirable traits
characteristics include: indehiscence (seeds remain on stalk), gigantism, synchronous maturation, ect.
What evidence of faunal remains can tell us if domestication occurred/what kind of domestication occurred?
- Prescence of animals outside their normal range
- large numbers of young suggest culling
- different ratios of male: female tells us milking vs. meat herds
- teeth crowding is often a sign of domestication
- overall size, smaller animals are signs of domestication