1 Archaeology and Dating Methods
1 Archaeology and Dating Methods
1 Archaeology and Dating Methods
This is satire
http://www.theonion.com/articles/archaeological-dig-uncovers-ancient-race-ofskelet,1268/
What is Archaeology?
The study of the human past through
material evidence of humansthe
archaeological record.
Archaeologists attempt to reconstruct and
interpret the cultural change and variation
of the human past.
Objects alone
do not help us much
When things are found in context, in their
original setting, we gain a much more
information.
Archaeologist
conduct field
work to
find material
remains in
context.
Once an object is in the museum
it is much harder to understand the context
If the evidence has been disturbed, it is harder to understand what occurred there in the past .
How does
looting
destroy
contexts?
Why do archaeologists
discourage private collections?
We also excavate.
Fieldwork:
Survey & Excavation
1000 AD
The general
goal of a
regional survey
is to map the
locations of
sites over a
large area and
then compare
changes
through time
1300 AD
Regional Surveys
Provide a small amount of information about a large number of sites.
They are far less expensive than excavations, but more general results.
1. Location of the sites
2. Sizes of the sites
3. History of occupation
With tools such as google earth, these studies are growing very quickly
Floor
Types of Archaeological
Excavation:
Vertical and Horizontal
Believe it or not, how you dig will get you different kinds of information
Vertical Excavation
Deep cross-section through multiple
time periods
Goal is to
understand
chronology
and culture
change over
time
Stratigraphy
Profiles
show a
slice of
what
occurred
at the
site, as one
action
buries
another.
Profiles can be hard to understand but they are
critical to understand for the context of the objects
you find
Horizontal Excavation
Broad areal exposure of a layer from a
single time period
Goal is to
understand
site function
and use of
space during
a single time
period
They
are
very
costly
Survey or Excavation ?
Which is better ?
It all depends on what questions you are asking.
3
Pollen grains
Artifact
Any object created or modified by human
action
Ecofact
An unmodified natural item that humans have used
or affected (eg animal remains, pollen grains).
Feature
Immovable objects: structures, floors,
trash layers, pit, etc.
Formation of Archaeological
Sites
Catastrophic
Destruction & Burial
Pompeii
Destruction:
Raiding and
Warfare
Gradual or Planned
Abandonment
Trash Middens
Places where
garbage was dumped
These are extremely common.
wet
dry
Conditions
Affecting
Preservation
Very cold, very wet, very dry
are all good for preservation
cold
Dating Methods:
Relative Dating vs. Absolute Dating
Relative Dating
Stratigraphy (law of superposition)
younger
older
Absolute Dating
Radiocarbon (carbon-14, C14) Dating
Potassium-Argon (K-Ar) Dating
Dendrochronology Dating
Radiocarbon
Dating
After death C-14 decays into
N-14
Half-life is 5,730 years
Ok for things less than 30,000
years old
The objects must be
organic (having once lived:
plants, animals, etc)
Potassium-Argon Dating
Potassium (K) decays into Argon (Ar)
Half-life is 1.3 million years
Good for dates in the millions of years
You do not date the object, but instead the ash
Dendrochronology
An excellent dating method,
but is only used in areas of
good wood preservation.
Political
Systems
Un-centralized
(Egalitarian)
Bands
Tribes
Centralized
(non-egalitarian)
Chiefdoms
States