* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download AS Archaeology
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
A2 Archaeology AQA Level 3 A2 Archaeology Units ► Unit 3: World Archaeology Section A ► 30% of A Level 2hour exam 90 marks ►2 Questions on Themes in World Archaeology. Section B ►1 Question on Contemporary Issues in World Archaeology ► Unit 4: Archaeology Investigation Coursework ► Internally by AQA. marked, externally moderated ► 20% of A Level 3500-4000words 60 marks Unit 3 World Archaeology ► Overview Students are introduced to a range of themes in world archaeology, building on skills and knowledge learnt in the AS Units. ► Section A: Themes in World Archaeology People and Society in the Past Sites and People in the Landscape Economies and Material Culture ► Section B: Contemporary Issues in World Archaeology Today... ► Looking at settlement sites and how we study them Settlement ► What is a site? A site is an area of past human activity. ► Any size or period from a single grave to an entire settlement. ► Also includes a cluster of artefacts. ► What is a structure? A structure is a building of any size or function. ► Could range from a few post holes to a standing building. ► Each requires its own method of excavation. ► Recording individual features (walls, floors, windows etc.) will facilitate a reconstruction and interpretation of the structure and its function. Settlement ► What is a settlement? A settlement is a group of structures and the spaces associated with them used by a community over a period of time. ► The boundaries of the settlement are also important. ► May be transitory, semi-permanent or permanent. ► Can be studied by survey and/or excavation. ► What is a landscape? For settlement archaeology, a landscape is the space between individual settlements. ► Different types e.g. social landscape, political landscape. Sources of archaeological finds in Denmark 19th to 20th Centuries. Settlement Studies ► 1950s - Pioneers like Gordon Willey (settlement study in the Virú Valley, Peru). ► 1960s - “New Archaeology” & “New Geography”, Lewis Binford. ► 1970s - Spatial archaeology, D.L. Clarke, Ian Hodder and Clive Orton. Settlement Studies ► Bruce Trigger - 3 levels of settlement. 1. The building structure. 2. The arrangement of structures within individual communities. 3. The distribution of communities across the landscape. ► What are the main methods of the discovery and field survey of sites and settlements? Settlement Studies ►What are the main methods of the discovery and field survey of sites and settlements? SMR / NMR Old maps and documents Local knowledge Aerial photography GIS Field walking Field surveying Geophysical surveying. GIS Geographical Information Systems. GIS ► ► ► ► ► GIS is a collection of computer hardware, software, and geographic data for capturing, managing, analyzing, and displaying all forms of geographically referenced information. Makes use of data collected from a variety of sources, including data from satellites. Interprets information in a visual way. Can be used to predict areas for prospection. www.gis.com/ GIS ► Starts with the blank canvas of the Earth. ► Adds layers of information which can be shown or hidden as necessary. ► One layer might be the geology and another human settlement. ► Layers have not remained static through time. For example, a vegetation layer needs dividing into time periods. ► Information can then be displayed Tables and charts but visually as a reconstruction. Why is GIS useful to archaeology? ► Deals with spatial data Excavations and survey ► Interpretation is dependant on understanding spatial relationships ► Recording relationships on maps/plans Able to compare them. Multiple scales Large regions ► Can handle large amounts of data. Avebury Avebury ► The data Basemap: Ordnance Survey 1:10000 raster. Archaeology: cleaned and enhanced Wiltshire County Council Sites and Monuments Record. Height Data: Ordnance Survey Land-Form PROFILE and EH Survey Services data. Aerial Photographs: 1:10000 vertical colour imagery. Satellite Data: KVR 1000 Russian satellite imagery (ground resolution around 1.5 - 3m). Land Use: only select areas so far. Land Ownership: areas owned by the National Trust. Survey Coverage: linked to an associated text database. Shows areas of geophysical survey, fieldwalking, augering and test-pitting. Flint Density Distribution: results collated from various fieldwalking surveys. Roads and Boundaries: including the extents of scheduled monument areas. A shaded Digital Terrain Model (DTM) of Avebury. Avebury (Aerial photo over a digital elevation model) Changing landscapes ► Important to think about geology when examining Palaeolithic and Mesolithic sites. These periods witnessed great climatic changes (the Ice Age). Ice melting caused the sea level to rise and sites and the land bridge with the Continent was lost to the sea. The topography and coastline changed. Historic Landscapes ► Historic landscapes can also be recreated using a mixture of: Archaeology Field survey Written records. Reconstructing Past Landscapes ► Archaeology has moved from ‘site to settlement to landscape archaeology’. This study is in its infancy. It is a way of examining the relationship between human societies of the past and their environment. Settlement Patterns ►How do people choose where to settle? Today? Israeli settlement on the West bank In the past? European settlers in New Zealand How do people choose where to settle? ► Today? Close to amenities ► Schools, jobs, shops, hospitals, religious houses, entertainment, etc. Good transport links ► Buses, trains, road networks, ferries, airports etc. Close to family & friends ► Visiting ► Looking after relatives Environment ► Rural / urban Incentives ► Financial help How do people choose where to settle? ► In the past? Close to amenities ► Fresh water, good hunting grounds, arable land, fishing locations, woodland, ritual locations, markets etc. Good transport links ► Coastal locations, rivers & streams, roads? Close to family & friends ► Visiting ► Looking after relatives Environment ► Hilltop for defence, woodlands / coastal for resources Incentives ► Resources ► Expansion of territory Settlement Patterns ► An investigation of settlement patterns is a branch of spatial analysis in archaeology. ► Distribution patterns used to study ancient human relationship with the environment. ► Settlement patterns are studied by plotting all the known sites onto maps (or GIS). Only contemporary sites Categorise settlements ► Size & Hierarchy (if known) – village, town, city etc. Boundary & territory Similar depth of investigation for all areas to prevent biased or unbalanced distribution patterns. Classification of Societies (Renfrew & Bahn,2000: 175) Site Status ► Settlement may be ranked in a similar way to social groups. ► Settlements are often excavated as individual unique areas – but this is only part of the story: Link with other settlements through social, political or economic ties. Does not include settlement hierarchy. Size / scale of buildings in the settlement is important. Social and economic relationship of the society which occupied them is more important. ► Interaction of: - Humans and their environment. Humans and humans. Rhos-on-Sea Old Colwyn Colwyn Bay Colwyn Bay Conwy Cardiff London Europe Colwyn Heights Site Status ► Possible site categories Regional centre Local centre Nucleated village Dispersed village Hamlet ► Based on size, chronological range (finds and features) etc. Evolution of settlements ► Not static and tend to evolve. ► They grow in size. Linear patterns. Growing outwards from a nucleus (nuclear). ► Sometimes, the opposite happens (site abandonment). Central Place Theory ► Developed by a German geographer Walter Christaller in the 1930s. Explained spacing and functions of cities & towns in modern southern Germany. Argued that: In a uniform landscape (no mountains, rivers etc. to get in the way) the spatial patterning of settlements would be perfectly regular. ► Central places of the same size and nature would be situated equi-distance from each other surrounded by a constellation of secondary centres with their own smaller satellites. ► Hexagonal patterns. ► Key:City Town Village Hamlet Central Place Theory ► Perfect conditions do not occur in nature. ► However, it is possible to detect some form of this theory in ancient cities and towns. Major centres will be some distance from neighbouring cities. Surrounded by ring of lesser settlements in a hierarchical nested pattern. Major centres then supply goods and services to surrounding area expecting something in return. Site Hierarchy ► Sites usually ranked by size. Less main centres (cities), more small settlements (villages and hamlets). ► Can be displayed in a histogram. Ease of comparison: ► Different ► The regions, periods, types of society. type of society will determine the variation and size of sites. ► “The more hierarchical the settlement pattern, the more hierarchical the society.” (Refrew&Bahn,2000:179). Thiessen Polygons ► Geometric shapes that divide an area into a number of different territories Each focussed on a single site. Straight lines between neighbouring sites. Then, at the mid-point along each of these lines a second series of lines, at right-angles to the first. ► Problems: - Doesn’t take into account difference in status of sites. ► So only use for sites of equal rank (status). Also doesn’t work unless sites are contemporary. Key: City XTENT Modelling ► Aims to assign territories to centres depending on their scale. Something the other theories didn’t do. ► Assumes a large centre will dominate over nearby small centres. Territory of small site is absorbed into larger ones territory. ► Assumes size of centre is directly proportional to its area of influence. Bell or bell tent shape. ► If two centres areas of influence overlap the bigger centre dominates. Case Study: Mesopotamia ► Diyala region of Mesopotamia (east of Bagdad in modern Iraq). ► Work by Gregory Johnson. 39 settlements from Early Dynastic period (c. 2800BC). From 25 hectares (60 acres) to one-tenth of a hectare (0.25 acres). 5 categories – large towns, towns, large villages, small villages & hamlets. Diyala region, Iraq Early Dynastic Period Idealised CPT & Best Fit CPT Hierarchy, Warka area, Late Uruk Period. XTENT model territories, Warka area, Late Uruk Period. Four or Five centres emerge. Homework!!! Due Thur Oct 13th (two weeks time) Make a plan of your personal study.