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What Is Archaeology? Archaeology is the systematic, scientific recovery and analysis of artifacts in order to answer questions about past human culture and behavior. What Is Archaeology? Archaeology is one of four sub-disciplines of Anthropology. Anthropology is the study of people and their biology and culture across space and time. Anthropology Subdisciplines: Archaeology Cultural Anthropology Linguistic Anthropology Biological or Physical Anthropology Archaeology Culture Speech & Language Biology of Humans Objectives of Archaeology Reconstruct Past Lifeways Reconstruct Cultural and Long-Term Histories Understand How and Why Cultures and Societies Change Archaeology Terms Systematic: A consistent way of studying anything. Science: Hypothesis-driven research. Recovery/ Analysis: To collect and study artifacts. Artifact: Any item resulting from human activity. Culture: Any learned behavior that is shared with others. Past: Archaeologists study human cultures that are no longer living (mostly). Archaeology Terms Site = a spatial clustering of material remains Context = where material remains are found and what they are associated with (in situ) What Do Archaeologists Study? • artifacts = portable objects made or altered by humans. • ecofacts = plant, animal, or sedimentary remains that result from human activity. • features = non-portable objects made or altered by humans (e.g., hearths, storage pits). Modern Scientific Archaeology 1960’s DNA The invention of modern scientific excavation techniques Using a multidisciplinary approach to study people. Increasing impact of science on archaeology Refinement of archaeological theory. Processual Archaeology / The New Archaeology Dendrochronology Botany Disciplines that are home to Archaeologists Anthropology Classics History Art History Area Studies (Near Eastern Studies, Asian Studies) Museology (Museum Studies) Materials Science and Engineering Medical Schools NASA Archaeology Specialties Prehistoric Archaeology Before writing. Historical Archaeology Document/writing assisted Classical Archaeology Greek and Roman Biblical Archaeology Underwater Archaeology Shipwrecks or anything else under water. Industrial Archaeology Industrial Revolution and other modern structures Andeanists, Egyptologists, Mayanists, Study of specific civilizations or time periods. Cultural Resource Management (CRM) Management and assessment of significant cultural resources. Archaeological Excavation • To recover stratified (in situ) datable materials to understand the context(s) of use and discard • mapping, screening, specialized sampling Laboratory Analyses Microscopy Radiocarbon Dating Dendrochronology Isotope Analysis Human Remains Plant and Animal Remains Ceramics Stone Tools (Lithics) Textiles Metallurgy GIS mapping STRATIGRAPHY Stratigraphy is the study of strata, or layers. Specifically, stratigraphy refers to the application of the Law of Superposition to soil and geological strata containing archaeological materials in order to determine the relative ages of layers. In addition, stratigraphy can tell us much about the processes affecting the deposition of soils, and the condition of sites and artifacts Law of Superposition “layer cake” model The Layers of Troy occupational phases: later atop the earlier Wheeler-Kenyon Excavation Method Section / Balk / Profile Wall foundation Section Drawing Horizontal excavation: “synchronic” approach Vertical excavation: “diachronic” approach RELATIVE CHRONOLOGY Based on: ARTIFACT STYLES CHANGING THROUGH TIME SERIATION This technique places assemblages of artefacts into relative order. Petrie used sequence dating to work back from the earliest historical phases of Egypt into pre-dynastic Neolithic times, using groups of contemporary artefacts deposited together at a single time in graves. W.F. Petrie (1853-1942) Flinders Petrie’s Sequence Dating ABSOLUTE DATING A more precise and accurate system is known as absolute dating and can in most circumstances provide a calendar year to the object. Since 1950 there has been a transformation in the dating techniques of archaeologists. Absolute dating is highly dependent on laboratory analysis. There are a number of techniques that have come to archaeology through the nuclear research efforts during WW2. RADIO CARBON DATING Radiocarbon dating uses the biological assumption that all living things absorb carbon, both ordinary carbon, C12, and radioactive carbon, C14, into their living tissue. At the moment of death the C14 begins to decay at a rate that scientists already know from other experiments. The missing amount can then determine how long it took to be lost and therefore date the object to a precise period. C14 dating can only be used on organic matter. C-14 Calibration LIMITATIONS OF C14 DATING First, the size of the archaeological sample is important. Larger samples are better, because purification and distillation remove some matter. Although new techniques for working with very small samples have been developed, like accelerator dating, these are very expensive and still somewhat experimental. Second, great care must be taken in collecting and packing samples to avoid contamination by more recent carbon. For each sample, clean trowels should be used, to avoid cross contamination between samples.. Third, because the decay rate is logarithmic, radiocarbon dating has significant upper and lower limits. It is not very accurate for fairly recent deposits DENDROCHRONOLOGY Dendrochronology is another traditional technique for establishing the abolute date of events. This is also called Tree-Ring Dating. Tree-Ring dating is based on the principle that the growth rings on certain species of trees reflect variations in seasonal and annual rainfall. Trees from the same species, growing in the same area or environment will be exposed to the same conditions, and hence their growth rings will match at the point where their lifecycles overlap. Dendrochronology Weaknesses in Dendrochronolgy In some areas of the world, particularly in the tropics, the species available do not have sufficiently distinct seasonal patterns that they can be used. Where the right species are available, the wood must be well enough preserved that the rings are readable. In addition, there must be at least 30 intact rings on any one sample. There also must be an existing master strip for that area and species. There is an absolute limit on how far back in the past we can date things with tree rings. Although bristle cone pine trees can live to 9,000 years, this is a very rare phenomenon. As we try to push our matching of archaeological specimens beyond the range for which we have good control data, our confidence in the derived dates diminishes