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Field Methods in Archaeology and Paleoanthropology

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Title: Field Methods in Archaeology and Paleoanthropology


1
Chapter 5
  • Field Methods in Archaeology and Paleoanthropology

2
Chapter Preview
  • How Are the Physical and Cultural Remains of Past
    Humans Investigated?
  • Are Human Physical and Cultural Remains Always
    Found Together?
  • How Are Archaeological or Fossil Remains Dated?

3
Prehistory and History
  • The term prehistory is used to refer to the
    period of time before the appearance of written
    records.
  • This does not deny the existence of history,
    merely of written history.

4
Paleoanthropology
  • The study of the physical remains of our
    ancestors and other ancient primates.
  • Paleoanthropologists do more than find and
    catalogue old bones.
  • Paleoanthropologists recover, describe, and
    organize these remains to see what they can tell
    us about human biological and cultural evolution.

5
Recovering Cultural And Biological Remains
  • The only way to thoroughly investigate our past
    is to excavate (dig) sites where biological and
    cultural remains are found.

6
Recovering Cultural And Biological Remains
  • The fundamental premise of excavation is that
    all digging is destructive, even that done by
    experts. The archaeologists primary
    responsibility, therefore, is to record a site
    for posterity as it is dug because there are no
    second chances.
  • - Brian Fagan, archaeologist
  • What kinds of information can we get from
    recording a site?
  • ANSWER Material Culture and Skeletal
    Remains/Fossils

7
Material Culture
  • The term material culture refers to the durable
    aspects of culture such as tools, structures, and
    art.

8
Types of Material Culture
  • Artifacts objects which have been modified by
    hominids (stone tools, ceramics, wood tools,
    etc.)
  • Manuports natural objects that were carried by
    hominids but not modified
  • Ecofacts natural objects found in association
    with hominids (e.g. plant remains, animal
    remains)
  • Features large, non-portable modified objects
    found at hominid sites (e.g. hearths, buildings,
    large statues, rock art, etc.)

9
Types of Material Culture For Class Discussion
  • Is this example of one of the Nazca Lines in
    Peru a feature, artifact, ecofact or manuport?

10
Types of Material Culture For Class Discussion
  • Are these examples of Maya sculpture features,
    artifacts, ecofacts or manuports?

11
Types of Material Culture For Class Discussion
  • Look over this list of material objects and
    decide if they are artifacts, manuports,
    ecofacts, or features
  • 1. A lucky rabbits foot
  • 2. Bones of a dairy cow
  • 3. A stepped-pyramid
  • 4. A stone tool
  • 5. A hearth or ring of stones

12
The Nature of Fossils
  • The term fossil refers to any mineralized trace
    or impression of an organism that has been
    preserved in earths crust from past geological
    time.

13
The Nature of Fossils
  • It is also important to understand the kinds of
    factors that led to the placement of the fossil
    within the ground as well as affected its
    preservation
  • TAPHONOMY the study of what happens to bones
    and other material remains once they have been
    discarded or the animal has died, and before they
    are excavated.

14
Taphonomy
  • Cultural Transforms burial, mortuary ritual,
    plowing, looting
  • Natural Transforms erosion, weathering,
    scavenging, natural disasters, animal action in
    the soil, climatic conditions

15
Natural and Cultural Burial of the Dead
  • Entirely preserved fossil skeletons dating before
    the cultural practice of burial about 100,000
    years ago are quite rare.
  • The human fossil record from before this period
    consists primarily of fragmentary remains.

16
Natural and Cultural Burial of the Dead
  • The fossil record for many fossil primates is
    even poorer, because organic materials decay
    rapidly in the tropical forests where they lived.
  • By contrast, the fossils of our pre-human
    ancestors are generally better preserved because
    of the arid savanna in which they were located.

17
Searching For Artifacts And Fossils
  • Places containing archaeological remains of
    previous human activity are known as sites.

18
Searching For Artifacts And Fossils
  • There are many kinds of sites, and sometimes it
    is difficult to define their boundaries, for
    remains may be strewn over large areas. Sites are
    even found underwater.

19
Site Identification
  • The first task for the archaeologist is actually
    finding sites to investigate.
  • Usually archaeologists survey a region in order
    to plot the sites available for excavation. A
    survey can be made from the ground, but more
    territory can be covered using aerial
    photography.
  • Innovations such as geographic information
    systems (GIS), remote sensing, and ground
    penetrating radar (GPR) often complement these
    exploration methods.

20
Site Identification
  • What archaeologists look for
  • (1) soil marks or stains that show up on the
    surface of recently plowed fields. These may
    reveal an archaeological site.
  • (2) middens or refuse or garbage disposal areas
    in an archaeological site. May appear to be
    large mounds.

21
Excavation
  • Since excavations are destructive, archaeologists
    must carefully record the location of material
    remains in three-dimensional space.

22
Excavation
  • To begin, the land is cleared, and the places to
    be excavated are plotted as a grid system a
    system for recording data in three dimensions
    from an archaeological excavation. Usually
    divides a site into squares (1m x 1m).
  • Grids are established using a datum point or
    reference point for a grid system.

23
Excavation
  • Trowels are used to scrape the soil, and screens
    are used to sift all the loose soils so that even
    the smallest artifacts, such as flint chips or
    beads, are recovered.
  • Some archaeologists use flotation a technique
    used to recover very tiny objects by immersion of
    soil samples in water to separate heavy from
    light particles.

24
Excavation
  • If a site is stratified (i.e. contains layers of
    cultural and biological remains), each layer or
    strata is excavated separately.
  • Archaeologists can also use stratigraphy to
    relatively date the remains by means of strata.
    Objects in lower strata are older than objects in
    higher strata.

25
Example of Stratigraphy
26
Stratigraphy Exercise Which material remain is
older?
27
Excavation of Fossils
  • Both skill and caution are required to remove a
    fossil from its burial place without damage.
  • Paleoanthropologists use a combination of tools
    and materials to do this pickaxes, dental tools,
    enamel coating, burlap for bandages, and
    sculpting plaster.


28
State of Preservation
  • Artifacts made of inorganic materials such as
    stones are preserved better than artifacts made
    of perishable materials (unless there are
    favorable climatic conditions).

29
State of Preservation
  • Sometimes the impressions of organic objects
    (such as post holes) can provide clues about the
    objects themselves.

30
Sorting Out the Evidence
  • Excavation records include a scale map of all
    the features, the stratification of each
    excavated square, a description of the exact
    location and depth of every artifact or bone
    unearthed, and photographs and scale drawings of
    the objects.

31
Sorting Out the Evidence
  • In the lab, artifacts that have been recovered
    from an excavation must be cleaned and catalogued
    before they are ready for analysis.
  • From the shapes of the artifacts as well as from
    the traces of manufacture and wear,
    archaeologists can usually determine their
    function.

32
Sorting Out the Evidence
  • Other kinds of information gathered from fossils
  • (1) Endocasts - Casts of the inside of a skull
    which can help determine the size and shape of
    the brain.
  • (2) Coprolites - Preserved fecal material
    providing evidence of the diet and health of past
    organisms.

33
Sorting Out the Evidence
  • Other kinds of information gathered from fossils
  • (3) Small fragments of DNA can be amplified or
    copied repeatedly using polymerase chain reaction
    (PCR) technology to provide a sufficient amount
    of material to perform these analyses.

34
Bioarchaeology and Forensics
  • The term bioarchaeology refers to the
    archaeological study of human remains emphasizing
    the preservation of cultural and social processes
    in the skeleton.
  • Examples include forensic anthropology, human
    osteology, and paleopathology.

35
Human Osteology
  • (1) determine the sex, age (at death), and
    ancestral population of a skeleton from
    morphological features
  • (2) determine wear patterns on the bones and
    teeth from repeated activities
  • (3) comparison with other skeletons to determine
    species affiliation

36
Human Osteology
37
Paleopathology
  • - Iron deficiency causes anemia porous bones
  • - Vitamin D deficiency causes legs to grow bent.
  • - Malnutrition or under-nutrition is inferred
    from skeletal measurements.
  • - Certain infections leave specific traces in the
    skeleton.
  • - Various cancers are identifiable in the
    skeleton.

38
Paleopathology
- Trauma in skeletons is clearly evident in bone
fractures, especially when they have not healed
successfully. - The individual workload leaves
traces in the skeleton. - Growth-disrupting and
growth-retarding stresses during childhood will
leave transverse lines of dense bone visible in
radiographs of long bones of the body.
39
Case Studies in Paleopathology

Tibias from a 50-60 year old Roman Soldier,
3rd-4th Century, AD
40
Case Studies in Paleopathology

Spear injury to right tibia Osteoporosis on both
tibias
41
Case Studies in Paleopathology

Patellas of a 40 year old Moche potter (350-600
AD)
42
Case Studies in Paleopathology

Both show wear from extended periods of kneeling
43
Case Studies in Paleopathology

Female Skull, 500 AD
44
Case Studies in Paleopathology

Blunt force trauma to left side of the face
45
Case Studies in Paleopathology

Male Skull, Belize, Postclassic Period (1300 AD)
46
Case Studies in Paleopathology

Possible anemia or syphilitic infection
47
Case Studies in Paleopathology

Yde Girl a bog body from the Netherlands (1st
Century AD)
48
Case Studies in Paleopathology

Hair has been cut off Evidence of strangulation
or hanging
49
Case Studies in Paleopathology

Skulls with evidence for cranial re-shaping
50
Bioarchaeology and Ethics
  • As scientists, anthropologists know the
    importance of the information that can be gleaned
    from studies of human skeletons, but as scholars
    subject to ethical principles, they are bound to
    respect the feelings of those who give skeletons
    a deep cultural and spiritual significance.

51
Dating the Past
  • Two types of dating
  • (1) relative dating - designating an event,
    object, or fossil as being older or younger than
    another.
  • (2) absolute or chronometric dating provides
    dates for recovered material based on solar
    years, centuries, or other units of absolute time.

52
Relative Dating Techniques
  • Seriation a technique for relative dating by
    putting groups of objects into a sequence in
    relation to one another.
  • Stratigraphy a technique for relative dating
    based on organizing remains by means of strata.
    Objects in lower strata are older than objects in
    higher strata.

53
Relative Dating Techniques
  • Palynology a method of relative dating based
    on changes in fossil pollen over time.

54
Absolute Dating Techniques
  • Radiocarbon dating a technique of dating based
    on measuring the amount of radioactive carbon
    (14C ) left in organic materials found in
    archaeological sites.
  • Dendrochronology a method of dating based on
    the number of rings of growth found in a tree
    trunk.

55
Absolute Dating Techniques
  • Potassium-argon dating a method of absolute
    dating based on measuring the amount of
    radioactive potassium left in a layer of volcanic
    rock.

56
Absolute Dating Techniques
  • Electron spin resonance measures the number of
    trapped electrons in bone
  • Thermo-luminescence measures the amount of
    light emitted from a specimen when heated to high
    temperatures.

57
Chance and the Study of the Past
  • The archaeological and fossil records are
    imperfect, partial, and non-representative.
  • Chance circumstances of preservation and
    discovery have determined what has survived the
    ravages of time to be excavated by
    archaeologists.
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