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Cartoon. Archeology Goes To The Movies. Definition. Archeology is the scientific study of past human culture and behavior, from the origins of humans to the present. The aim is to reconstruct human societies that can no longer be observed firsthand, in order to understand and explain human behavior..
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1. Archeology: The Science of Trash By Ron Eisenman
3. Archeology Goes To The Movies
4. Definition
Archeology is the scientific study of past human culture and behavior, from the origins of humans to the present.
The aim is to reconstruct human societies that can no longer be observed firsthand, in order to understand and explain human behavior.
5. Objects of Study Archaeologists study the material remains of previous human societies such as the fossils (such as preserved bones and teeth) of humans, food remains, the ruins of buildings, and human artifactsitems such as tools, pottery, and jewelry.
Fossil: any trace or impression of an organism of past geologic time that has been preserved in the Earths crust. Bones, teeth, shells, horns and woody tissues of plants are the most common type
Artifact: any object made or altered by humans
6. History The discipline of archeology began in the 19th Century
Most early sites were in Europe, Egypt, and Southwest Asia
Today, highly trained archeologists excavate sites all over the world which cover the earliest human history to the present
7. The Archeological Record Most objects have disintegrated over time.
The prospects for an item to be found in the archeological record depend on the following factors:
Soil conditions
Nature of the original material
The most common items include durable items such as potsherds (small fragments of pottery), tools or buildings of stone, bones, and teeth (which survive because they are covered with hard enamel).
Delicate objects are rarely found
Temperature: Ice and cold temperatures slow decay
Humidity: Low humidity encourages preservation, ie, King Tuts flowers and robes
Human activity
Paradox: Assuming a site is preserved and discovered, it is destroyed as soon as it is touched.
8. Specialties Since the archeological record is so incomplete, archeologists must use other kinds of information and educated reasoning to fill in the gaps.
Archaeology is a multi-disciplinary team effort relying on expertise in diverse fields, including physical anthropology (the study of human biology and anatomy), geology, ecology, and climatology (the science of weather patterns). Sub-specialties include exotic fields like zooarchaeology, paleoethnobotany, and geoarchaeology.
9. Specialties Prehistoric archeology (or paleoanthropology)
Early human remains
Stone Age
Early Farming
Historical archeology
Classical Civilizations
Biblical archeology
Underwater archeology
Industrial archeology
Urban archeology
Forensic archeology
10. Survey Site: any place containing archeological remains of human activity
How are sites discovered?
Luck
Ground surveys: soil marks, vegetation
Aerial photography
Satellite imaging
Exposure from erosion, earthquakes, floods
Documents, maps, and folklore
Conspicuous mounds or ruins
11. Type of Sites Living or settlement sites
Early settlements were open-air lake or riverside camps, rock overhangs, or caves
Near water, game, and farming opportunities
Kill sites
Ceremonial sites
Burial sites
Battlefields
12. Stonehenge
13. Excavation Sites are excavated according to plan- there are no second chances
2 methods:
Horizontal excavation: for larger areas
Vertical excavation: for smaller areas and emphasis on chronology (see next slide)
Grid systems and stakes are used to record the exact location of where an object is found in relation to another object
Digging is carefully done using hand trowels, screens, brushes, and picks. Flotation may also be used
Site maps, photographs, scale drawings are used
14. Vertical Excavation
15. Sorting the Evidence The materials are processed in a laboratory
3 hours of tedious lab work for one hour of fieldwork
Analysis of human skeletal materials explains many aspects of life
16. Goals Modern archaeological studies have three major goals:
Chronology: to establish the age of excavated materials
Reconstruction: to model what past human campsites, settlements, or citiesand their environmentsmight have looked like, and how they might have functioned
Explanation: to create scientific theories about what people living in the past thought and did.
17. Dating
18. Chronology- Relative Dating Relative dating: establishes the date of archaeological finds in relation to one another.
Law of Association: an object is contemporary with the other objects found in the same archaeological level
Law of Superposition: The lowest occupation level on a site is older than those on top of it.
It is possible to date materials by:
Comparing the object itself with known dates of similar objects
Palynology: examination of pollen grains and vegetation
Knowledge of paleontology and the nearby animal remains
19. Chronology- Absolute Dating Absolute dating: determines the year in which an artifact, remain, or geological layer was deposited.
Historical documents or objects of known age that confirm the date, or both.
Dendrochronology, or tree-ring dating. (More recent)
Radiocarbon dating (40,000-1500 AD)
Uranium Thorium Dating (1 MYA-300,000)
Potassium-argon dating (oldest to MYA)
20. Reconstruction and Explanation Settlement: The study of the nature of human occupation of a site.
How long? What kind of activities took place? Organization? What materials were used? Where did the materials originate? Trade with outsiders?
Burials
Reveals much about an individual and the larger society
21. Reconstruction and Explanation Food: provides clues about environment, economics, and technology
Textiles: one of the most important products of human skill for over 1 million years.
Disease (Paleopathology): Clues to genetics, natural environment, and social conditions
Warfare
Valuables
Ritual and religion
22. Archeology Careers and Resources http://www.museum.state.il.us/ismdepts/anthro/dlcfaq.html
23. Sources http://history-world.org/archeology.htm
http://www.museum.state.il.us/ismdepts/anthro/dlcfaq.html
Past Worlds: Atlas of Archaeolgy
Anthropology by Haviland