Finding a Site Survey and Excavation September 9, 2014 Anth 130.

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Finding a Site Survey and Excavation September 9, 2014 Anth 130

Transcript of Finding a Site Survey and Excavation September 9, 2014 Anth 130.

Page 1: Finding a Site Survey and Excavation September 9, 2014 Anth 130.

Finding a SiteSurvey and Excavation

September 9, 2014Anth 130

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Discovering sites!

• Ground Reconnaissance• Ariel Survey• GIS• Subsurface Investigation • Ground-Based Remote Sensing

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Documentary Sources

• Looking at historical documents for clues as to where ancient archaeological sites maybe located

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Troy

• Schliemann's belief in the historical accuracy of Homer led to the finding of ancient Troy

• Excavated at the ancient site of Troy in 1872

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Biblical Archaeology

• When looking for sites in the Near East Biblical archaeology looks to the old and new testament for clues as to sites locations

• Example: Megiddo, Israel

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Old Maps and Place Names

• Help to work out plans of historic towns and places

• Helps archaeologist know where it would be best to start survey and excavation

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Survey

• Earliest method was to look for the most prominent remains in a landscape: walls, buildings, burial mounds

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Survey• Archaeologists have realized that people left faint scatters of artifacts

throughout the landscape• Not necessarily a site but still represents human activity • Work is done by systamtic survey and sampling procedures• Survey is very important when studying settlement patterns• Used to be used as a preliminary stage of fieldwork but has become its

own type of inquiry

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It is not enough to locate a site and simply study it!

You must study it in relation to other sites and the landscape around it

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Survey

• Sometimes excavation does not need to take place after survey

• Produces a type of regional data that digging does not

• Also used to test natural and mineral resources

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Survey in Practice

• First must establish a boundary

• Must understand the natural and cultural processes working in an area

• Need to asses your resources

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Unsystematic Survey

• Walking across an area• Scanning, recording artifacts• Recording any artifacts in relation to features• Results can be biased or misleading…why?

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Systematic Survey

• Employs a grid or a series of equal spaces that travers each other

• Area is divided into sections which are walked systematically

• Easier to know the exact location of a find• Repeated looking can make sure nothing is

missed

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Aerial Survey

• Survey using air born (or space born) equipment

• Two parts: data collecting and data analysis• They are a means to an end• Google Earth

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GIS

• Geographic Information Systems • Collection of computer hardware and software

and geographical data,designed to obtain, manage, store, analyze and display spacial information

• Has the ability to perform statistical analysis of site or artifact distribution

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Subsurface investigation

• Probes: probing the soil with a rod or auger and noting positions where they strike solids or hallows

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Test Pits

• Small pits dug into the ground at consistent distances…normally one meter squares but sometimes small round holes

• Often used in areas with poor surface visabilty

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Ground-Based Remote Sensing

• Non-destructive techniques to learn more before actually excavation

• Geophysical sensing devices that can either pass energy through soil and measure or response to “read” what lies beneth or they measure physical properties without the need to pass energy

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Seismic and Acoustic Methods

• Sonar• Detection of graviational anomalies to detect caves• Seismic methods to find foundations of buildings• Very useful in underwater archaeology

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Electromagnetic Methods

• Ground penetrating radar• Uses radio pluses to map what is under the

soil • Used to create “time-slice” maps

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Earth Resistance Survey

• Based on the idea that the damper the soil the more easily it will conduct electricity

• Silted ditches retain more mostiure than walls…

• Works very well to find pits in chalk or gravel or masonry in clay

• Will not fully function if the soil is too hard or dry

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Magnetic Survey

• Buried features (such as hearths or pottery kilns) produce slight distortions in the earth’s magnetic field

• This is because of the presence of magnetic minerals

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Other Things Archaeologists do to find and analyze a site before digging

• Use a metal detector• Map the vegetation• Geochemical analysis

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Now we have site….

• What’s next?