42 research outputs found
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Microscopic Examination of Ancient and Modern Irrigated Paddy Soils in South Korea, with Special Reference to the Formation of Silty Clay Concentration Features
European ancient settlements - A guide to their composition and morphology based on soil micromorphology and associated geoarchaeological techniques; introducing the contrasting sites of Chalcolithic Bordus, ani-Popina, Borcea River, Romania and Viking Age Heimdaljordet, Vestfold, Norway
Specific soil micromorphological, broader geoarchaeological and environmental archaeology signatures of settlement activities and land use have been identified from numerous case studies across Europe â from Romania to western Norway. In order to demonstrate how such investigations contribute to our understanding of settlement morphology and its wider landscape, an improved way of organising site-specific information or guide was created (Macphail and Goldberg, in press). Activities and land use are divided into âWithin Settlementâ, âPeripheral to Settlementâ and âThe Settlement's Wider Landscapeâ. Major themes identified are: Constructions (and materials), Trackways and paths (and other communication/transport-associated features), Animal Management, Water Management, Waste Disposal (1: middening; 2: human waste), Specialist Domestic and Industrial Activities and Funerary Practices. In the case of trackway deposits, their characterisation aids the identification of intensely occupied areas compared to rural communications, although changing land use within urban areas has also produced ârural signaturesâ (e.g. as associated with animal management), for example in Late Roman cities. Specialist activities such as fish and crop processing or working with lead and other metals, in-field and within-wall manuring, stabling and domestic occupation floor-use evidence, and identification of different funerary practice â cremations, boat graves and other inhumations, and excarnation features â and peripheral constructions such as boat-houses, are also noted. New information from the Chalcolithic tell site of BorduĆani-PopinÄ, Romania and seasonally occupied Viking settlement of Heimdaljordet, Norway, is introduced
Marco Gonzalez, Ambergris Caye, Belize: a Geoarchaeological Record of Ground Raising Associated With Surface Soil Formation and the Presence of a Dark Earth
Marco Gonzalez, on the south-west end of the island of Ambergris Caye, Belize, has well-preserved Maya archaeological stratigraphy dating from Preclassic times (ca. 300 B.C.) to the Late Classic period (ca. A.D. 550/600 to 700/760). Although later occupations are recorded by house platforms and inhumations (Terminal Classic to Early Postclassic), and use of the site continued until the 16th century A.D., intact stratigraphy is rare in these cases owing to a greater degree of disturbance. Nonetheless, understanding site formation entails accounting for all processes, including disturbance. The siteâs depositional sequenceâas revealed through soil micromorphology and chemistry and detailed hereâhas yielded critical information in two spheres of research. As regards archaeology and the elucidation of Maya activities on the caye over time, soil micromorphology has contributed beyond measure to what we have been able to distinguish as material remains of cultural activity. Detailed descriptions of the nature of the material remains has in turn helped us to clarify or alter interpretations based on artefacts that have been identified or sediments characterised according to traditional recovery techniques. The other major sphere in which soil micromorphology and chemistry play a critical role is in assessment of the environmental impact of human activity, which enables us to construct and test hypotheses concerning how the site formed over time; what materials and elements contributed to the character of the sediments, especially in the formation of a specific Maya Dark Earth type that is developed from carbonate rich deposits; and how the modern surface soils acquired the appearance of a Dark Earth, but essentially differ from them. In terms of agricultural soil sustainability, the Marco Gonzalez surface soil is neo-formed by a woodland vegetation drawing upon the nutrients and constituents present in both the Dark Earth and underlying better preserved stratified deposits
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Humans and fire: changing relations in early agricultural and built environments in the Zagros, Iran, Iraq
Fire-centred studies have recently been highlighted as powerful avenues for investigation of energy flows and relations between humans, materials, environments and other species. The aim in this paper is to evaluate this potential first by reviewing the diverse theories and methods that can be applied to investigate the ecological and social significance of anthropogenic fire, and second by applying these to new and existing data sets in archaeology. This paper examines how fire-centred approaches can inform on one of the most significant step-changes in human lifeways and inter-relations with environment and other species â the transition from mobile hunting-gathering to more sedentary agriculture in a key heartland of change, the Zagros region of Iraq and Iran, c. 12,000â8,000 BP. In the review and case studies multiple links are investigated between human fire use and environment, ecology, energy use, technology, the built environment, health, social roles and relations, cultural practices and catastrophic event
Persistent Place-Making in Prehistory: the Creation, Maintenance, and Transformation of an Epipalaeolithic Landscape
Most archaeological projects today integrate, at least to some degree, how past people engaged with their surroundings, including both how they strategized resource use, organized technological production, or scheduled movements within a physical environment, as well as how they constructed cosmologies around or created symbolic connections to places in the landscape. However, there are a multitude of ways in which archaeologists approach the creation, maintenance, and transformation of human-landscape interrelationships. This paper explores some of these approaches for reconstructing the Epipalaeolithic (ca. 23,000â11,500 years BP) landscape of Southwest Asia, using macro- and microscale geoarchaeological approaches to examine how everyday practices leave traces of human-landscape interactions in northern and eastern Jordan. The case studies presented here demonstrate that these Epipalaeolithic groups engaged in complex and far-reaching social landscapes. Examination of the Early and Middle Epipalaeolithic (EP) highlights that the notion of âNeolithizationâ is somewhat misleading as many of the features we use to define this transition were already well-established patterns of behavior by the Neolithic. Instead, these features and practices were enacted within a hunter-gatherer world and worldview
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Chapter 15 Springhead (Zone 11) & Appendix G. Radiocarbon Dating Appendix P Waterlogged Wood Appendix Q Wood Charcoal, Lithological Succession, Dating, Wood, and Wood Charcoal at the Ebbsfleet River Crossing (ARC ERC01)and Prehistoric Spring Side Sequences (ARC SPH00)
This book presents the findings from excavation in advance of the High Speed 1 and South Thameside Development Route 4, and post-excavation analysis and dating of the prehistoric sedimentary sequences and sites found along the route, notably at the Ebbsfleet River Crossing site. The volume is of particular interest due to both the nature of scale of the HS1 development and its relevance in the light of recent announcements regarding HS2
Chapter 15 Springhead (Zone 11) by Barnett et al included in this substantial research monograph incorporates a series of specialist subchapters as outlined in below. Together they form a substantial contribution to our understanding of prehistoric environmental and geoarchaeological change across the area which provided the arena for human occupation.
Introduction
The Ebbsfleet River Crossing (ARC ERC01)
Introduction
Lithological succession by Catherine Barnett, David Norcott and Elizabeth Stafford
Dating by Catherine Barnett
Pollen by Rob Scaife
Molluscs by Sarah F Wyles
The prehistoric spring side sequences (ARC SPH00)
Introduction
Lithological succession by Catherine Barnett, David Norcott and Elizabeth Stafford
Dating by Catherine Barnett
Micromorphology and soil chemistry by Richard I Macphail and John Crowther
Molluscs by Sarah F Wyles
Appendix G Radiocarbon dating by Catherine Barnett and Elizabeth Stafford
Appendix P Wood species analysis by Catherine Barnett and Denise Druce
Appendix Q Wood charcoal by Catherine Barnet