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Archaeological
Analysis
When the last excavated
trench is backfilled with dirt and when survey is completed for another
season, one is left with only the records, drawings, photographs, and
cultural material to make sense of what everything means. The processing
and interpretation of those material remains, in conjunction with the
records, is the essential final step in completing the picture of past
human activities occurring in an area over time. Artifacts, ecofacts,
and features say little themselves, but researchers can make meaningful
inferences about these when they are studied closely and in detail. Analysis
is the examination, description, classification, and identification of
that material, as well as consideration of its broader meaning. As will
be seen in this section, data analysis is a vital part of fieldwork at
Isthmia and a necessary preparatory step to making interpretations about
past human activities.
Processing
Every
season, archaeological projects recover great quantities of artifacts,
ecofacts, features, and other cultural and environmental matter
that must be processed and managed in an efficient and systematic
manner (Figure 9.1). In a multi-year excavation project such as
the one at Isthmia, hundreds of thousands of objects and other
cultural material fill the storage sheds and museum. Processing
is the management of that archaeological material, beginning with
decisions about how much to sample and ending with cleaning, sorting
(preliminary analysis), inventory, and storage. It is the means
by which researchers cope with the significant quantities of artifacts
recovered annually and thereby stands as a preliminary step leading
up to analysis.
Processing
decisions begin with the research design and the goals tailored
for each project. As we have seen in our discussion of excavation
and survey, most projects employ sampling strategies that seriously
reduce the amount of matter brought back for analysis. In the
excavations at Isthmia, this involves sifting only a percentage
of the dirt from each stratum and discarding the rest; sieving
soil through wire mesh also reduces the number of total artifacts
since smaller objects are not preserved. Systematic survey in
the Eastern Korinthia necessarily samples since walkers are often
arrayed 10 or more meters apart, a total visual coverage rarely
more than 20%. Moreover, using EKAS' ChronoType system, only representative
objects are flagged, avoiding redundancy and diminishing the work
required of the Processing Team. Unlike the Isthmia excavations,
the EKAS project removes few artifacts from the field and this
saves enormous amounts of time in processing back at the Excavation
House. Thus, OSU's processing and analysis techniques are tailored
to the specific projects: the EKAS project employs a non-collection
strategy and so all processing takes place in the field, while
the excavations at Isthmia process material at the site as well
as at the Excavation House.
Cleaning:
Before any analysis takes place, artifacts must be cleaned either
on-site or back at the project's headquarters (Figure 9.2). Soils
and sediments build up on objects through time to form thin layers
of "encrustation" which cloud the exterior surface of the artifacts.
Even when the objects are not taken back to a laboratory, a washing
is often necessary to elucidate the exterior surface, which is
important in analyzing and dating the artifact. The washing is
done simply with water and brush, or, if the encrustation is too
hard and cemented, the artifacts are soaked in a weak mixture
of hydrochloric acid and water. This acid bath will certainly
remove most of the crust (and the artifact itself, if soaked too
long or not rinsed thoroughly). After the wash, artifacts are
allowed to dry overnight (or longer if necessary). While they
are being washed, and at every step in the recording process,
great care must be taken that the artifacts do not get mixed up
and that they retain their association with their archaeological
context is maintained.
Cleaning artifacts
is an important but time-consuming task in every archaeological project,
and it is essential that a team keep up, lest an overwhelming amount of
processing be left for the end of the season. At Isthmia, assigned crew
members wash hundreds of new objects at the end of every day. The other
real concern in this process is that the artifacts will lose their provenience,
through strong winds or careless artifact handling. Attempting to reassign
artifacts to their context is risky business; wrongly assigning the artifact
contaminates the collection of another provenience.
Sorting:
Artifact cleaning is usually followed with a preliminary sorting
of the material into broadly distinct classes: ceramic, stone,
bone, coins, architecture, and other (Figure 9.3). When the material
is dry, the artifact classes from the same Lot are bagged together,
all the bags from the same context being stored in a larger box.
Information about the archaeological context and excavation date
is written on the outside of the bags and boxes, as well as on
tags which are placed inside the bags; this reduces the risk that
that the context will be lost during the processing or storage.
Inventory:
Some artifacts may be selected for inventory, which involves "naming"
the object. Artifacts are assigned unique numbers by which they
are referred in subsequent analysis and discussion. In some areas
(e.g., North America), where artifacts are comparatively fewer,
it may be feasible to inventory all or most objects recovered
in survey or excavation. However, in Mediterranean areas, where
artifacts are overwhelming in numbers, researchers select objects
considered important and unique, or well preserved and representative
of similar objects. Inventory, then, is a way of processing and
managing all that material. Although the Eastern Korinthia Survey
project rarely inventories objects (as we have seen, artifacts
are rarely removed from the field), the Excavation House and museum
at Isthmia are filled with inventoried objects from years of excavation.
In the series of reports of the excavations at Isthmia, the inventory
number has given researchers a convenient way to refer to artifacts
by name.
Isthmia has a well-developed
system for managing its finds. The inventory number is usually written
directly onto the surface of the artifact, or when that is not possible
or desirable, onto a tag attached to the object. The number contains three
parts:
TYPE OF OBJECT
-- YEAR -- RUNNING NUMBER
The artifact is assigned
to a specific "object type," a class of material ranging from pottery
to coins to sculpture. At Isthmia, the following abbreviations exist:
IA (Architecture)
IC (Coins)
IM (Miscellaneous: small finds, jewelry, etc.)
IPB (Byzantine Pottery)
IPG (Greek Pottery)
IPL (Lamps)
IPR (Roman Pottery)
IS (Sculpture)
IS (Inscriptions)
Artifacts
are also designated by the last two digits of the year the object
was discovered. Because there are usually multiple artifacts of
the same type found in each field season, the artifact is also
assigned an individual number that identifies the object within
its class and year. The assigning of this specific "running number"
is based on the order in which the object is inventoried. The
following artifacts, for example, line the shelves of the Isthmia
excavation house:
| IPL
78-23 |
The
23rd lamp inventoried in 1978. |
| IPB
68-124 |
The
124th Byzantine sherd inventoried from 1968. |
| IS
93-1 |
The
first piece of sculpture from 1993. |
| IC
90-4 |
The
4th coin from 1990. |
An inventory
card is filled out for each labeled object that includes additional
information about the object. The archaeological context is noted
along with references to appropriate field notebooks that discuss
the original recovery in more detail. The condition, decoration,
and dimensions of the object are described in great detail. A
photograph of the object is glued to the card and the physical
location of the object (e.g., in the excavation shed or the Isthmia
archaeological museum) is also noted. The inventory cards are
filed by year and stored in a cabinet at the Excavation House.
This system allows researchers an effective way of locating specific
objects among the thousands of artifacts which have been recovered
through excavation and survey.
Artifacts
A basic concept
that underlines archaeological analysis are the attributes of
artifacts. Attributes are those physical characteristics of artifacts
that make it possible to say anything meaningful about the artifacts
themselves. Artifacts are sorted by similarities and differences
in these attributes. Artifacts may be analyzed in terms of 1)
surface attributes such as decoration and color, 2) attributes
of form such as dimension, shape, and size, or 3) technological
attributes such as the raw material. Each kind of artifact characteristic
provides different information about past cultures. For example,
the style of a stone spear point (e.g., where hafting or notching
occurs on the point) may suggest a particular cultural tradition
and the date of manufacture; the large size and shape may suggest
the use of the spear point for big-game hunting; and the use of
material such as obsidian might indicate trade connections with
a particular place. It is the task of the archaeologist to decide
what kind of information to analyze and data to collect.
The
similarities in artifact attributes may be used to construct an
artifact typology, the hierarchical arrangement and ordering of
classes (types) of artifacts (Figure 9.4). For every kind of material
(e.g., ceramic, stone), archaeologists can assign artifacts to
types based on similar physical attributes such as shape, size,
and decoration. Because the style of artifacts changes slowly
over time, archaeologists can order the artifacts into sequences
in which one artifact is related stylistically to another. Moreover,
since these changes often represent developments in style over
time, archeologists can create relative chronologies in which
a stylistic development in an artifact type signifies a later
point in time. When one type of pottery is discovered with diagnostic
artifacts such as coins or inscriptions, or is related to a radiocarbon
dated context, archaeologists can create absolute chronologies.
Once these are established for a period and area, the discovery
of certain artifact types at other sites can provide reliable
dates for those sites.
Analysis of
artifacts at Isthmia occurs at two levels. On the one hand, general
information is recorded about the artifacts in each Lot. Artifacts
are sorted, counted, and weighed by each chronological period
(Prehistoric, Greek, Early Roman, Late Roman, Early Byzantine,
Late Byzantine, Modern, and Undatable), material class (fine and
coarse pottery, lamps, tiles, metal, glass, stone), and ChronoType
(an object that is physically and chronologically unique). On
the other hand, more specific descriptions and measurements are
made for inventoried objects. This twofold system allows archaeologists
to make inferences and comparisons about entire artifact groups,
as well as specific artifacts, within each Lot.
Ceramics:
Ceramics are the most common type of artifact found in Mediterranean
archaeology since clay pots were usually the primary (and, oftentimes,
only) means of storage, cooking, and transport during ancient
times (Figure 9.5). Because well-baked clay breaks down slowly
through time and pottery has little real reuse value (unlike metal
and marble objects which were often used for construction or warfare),
sherds survive abundantly in the archeological record. Moreover,
ceramics are excellent indicators of cultural activity in the
Mediterranean area. Since pottery is so abundant and excavation
has traditionally dominated archaeology, tightly dated chronologies
exist for many periods of ancient history and a potsherd may indicate
a very restricted period of production. The analysis of ceramics
then is a very important part of archaeological fieldwork.
Analysis of
ceramics at Isthmia begins with an initial sorting into broadly
periodic (e.g., Roman), functional (e.g., fine ware), typological
(e.g., pottery), morphological (e.g., rim sherd) classes for each
lot. As discussed, all sherds are also grouped into ChronoTypes,
a categorization that is both physically and chronologically distinct.
For example, the ARS ChronoType represents African Red Slip pottery,
a Late Roman fine ware produced from the third to seventh centuries
AD. Potsherds are counted and weighed for each class and forms
filled out recording these values. This is the end of the road
for some of the potsherds, and they are redeposited in dusty storage
boxes until a later day when some analyst has specific questions
about the contents of the Lot. Pottery of this kind is called
³context pottery,² to separate it from the inventoried pottery.
Inventoried artifacts,
however, are analyzed much more closely. The dimensions (height, length,
thickness) of the sherd are measured in meters with metal tapes or calipers.
These values give some indication of the form and function of the vessel.
Generally speaking, thicker vessels were put to more utilitarian purposes
than thin-walled vessels. Pithoi, for example, are thick, gigantic storage
vessels that were most certainly used for storage and were often produced
locally.
The fabric
is the physical composition of the pottery and is described in
terms of the clay, the color, and the temper. The clay may be
fine, medium, or coarse, indicative of the source of the clay
as well as vessel function (coarser jars generally put to heavier
use). Color is measured using a Munsell color chart for the exterior,
interior, and core surfaces. The lightness / darkness of color
illuminates the atmosphere of the firing process, ceramic technology,
and the source of clays. Temper is the filler material added to
clay to prevent the pot from breaking during the firing process
and to give it special characteristics. Potters used a great variety
of temper for this purpose: grit (crushed crystalline rock), grog
(crushed pottery), shell, and even some types of reeds and grasses.
The temper type is noted, and the size (average and range) for
each sherd is estimated. Generally, the analysis and determination
of the clay, color, and temper indicate the function of the vessel
and the sources of physical materials. If the vessel is locally
produced, scientific analysis of the fabric may enable one to
determine the exact clay bed from which the clay was extracted.
The decoration
of ceramics is described and measured whenever possible. Decoration
includes surface treatments such as painting, slips, glazes, wheel
marks, incisions, and excisions. The decoration of the exterior
surface indicates cultural values and may be used to date the
pot stylistically. Examples of comparatively similar decorations
and styles may be found from other excavated contexts, providing
a date for the ceramic ware.
Rim
sherds are analyzed in greater detail than normal body sherds
since they generally provide better indication of the form and
shape of the vessel (Figure 9.6). Rim stance is the position of
the rim when oriented correctly. Rims flare outward, slope inward,
or are simple and vertical. Moreover, the lip treatment (square,
rounded, pointed) and the presence of rim thickening are also
associated with certain styles and ChronoTypes. When rim sherds
are oriented correctly and compared to a "diameter chart," it
is possible to estimate the orifice diameter, the size of the
vessel opening. Using all this information, archaeologists ascertain
the vessel form, determining the shape and size of the whole pot
from a single sherd or two.
Lithics:
Lithic artifacts are rarely found in excavations at Isthmia but
are commonly discovered in the Eastern Korinthia Survey. Stone
tools were more typical in prehistoric times but were sometimes
used well into the classical period and even later. As in the
Americas, prehistoric Europe developed standard techniques for
knapping material into knives, blades, and projectile points.
Local outcroppings of chert and flint were sought to craft weapons
and tools. By holding "cores" of raw flint at certain angles and
striking the flint block with another "hammer" stone, smaller
"flakes" which were chipped away could be manipulated into tools.
Today, these flintknapping processes are reflected in the cores,
flakes, and tools left behind on the landscape. Indeed, the permanency
of stone has meant that lithics are common finds in many survey
projects.
The analysis
of lithic artifacts is in some ways similar to that of pottery.
Artifacts are sorted into various classes that reflect the process
of manufacture or the function of the artifact; counts and weight
are taken for these classes. At the basic level are the debitage
remains: stone cores, large blocky flakes, thinner flakes, exhausted
cores (where the cores have been worked so much that they are
no longer useable), and thinning flakes (from the final steps
of tool making). Oftentimes, flakes were utilized as tools or
made into tools, apparent in their dulled or worked edges. All
lithics are examined for this kind of utilization with microscope
or magnifying glass.
Tools are
objects that have been clearly modified by retouching with hammer
stones, bones, or antler tine. This is apparent in the marks on
the surface edges of the stone where small "trimming flakes" were
removed to sharpen the edge. Tools worked on only one face of
the stone are described as unifacial, while retouch on both sides
is called bifacial. Stone tools exist in a variety of forms (knives,
blades, bladelets, projectile points, and drills) and are analyzed
in terms of dimension, styles, color, and material.
The dimensions of
a tool may indicate technological capacities, modes of manufacture, or
function. For example, spear points are associated with human activities
such as hunting, warfare, and ritual; the size of a point may illuminate
which activity is most likely.
Like
pottery, the styles of tools change over time and where typologies
of stone tools exist, it may be possible to use tools as a means
of dating. This is especially true of projectile points, since
the shape, curvature, and form of base are associated with particular
traditions. When these are found on the landscape or in excavated
contexts, they aid in providing dates for the use of the area.
Lithic material
may indicate trade, long-distance connections, or the utilization
of the local environment (Figure 9.7). For example, obsidian bladelets
found during survey indicate trade connections with the island
of Melos to the south of Greece, while some flints may be traced
to local outcroppings. Moreover, distinctive forms and shapes
are associated with certain activities. Knives and blades were
certainly used for cutting; scrapers used for removing meat from
hides; points for war and hunting. Finally, the microscopic examination
of the residues left on the edges of stone tools will reveal the
more specific activities to which the tool was applied.
Microanalysis:
Analyzing Ecofacts
Artifacts
are only one class of material that provides information about
past human cultures. In order to gain a fuller understanding,
archaeologists must also examine ecofacts, the environmental and
organic remains that reveal past ecosystems, climate, and ancient
diet. Floral (plant) and faunal (animal) remains are a necessary
and significant part of archaeological analysis.
Floral Remains:
Ancient plant residues are important indicators of changing plant environment,
past climate, and plant cultivation, all of which reflect on past human
behaviors. For these reasons, analysis of plant remains has become a significant
aspect of excavation and survey. The study of pollen (called palynology)
has become important especially for illuminating changing patterns of
plant population in an area. Because plants are everywhere emitting pollen
grains and because the outer shell (exine) is virtually indestructible
under certain conditions (in moist, low oxygen atmospheres: marshes and
peat bogs), the analysis of pollen is a reliable means of reconstructing
past environments.
In archaeological
excavation and regional survey, pollen is collected by extracting sediments
through a technique known as coring. A hollow pipe, several meters long,
is drilled deep into the bottom of a marsh or peat bog, and layers of
sediments are extracted which contain pollen grains. When taken back to
a lab, these sediment cores undergo a physical and geochemical analysis.
Small samples are examined at set intervals and processed with an acid
solution so that only the pollen grains remain. Because pollen grains
are unique in shape, size, and physical appearance, specific plant genus
(and in some cases, species) can be identified under the microscope. The
pollen analyst then faces the daunting task of manually counting the total
number of pollen grains for each genus. This information can then be used
to create pollen sequences, which list percentages of pollen by type,
and pollen diagrams, which show the changes of these percentages through
time. All of this is used to illuminate local environment and vegetation
changes, which can be tied to absolute dates through radiocarbon dating.
It is then possible to make inferences about the responses of vegetation
to climatic changes and the pressure of humans on the environment.
Plant data is also
collected during excavation in a process known as flotation, or water
sieving. Soil is dumped into a vat of water and materials are separated
by density. Denser, heavy material such as minerals and artifacts, sinks
to the bottom of the vat, while less dense organic remains float on the
surface. After this floating material is skimmed off the water surface
and allowed to dry, researchers manually sort the plant remains into a
variety of categories: seeds and seed pods, wood fragments, charcoal,
roots, shell, and miscellaneous material. This painstaking and tedious
process requires a great deal of patience, as well as a certain level
of skill in identifying the various kinds of material. However, the payoff
is high in the information it provides about past environment. Like pollen,
it may be possible with a microscope to identify specific plant species
and genuses in the seeds, roots, wood, and charcoal remains; this information
can be used to make inferences about plant cultivation, ecosystem, and
diet.
Faunal Remains:
Animal remains are important indicators of ancient diet, husbandry, and
climate. In the flotation process described above, the heavier, denser
material sinks to the bottom of the vat and this is "water sieved" through
fine mesh. In many archaeological contexts, the tiny remains which are
left when the silt and earth is washed away consist largely of animal
(faunal) remains. Like plants, these can be sorted out by species and
used to infer about ancient diet and local environment.
Changing quantities
of microfaunal (small animal) remains, such as rodents, bats, birds, mollusks,
and insects, may indicate climatic changes, since these animals are sensitive
to shifting environmental patterns. Macrofaunal (large animal) remains
indicate diet and husbandry in past cultures. Archaeologists can estimate
the minimum number of animals of the same species present at a site by
determining the number of unrepeated elements for each species. Some species
can be linked with particular activities, like sheep and goats with pastoralism,
deer and wild boar with hunting, and oxen with plowing. Moreover, faunal
analysts can, by determination of the sex or age of the animal, make fuller
statements about the nature of the use of the animal or the site. For
example, a significantly greater number of younger deer may indicate a
preference for skins rather than meat. Or the presence of certain animals
may suggest the use of sites at particular seasons.
Finally, bones are
examined under microscope and magnifying glass for evidence of
modification. Bone which has been burned in a fire often turns
a variety of colors (red to blue to black), and it is also possible
to ascertain activities such as cooking, boiling, disarticulation,
and butchering through the marks left on bone.
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