archaeological anthropology from excavation to interpretation

17
Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Upload: rudolph-williams

Post on 18-Jan-2018

238 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Grid system and datum point

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Archaeological Anthropology

From excavation to interpretation

Page 2: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Begin the Excavation

Grid system with datum pointScrape the uppermost surfaceStratification creates superposition or sequence of time periodsPhasing identifies each distinct layer or stratumEach time period is called a contextEach item of interest is called a feature

Page 3: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Grid system and datum point

Page 4: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Grid system in Qulat al Bahrain

Page 5: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Features at C-8

Page 6: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Phasing by stratification

Page 7: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Extracting the EvidenceIntensive vs extensive excavationIntrusive vs non-intrusive excavationOvercutting or undercutting the stratumExtraction by toolsSeparation by screen or sieve Separation by flotationReturning the fillRead pp. 40-46

Page 8: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Separation

Page 9: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Intensive or extensive?

Page 10: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Interpretation of Evidence

By analogy based on established knowledge Date: absolute or relativeEconomics: trade, labor, productsTechnology: food foraging or food producingAuthority and social stratification Read pp. 286-296

Page 11: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Dilmun Civilization of Bahrain

Trade entrepot Qualat al Bahrain (Bahrain Fort, Seef)Burial Mounds (A’ali)

Page 12: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Trail of Dilmun Seals: trade, currency, craftsmanship

Page 13: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Qualat al Bahrain (Bahrain Fort, Seef): marketplace, labor, trade, houses, roads

Page 14: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Barbar Temple (Saar): 3 successive temples, Sumerian resemblance

Page 15: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Burial Mounds (A’ali): afterlife, social complexity, elite class

Page 16: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

Attempts to protect the burial mounds have run into opposition by religious fundamentalists who consider them unIslamic and have called for them to be concreted over for housing. During a parliamentary debate on 17 July 2005, the leader of the salafist Asalah party, Sheikh Adel Mouwdah, said "Housing for the living is better than the graves for the dead. We must have pride in our Islamic roots and not some ancient civilisation from another place and time, which has only given us a jar here and a bone there."

Page 17: Archaeological Anthropology From excavation to interpretation

A s si gnm ent :

Re ad pp . 40-4 6 and 286- 296

P l an th e even tMa ke 3 i nst ru ct i on al vi deos of 1 mi nute e ach

B e fore the d i g

Du ri ng the d i g

A f ter t he di g