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Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

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Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites
Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Chapter 4

Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for

Archaeological Sites

Page 2: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Outline

• Good Old Gumshoe Survey• Archaeology Is More than Just

Digging Sites• Surface Archaeology in the Carson

Desert• Does Sampling Actually Work? The

Chaco Experiment

Page 3: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Outline

• Quality Control in Surface Survey• What about Things that Lie Below

Ground?• GPS Technology and Modern Surveys• Full-Coverage Survey

Page 4: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Finding Archaeological Sites

• Archaeological sites are found in different ways, and there is no single formula.

• Luck and hard work are the major keys; other sites are found through systematic regional survey.

Page 5: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Systematic Regional Survey

• A set of strategies for arriving at accurate descriptions of the range of archaeological material across a landscape.

Page 6: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Seasonal Round

• Hunter-gatherers’ pattern of movement between different places on the landscape timed to the seasonal availability of food and other resources.

Page 7: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Settlement Pattern

• The distribution of archaeological sites across a region.

• A settlement system is the movements and activities reconstructed from a settlement pattern.

Page 8: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

The Surveyor’s Toolkit

• A GPS instrument• A two-way radio• A good but cheap

watch (We’ve crushed several climbing over rocks.)

• A good compass• A K+E field notebook• Pencils• Ziploc bags

• A black Sharpie marker• A trowel (for test pits)• A metric tape measure• Graph paper (for site

maps). • A small flashlight• A snake bite kit,,

pepper spray, mosquito repellent, or shin guards.

Page 9: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Map of the Carson Desert and Stillwater

Mountains

Page 10: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Statistical Population

• A set of counts, measurements, or characteristics about which relevant inquiries are to be made.

• Scientists use the term “statistical population” in a specialized way (quite different from “population” in the ordinary sense).

Page 11: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Sample Universe

• The region that contains the statistical population and that will be sampled.

• Its size and shape are determined by the research question and practical considerations.

Page 12: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Getting the Sample

1. Decide on the sample fraction. What portion of the sample population would be included—1% of the sites? 5%, 10%, 50%?

2. How do you actually acquire the sample? Ideally, we would take all the sites in the sample universe, give each one a number, and randomly select a portion and examine those sites.

Page 13: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Stratified Random Sample

• A survey universe divided into several sub-universes that are then sampled at potentially different sample fractions.

Page 14: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Smithsonian Number

• A unique catalog number given to sites.

• It consists of a number (the state’s position alphabetically), a letter abbreviation of the county, and the site’s sequential number within the county.

Page 15: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Does Sampling Work?

• Experimental studies show that survey sampling does work—it can accurately characterize a region’s archaeology.

• But survey sampling is not good at finding the rare sites that are important in understanding a region’s prehistory. – These are found by gumshoe

survey.

Page 16: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

What’s a Site?

• Often geography places a clear boundary on a site’s edges, for example, a riverbank or a steep slope.

• Deflation is a geologic process whereby fine sediment is blown away and larger items remain.– This results in archaeological remains,

which might have been discarded at different times, being left together.

Page 17: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Topographic map of Quadrat 36 in the Stillwater Mountain

survey

Page 18: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Hypothetical Artifact Scatter 4 Site-definition Scenarios

Page 19: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Total Station

• A device that uses a beam of light bounced off a prism to determine an artifact’s provenience.

• Total stations make the precise mapping of large areas practical and the archaeologist treats the entire survey unit as one large site.

• He or she can use a variety of statistical methods to find patterns in which artifact types are physically associated.

Page 20: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Shovel-testing

• A sample survey method used in regions where rapid soil buildup obscures buried archaeological remains.

• It entails digging shallow, systematic pits across the survey unit.

Page 21: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

GPS Technologyand Modern Surveys

• GPS consists of 24 satellites that circle the earth in 12-hour evenly distributed orbits at an altitude of 17,000 kilometers.

• Each satellite carries a computer and a very accurate atomic clock.

• Handheld GPS units operate by picking up the continuously broadcast signals from at least four satellites.

• GPS is funded and controlled by the U.S. Department of Defense.

Page 22: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Full-coverage Survey

• Most useful when:1. The research question concerns

complex settlement systems and seeks to explain their changes through time.

2. A surface archaeological record is clearly visible.

3. Addressing questions regarding specific relations between specific sites.

Page 23: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Quick Quiz

Page 24: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

1. The systematic regional survey is the single best formula for finding an archaeological site.

A. TrueB. False

Page 25: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Answer: B. False

• Archaeological sites are found in different ways, and there is no single formula. Luck and hard work are the major keys; other sites are found through the systematic regional survey.

Page 26: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

2. A settlement system is:A. The distribution of archaeological

sites across a region.B. The movements and activities

reconstructed from a settlement pattern.

C. A set of counts, measurements, or characteristics about which relevant inquiries are to be made.

D. All of the above.

Page 27: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Answer: B

• A settlement system is the movements and activities reconstructed from a settlement pattern.

Page 28: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

3. Full-coverage surveys are necessary when trying to ensure that no rare but significant site will be missed.

A. TrueB. False

Page 29: Chapter 4 Doing Fieldwork: Surveying for Archaeological Sites.

Answer: A. True

• Full-coverage surveys are necessary when trying to ensure that no rare but significant site will be missed.


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