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Glossary

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    78382
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    Glossary Entries
    Word(s) Definition Image Caption Link Source
    absolute age The age of an object with reference to a fixed and specific time scale, as determined by some method of absolute dating, e.g. 10,000 BP or 1.9 mya.       Wikipedia
    absolute dating Ascertaining the age of an object with reference to a fixed and specific time scale (e.g. calendar years or radiocarbon years), as opposed to relative dating.       Wikipedia
    aerial archeology Archeological investigations conducted from the air, e.g. using aerial photography or satellite imagery.       Wikipedia
    antiquarianism A person interested in the collection, curation and/or study of antiquities, particularly in reference to the intellectual tradition that developed in Europe in the 16th–17th centuries and is considered a precursor to modern archeology.       Wikipedia
    antiquities Ancient artifacts, particularly in the context of their trade and collection.       Wikipedia
    antiquity The ancient past, in particular the period of the earliest historic civilizations.       Wikipedia
    archaeobotany Subdiscipline devoted to the analysis of plant remains in the archaeological record.       Wikipedia
    archaeologist A person engaged in the study or profession of archaeology.       Wikipedia
    archeology The academic discipline concerned with the study of the human past through material remains.       Wikipedia
    artifact A physical object made by humans.       Wikipedia
    assemblage A set of artifacts or ecofacts found together, from the same place and time. Can refer to the total assemblage from a site, or a specific type of artefact, e.g. lithic assemblage, zooarchaeological assemblage.       Wikipedia
    association Two or more excavated objects that are thought to be related are said to be in association, e.g. artifacts discovered in close proximity within the same context, or architectural features thought to have been standing at the same time.       Wikipedia
    backfill (1) To re-fill a trench once an excavation has been completed. (2) Material used for backfilling, usually spoil from the original excavation.       Wikipedia
    balk A wall of earth left in place between excavated areas in order to maintain the structural integrity of the trench and/or expose a section to aid in interpretation.       Wikipedia
    bladelet Type of stone tool; a small blade characteristic of Upper Palaeolithic Europe.       Wikipedia
    context 1. As in common usage, information relating to where an artefact or feature was found and what it was found in association with. (2) In single context excavation, a well-defined stratigraphic unit relating to a single depositional event, used as the primary unit for recording and analysis.       Wikipedia
    culture An archaeological culture is a recurring assemblage of artifacts from a specific time and place that may constitute the material culture remains of a particular past human society.       Wikipedia
    dig An informal term for an archaeological excavation.       Wikipedia
    dry sieving A method of sifting artifacts from excavated sediments by shaking it through sieves or meshes of varying sizes. As opposed to wet sieving, which uses water.       Wikipedia
    earthworks Earthworks are artificial changes in land level, typically made from piles of artificially placed or sculpted rocks and soil       Wikipedia
    environmental archaeology Environmental archaeology is the science of reconstructing the relationships between past societies and the environments they lived in.       Wikipedia
    excavation Excavation is the exposure, processing and recording of archaeological remains.       Wikipedia
    fieldwork Archeological investigations taking place in the field, e.g. excavations or surveys.       Wikipedia
    finds An informal term for artifacts, features and other things discovered by archaeologists.       Wikipedia
    finds processing The preparation of finds from an excavation for storage or further specialist analysis, typically including washing, labelling, sorting and listing in an inventory.       Wikipedia
    finds specialist An archeologist who specializes in the analysis of a particular type of find, e.g. medieval pottery or prehistoric worked flint.       Wikipedia
    flotation A method for recovering very small artifacts (particularly small fragments of bone and botanical remains) from excavated sediments using water.       Wikipedia
    forensic archeology Forensic archeologists employ their knowledge of archeological techniques and theory in a legal context. This broad description is necessary as forensic archaeology is practiced in a variety of ways around the world.       Wikipedia
    geoarchaeology The application of geology and other earth science techniques to archeology.       Wikipedia
    geofact Rocks or other naturally-occurring minerals found in an archeological context and presumed to have been transported there by humans, but not sufficiently modified to qualify as an artifact.       Wikipedia
    geoglyph A form of rock art produced on the ground, either by arranging material on the surface (a positive geoglyph) or removing part of it (a negative geoglyph).       Wikipedia
    henge A type of Neolithic earthwork that has a ring-shaped bank and ditch, with the ditch inside the bank.       Wikipedia
    hillfort A type of earthwork used as a fortified refuge or defended settlement.       Wikipedia
    industrial archaeology Subdiscipline devoted to the study of past industry and industrial heritage.       Wikipedia
    industry A typological classification of stone tools, e.g. the Mousterian industry, the Acheulean industry.       Wikipedia
    in situ Features, artifacts and other remains in their original depositional context, cf. unstratified.       Wikipedia
    K–Ar dating Potassium–argon dating; a radiometric dating method useful for samples older than 100,000 years.       Wikipedia
    kerbstone circle A circular retaining wall built around certain types of burial mound.       Wikipedia
    kill site A site where people slaughtered and/or butchered animals en masse, especially in a Palaeolithic context, e.g. Naco Mammoth Kill Site, Cooper Bison Kill Site.       Wikipedia
    kiln site In Southeast Asian archaeology, a site that was the centre for manufacture of particular ceramic ware, e.g. Phnom Kulen, Buriram, Go Sanh, Kalong, Sukhothai.       Wikipedia
    matrix (1) The physical material in which finds and other cultural remains are found, e.g. soil or rock. (2) Harris matrix; a diagram showing the stratigraphic relations between contexts.       Wikipedia
    occupation earth set of deposits believed to represent in-situ settlement at an archaeological site, containing pottery sherds, ashes, animal remains, etc.       Wikipedia
    pollen spectrum A series of side-by-side graphs, produced by archaeobotanists and palynologists, showing the frequency of different types (species) of pollen in a soil sample by depth. Usually presented vertically, with the shallowest samples at the top and the deepest at the bottom, to represent a pollen core or other stratified deposit. The depth of the sample corresponds roughly to how old it is, and therefore the vertical axis may also contain an estimate of its absolute age. Used to visualise the environmental history of the place where the sample was taken.       Wikipedia
    potsherd A fragment of pottery. In specialised usage sherd is preferred over the more common spelling shard.       Wikipedia
    quarter sectioning Sometimes called digging by quadrant, it is a procedure for excavating discrete features (especially those circular or ovoid in shape) where two diagonally opposite quadrants are removed, resulting in two complete cross-sections of a feature.       Wikipedia
    radiocarbon dating absolute dating technique used to determine the age of organic materials less than 50,000 years old. Age is determined by examining the loss of the unstable carbon-14 isotope, which is absorbed by all living organisms during their lifespan. The rate of decay of this unstable isotope after the organism has died is assumed to be constant, and is measured in half-lives of 5730 + 40 years, meaning that the amount of carbon-14 is reduced to half the amount after about 5730 years. Dates generated by radiocarbon dating have to be calibrated using dates derived from other absolute dating methods, such as dendrochronology and ice cores.       Wikipedia
    season A period of time spent working on a particular site or field project.       Wikipedia
    Section A section is a view of the archaeological sequence showing it in the vertical plane, as a cross section, showing the stratigraphy.       Wikipedia
    shovel test pit test holes, usually dug out by a shovel, in order to determine whether the soil contains any cultural remains that are not visible on the surface.       Wikipedia
    shovelbum A colloquial term for professional excavators working in cultural resources management in the United States.       Wikipedia
    sieving The use of sieves, screens, and meshes to improve the recovery rate of artifacts from excavated sediments (spoil). Can be divided into dry sieving and wet sieving.       Wikipedia
    spoil Loose sediment excavated from a trench.       Wikipedia
    spoil heap A pile of sediment from an excavation, usually located next to a trench.       Wikipedia
    trial trenching A method of archeological evaluation used to estimate the archeological potential of a site.       Wikipedia
    typology The classification of objects according to their physical characteristics.       Wikipedia
    watching brief A formal program of observation and investigation conducted during any operation carried out for non-archaeological reasons.       Wikipedia
    wet sieving The use of flowing water to force excavated sediment through a screen or mesh and recover small artifacts. It is more effective than dry sieving in heavier soils and, as part of the process of flotation, can be used to recover very small organic remains.       Wikipedia
    zooarchaeology Subdiscipline devoted to the analysis of animal remains in the archeological record.       Wikipedia
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