03042018 Flashcards

1
Q

Extra opportunities

A
  1. Visit the James B. Petersen Memorial Gallery of Native American Cultures @Fleming Museum on campus
    > Send email + briefly reflect (approx. 2 paragraphs) on what you learned, relating your learning experience to archaeology and the course
  2. Following the instructions for our 1st assignment, choose a new article from the Journal of Archaeological Science, any from RECENT volumes 91-93 (March 2018-May 2018)
    - 2-3 puts to total points for the course for completing 1 of these extra opportunities (4-6pts if do both)
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2
Q

Poverty Point, Louisiana

A
  • Near the Gulf of Mexico
  • Things moving in down from the north
    1. Concentric circles Mound A (monumental architecture)
    > Take more than a generation to build
    > Social organization, collective effort by the coordinated groups
    > More hierarchical society
    2. Borrow Pits, Ridges
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3
Q

Soil Micromorphology

A
  • Look at how the sediment built up by examining profile of the soil
    > Stable + long enough for the development before another layer came in?
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4
Q

Poverty Point Mound A

A

By soil
- Construction sequence of the Mound A platform: show images from the South Profile excavation
> Submound Ab: a ground surface that is stable + preconstruction ground surface
- 238,500 m^3 of mound fill!
- Intentionally mixed together in thematic loads (from 100-400m away) before being deposited in a systematic modular fashion.
- Carefully selected from specific deposits that are not uniformly distributed across the Macon Ridge
> Purpose, system, exponential mind to build it
- Mound A constructed in an estimated 30-90 days. Calculations on volume an d5 hour work days suggest 91,000 person days of labor, or 1,000-3,000 people working for 30-90days!
> Done very quickly

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5
Q

Indian Knoll, Green River, Kentucky

A
  • Northeast from the Poverty Point
  • Excavate with axes (NOT good excavation)
    > If in modern time: preserved the site instead
  • A lot of diff deposit (up to 8ft deep): artifacts
    > musical instruments, shell forgets, beads,
  • Men, women and children burials
    > Show social status (associated artifacts, exotic items in the burial)
    > NOT in children/young adults
  • Trade materials from far away
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6
Q

Indian Knoll Bannerstones

A
  • Bannerstones made by exotic materials

- Wings of spear throwing

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7
Q

*** Late Archaic period, ca. 6,000-3,000BP

A
  1. Population increase. Evidenced by increase in sites
  2. Cemeteries show further development of territories. Warfare evidenced by traumatic injuries
    > Trade of exchanges: lessen the tension, funding the prestiges, diplomacy
  3. Artifact styles show local and regional cultural affiliations
    > Broader
  4. Huge increase in trade and exchange
    > Why? (Determined by environmental context)
    > Engage different cultural groups, political in some ways
  5. Signs of status “differentiation” (hierarchy)
    - Evidence from the burials
  6. Beginnings of plant domestication and “horticulture” or gardens (as opposed to full blown “crops”)
    > Gardens: people coming back routinely to manipulate it
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8
Q

***Time line

A
  1. Upper Paleolithic ends with end of the Pleistocene epoch
    > Last glacial; megafauna extinctions; timing varies depending on where (~15kya)
  2. Mesolithic begins at end of Upper Paleolithic and beginning of the Holocene epoch and ends with beginning of Neolithic
  3. Neolithic begins with the advent of agriculture
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9
Q

*** Significant environmental changes during the Mesolithic

A

Including:
1. Rise in sea-level
2. Warming episode - by 8,000BP Europe reached present temperatures
3. Changes in forest and distribution of trees/plants. Pleistocene grasslands replaced. Northern Europe = coniferous; Southern Europe = mixed coniferous/deciduous
4. Megafauna disappear (more likely due to climatic effect)
5. Reindeer move northward, out of Europe
> Ppl moving with them = adapting to the new environment
6. Replaced by forest animals including: deer, wild cattle, wild pigs, ibex

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10
Q

*** In Mesolithic get

A
  1. Shift in tool tech, continuation of Upper Paleolithic trends
    > i.e. trend toward smaller, more specialized tools
    > Continued trend toward — microlithic tools —— composite, inset tools
    > Inset tools: handle with multiple pieces of flakes/blades
  2. Shift in population densities and distribution
    - Actually lower population densities than in Upper Paleolithic
    - Formerly open areas now forested
    - Little edible biomass in boreal forest
    - Resources smaller, more dispersed
    > Dispersed resources = dispersed people
  3. Major shift in diet: called “broad spectrum revolution” in 60s
    > Shift from big game to greater depend on wild plant resources (a necessary precursor to agriculture)
    - Not really a revolution at all (gradual)
    > Adaptation to environmental changes
    - People already had broad diets in Upper Paleolithic
    - While changes in resources and diet, NO difference in organizational principals of subsistence strategies
    **
    Resources changed (from Concentrated to Dispersed)
    > So diet changed, but strategies remained the same ***
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11
Q

Mesolithic “ends” with appearance of agriculture

A
  • Timing = different in different regions
    > NOT a guarantee about adoption of agriculture
  • Once thought that people would automatically adopt agriculture. WHy wouldn’t they?
  • Called the “Wave of Advance Model” that hypothesized that you could chart the transition to Neolithic and farming starting with the Origin point and radiating outward
    > Similar to wave caused by a pebble (takes time to see the effects)
  • Some cultural sequences disprove model
    > Agriculture around them, but they maintained Mesolithic way of life
    > e.g. Vedbaek (Vay-Bek) near Copenhagen in Denmark, heavy reliance on marine resources, no need for agriculture
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12
Q

***** Fertile “crescent”

A
  • Most productive area in the world
  • Political unrest destroy the cultural assets
  • Name: Agricultural potential
  • Mountains in the region: Jericho, Abu Hureyra, Shanidar
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13
Q

Near East Chronology

A

Dry and not as cold / 9,600 / PPNB
10,000 ————————/10,500/ PPNA
Warm and moist (forest expands) / late Natufian
12,500 ————————/12,500 early Natufian
Cold, dry stepped desert
14,000 ————————
Warm and moist / 15,000 geo. Kabaran
17,000 ————————
Cold and dry
20,000
* Abrupt shift at 12,500 from mobile to sedentary villages in Levantine area now Israel, Lebanon and Jordan - area on the eastern Mediterranean at foothills of mtns

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14
Q

Area diverse environmentally by topography - get different habitats in mountains, river, and sea

A

Four main geographical units:

  1. Coastal plain - springs, good soils
  2. Hill zone - most diverse - rich tree forest, clay soils; warm dry summer, wet cool winters
  3. Levantine rift - area east of hills include Dead Sea; real dry; some wild cereals
  4. Jordanian plateau - rocky desert, little rain; lots of gazelle, wild sheep, pigs
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15
Q

Natufian, 12,500-10,500BP

A
  1. “Vertical” economy
    > Warmer climate allowed important plants to grow in more varied environments/altitudes (move 1 elevation each time based of the timing)
    > e.g. wild emmer wheat, wild barley, wild legumes like lentils
  2. Semi-subterranean, round houses. Storage facilities
    - Partial plan of Level I @Ain Mallaha, Israel
    > Circular in shape Hearth, pestle, bin (?)
    - Hut foundations @Nahal Oren, Israel
    > Slope, curving
  3. Stone sickles
    > e.g. inset: stone sickles from Ali Kosh, Iran and dynastic Egypt
    > Adaptation to harvest grains
  4. Hunted wild gazelle, wild pig, wild horse, cattle
    > Maintain some of the previous subsistence strategies
    > BUT @transitional period
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16
Q

Distribution of wild einkorn wheat and while goats in SW Asia and Egypt

A
  • Distribution of wild goats

- Distribution of wild einkorn wheat

17
Q

PPNA 10,500-9,500BP

A
  1. Similar settlement and technology to Natufian
  2. Massive population growth. At 10,000BP.
    > “Jericho” = largest village in the world, abt 2,000 people
  3. Oldest monumental architecture = wall around Jericho
  4. Major change in plant remains
    > 1st evidence of domesticated emmer wheat and barley
    > Manipulate by people to select the plants for more beneficial gain
    > Plants keep longer in the season > longer time for harvesting
    > Domesticated pieces: ripe spikelets remain in ear; ear shatters only when threshed; dense ear due to shorter rachis
  5. Still hunting wild gazelle, pig, cattle
18
Q

Ancient Tell of Jericho @Northern end of Jordan Valley

A
  • A mound of accumulation of 10,000 years of human occupation
  • Circular stone tower @Tell at Jericho
19
Q

Evidence of a 2nd domestication of barley east of the Fertile Crescent

A
  • 25 wild barley accessions where are 18 loci were sequenced are indicated by filled circles
  • 20 accessions were sequenced at 4 loci and are indicated by asterisks
20
Q

PPNB 9,500-8,500BP

A
  1. Same domesticated plants
  2. Shift in settlement from circular to rectangular houses. Increase in “segmented” space within the houses (interior partitions, rooms)
    > Completely different style of architecture
    > e.g. Rectangular houses @Tell Matarrah, Iraq; Jarmo, Iraq
    > Storage; oven, couple of rooms for living/sleeping, hallway, courtyard + grinding stones
    > Bigger families for agricultural purpose (labors)
    > Switch from circular design to rectangular: more space inside with same amount of materials, hard to find timbers to cover a giant dome
    > Engineer solution for larger house
    - Easier for community development (disorganized in circular structure)
  3. 1st evidence of domesticated animals (sheep and goats). Decrease in hunting of wild animals (e.g. Jericho, Abu Hureya)