Week 3 Part 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Does the stratigraphy indicate the order of artefact production? Why?

A

No
Because…
1/ residual (reworked remains) from earlier times can find its way into younger remains
2/ Infiltrated remains can move down strata through cultural or non-cultural processes
-> Imagine digging a trench, the remains will be upside down

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2
Q

Who divided the stone ages?

A

Sir John Lubbock

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3
Q

What were the stone ages divided into? What characterised them?

A

Palaeolithic
- Europe still contained Woolly Mammoth, Cave Bear
Neolithic:
- Beautiful weapons and instruments

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4
Q

Who proposed the Mesolithic? What is it?

A

Edouard Lartet

- Middle period between Palaeolithic and Neolithic

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5
Q

What was Gabriel de Mortillet’s contribution?

A

Divided the Upper Palaeolithic into 5 periods

  • Magdalenian
  • Solutrean
  • Gravettian
  • Aurignacian
  • Chatelperonian
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6
Q

How does cross dating work in general?

A

Comparing of aesthetics of one artefact at an undated site to a similar artefact aesthetically which is dated to date the artefact

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7
Q

What is seriation? Who proliferated the idea?

A

The arrangement of archaeological material in a presumed chronological order based on morphological characteristics

Pitt Rivers

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8
Q

Why does proliferation not work? 2 points

A

1/ Peak popularity might occur at different times for different sites. Battleship curve Doppler effect

2/ Does not account for how styles can become popular again

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9
Q

What two ways can the chemical composition of artefacts change

A

1/ Loss of materials originally in the specimen

2/ Uptake of elements from the environment

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10
Q

How does nitrogen, fluorine and uranium dating work?

A

Nitrogen: Naturally found in animal bones and degrades after death

Uranium: Acquired over time when buried

Fluorine: Accumulates over time from contact with groundwater

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