Title: Archaeologys Past
1Archaeologys Past
- A Brief History of Archaeology
2The Western World Discovers Its Past
- Nabonidus (538 B.C.) the first archaeologist
- Petrarch- early Renaissance
- The British antiquarian spirit (16th century)
- Importance of 1859
3Nabonidus
- Nabonidus- last king of the neo-Babylonian Empire
died in 538 B.C. - Is considered by most historians to be the
first archaeologist. - he remains an important figure for one simple
reason - He looked to the physical residues of antiquity
to answer questions about the past.
4Nabonidus stele
Nabonidus cuneiform
5Francesco Petrarch
- Italian poet and humanist, b. at Arezzo, 20 July,
1304 d. at Arquá, 19 July, 1374 - Defined an important intellectual tradition which
continues to be important for archaeological
research - In order to understand the present, one must
first understand the past. - Petrarchs approach lead to a rediscovery of the
past
6The British Antiquarian Spirit (16th century)
- British Antiquarian Society 1572
- The emphasis of this and later societies was to
record and preserve the national treasures,
rather than indiscriminately to acquire curios
and objects dart - Archaeological research to this point proceeded
mostly within the tradition of Petarch, concerned
primarily with clarifying the picture of
classical civilizations. - Major Problems Jacques Boucher de Perthes
discovers ancient axeheads (1836). - Acheulian Tradition associated with Homo erectus
1.8 mya-200,000 - Finding disputed by Usher October 23 4004 B.C.
7Acheulian Hand Axes
Jacques Boucher de Perthes
8The Importance of 1859
- Hugh Falconer visits Abbeville and St. Acheul to
examine the evidence - A paper is presented to the influential Royal
Society of London supporting the claims of
Boucher de Perthes - Darwin On the Origin of Species
9No Antiquity in the Americas?
10Founders of Americanist Archaeology
- Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) A man ahead of his
time - One of the first people on the continent to
excavate. - First to examine stratigraphy.
- The layering of deposits at an archaeological
site. Cultural elements and natural sediments
become buried over time. The layer on the bottom
is the oldest and the top layer is the youngest. - According to the Law of Supposition, the lowest
stratum is the oldest, and the highest stratum is
the more recent deposit. - First to use the scientific method.
11View of the Mississippi Valley, painted by John
Egan, 1850. This painting shows an early
excavation of a conical mound that is often
erroneously associated with Thomas Jefferson.
Photo courtesy of the University of Alabama
Museums.
12Clarence Bloomfield Moore
- C. B. Moore was a wealthy man born in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and educated at
Harvard University. - At the age of 40, Moore purchased a flat bottomed
steamship, named the Gopher, and navigated the
Florida rivers during the summer. - Concentrating on the shell middens and sand
burial mounds along the rivers of Florida, year
after year, C.B. Moore carefully excavated sites
along the waterways. - While Moore reserved the warmer months for
traveling along the southeastern waterways and
excavating sites, the winter months were spent
analyzing his findings and writing reports that
were published by the Journal of the Academy of
Natural Sciences of Philadelphia.
13C.B. Moore (1852-1936)
C.B. Moore and his steamship the Gopher.
Reproduced from Certain Aboriginal Remains of the
Black Warrior River.
14Nels Nelson (1875-1964)
- Born into a hardworking farm family in Denmark
- Emigrated in 1892 at the age of 17 to the U.S. At
this time he began his schooling by entering the
first grade. - Graduated high school in 1901 at 26.
- B.A. Stanford philosophy 1907
- M.A. Berkeley archaeology 1908
- M.A. thesis was on shellmounds in the San
Francisco area - Nelson is best remembered for his contribution to
stratigraphic techniques.
15Emeryville mound, 1907.
Steam shovel destruction of shellmound in 1924
16Southerly wall of areas 34 and 40, looking north
1924 demolition of the mound.
17Cross-section of the western foot of the shell
mound.
18Alfred Vincent Kidder (1886-1963) The Founder of
Anthropological Archaeology
- Spent most of his years growing up in New
England. - Entered Harvard in 1904 as a pre-med major.
- 1907 decided on archaeology as a profession after
spending the summer in Arizona and Utah
performing his first field work. - 1914 receives PhD. He was awarded the 6th
American PhD specializing in archaeology and the
first to focus on North America
19- Thesis entitled Southern Ceramics (Kidder, 1914,
unpublished). - Kidder continued his southwest expeditions under
the Peabody Museum of Harvard University until he
was appointed director of excavations at the
Pecos ruins for the Phillips Academy at Andover,
Mass. in 1915, a position he held until 1929. - This was the first large-scale systematic
stratigraphic archaeological excavation in North
America as well as the largest undertaking of its
kind.
20- It was here that Kidder made use of the
stratigraphic method on a large scale and
extended it into a regional strategy of cultural
chronological steps (Willey, 1974). The method
consisted of 5 steps - (1) reconnaissance
- (2) selection of criteria for ranking the remains
of sites chronologically - (3) seriation into a probable sequence
- (4) stratigraphic excavation to elucidate
specific problems followed by - (5) more detailed regional survey and dating
(Bahn, 1996).
21- It was this introduction to a field previously
unsystemized that led Kidder to write An
Introduction to the Study of Southwestern
Archaeology (Kidder, 1924), now a classic in
American archaeology. - This book also provided the basis for the Pecos
Classification that was derived during the first
Pecos Conference held in 1927. - The classification served as a chronology of the
cultures in the southwest, starting with the
early Basketmakers and extending to the Pueblo
cultures of later historical times. One such
culture is the Anasazi of Mesa Verde, Colorado,
thought to be modern ancestors of the Pueblo
Indians.