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Typology I

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Only durable tool until metallurgy (over 2 million years) ... Craft Specialization. Pottery Seriation. Ancient Kiln. What can Pottery Tell Us? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Typology I


1
Typology I
  • Lithics Stone Tools

2
Stone Tools and Archaeology
  • Common throughout prehistory
  • Only durable tool until metallurgy (over 2
    million years)
  • Reductive technology manufactured by removing
    material from core (creates substantial residue
    debitage)
  • Inorganic do not decay
  • Same basic process for manufacture used across
    all of prehistory
  • Percussion (grinding later development)

3
Stone Tools Raw Materials
  • Needs specific types of stone
  • Non-crystalline homogenous Cryptocrystalline
  • Conchoidal fracture
  • Molecular edge
  • Ideal natural glass (obsidian)
  • Chert/flint quartzite basalt quartz

4
Conchoidal Fracture
5
Raw Materials
Chert
Obsidian
Quartzite
6
Stone Tools vs. Metal
  • Stone Sharper (up to 1000x) ubiquitous raw
    materials
  • Brittle high breakage rate
  • Metal Durable more flexible
  • Require complex technology (smelting, alloying
    (natural cold hammering inferior to stone tools)

7
Stone Tool Manufacture
  • Percussion
  • using hard or soft hammer to remove flakes from
    core
  • Subsequent hammering to shape flake or core to
    desired shape
  • Pressure flaking for final shaping and sharpening
  • Flintknapping

8
Debitage
  • Waste flakes left over from tool manufacture
  • Most common artifact throughout most of
    prehistory
  • Analysis
  • Reconstruct production sequence
  • Utilization (retouch, polish)

9
Flake Morphology
10
Debitage
11
Projectile Points
  • Projectile Point, not just Arrow Heads
  • Knives, spears, darts, Drills also
  • Most common type of formal stone tool
  • Formal defined shape, extensive shaping, curated
  • Informal expedient tools disposable (flake,
    utilized debitage)
  • Change over time size, shape, hafting
  • Correlating point changes with stratigraphy or
    absolute dates seriation point chronology

12
Stone Tool Typology
  • Typology formation and analysis of groups of
    similar artifacts (types)
  • Can be used spatially (to distinguish between
    different archaeological cultures)
  • Can be used temporally (to interpret changes in
    tools over time)
  • Seriation

13
Projectile Point
14
Typology Example (1)
15
Typology Example (2)
16
Typology Example (3)
17
Typology II
  • Pottery and Ceramics

18
Ceramics and Archaeologists
  • Comparatively recent development
  • Clay figurines (Europe) 30,000 BP
  • True pottery 10,000 BP (Japan) 8,500 BP
    (Anatolia) 7,000 BP (Iran) 4,800 BP (China) AD
    500 (Mexico)
  • Relationship to agriculture?
  • Additive technology (less residue)
  • Fragile but durable
  • Plastic medium lots of possible variation
  • Pottery vs. Ceramic

19
Impact of Pottery
  • container revolution
  • Widespread durable vessel form
  • New cooking techniques
  • Storage
  • New medium for expression and symbolism
  • First durable plastic medium

20
Basic Nomenclature
  • Jar vs. Bowl
  • narrow vs. wide opening storage vs. consumption
  • Sherd fragment
  • Body vs. Base vs. Rim
  • Rim most useful for typology
  • Glaze, Slip
  • Decorations
  • Painting, appliqué, incising, cord impressions

21
Pottery Manufacture
  • Clay Temper
  • Clay provides strength (lt0.002 mm)
  • Temper flexibility prevents breakage during
    firing
  • Grit, Grog, Shell, Straw, Sand, etc.
  • Firing causes clay particles to sinter (adhere
    to each other)
  • Properties related to size of clay and
    temperature of firing
  • lt1000º C Terra Cotta
  • 900-1200 º C Earthenware
  • 1200-1350 º C Stoneware
  • 1350 º C Porcelain

22
Manufacture Techniques
  • Vessel formation
  • Pinching
  • Coiling
  • Slab Form
  • Wheel Thrown
  • Surface modification (Incising, Punctates, etc.)
  • Drying
  • Surface Treatment (slip, glaze, paint)
  • Firing (open fire, covered fire, kiln)

23
Pottery Examples
24
What can Pottery Tell Us?
  • Chronology
  • Type seriations (same as for stone tools)
  • Technology
  • Crude, coarse earthenwares vs. High-fired
    Porcelain
  • Craft Specialization

Pottery Seriation
Ancient Kiln
25
What can Pottery Tell Us?
  • Trade/Social Interaction
  • Pottery types regionally specific
  • Example
  • Pennsylvania types (Shenks Ferry) occur in
    Southern New York (AD 1000-1300) along with New
    York types (Owasco)
  • Wife Stealing Hypothesis (Marital Exogamy)
  • Assumption of female potters supported by
    ethnohistoric sources
  • Open question hostile abduction or willing
    exchange between neighboring populations

26
Pennsylvania vs. New York Pottery Types
27
What can Pottery Tell Us?
  • Iconography (Ideology)
  • Effigies (human, zoomorphic), Painted images
  • Examples
  • Valdiva Phase pottery (South America) entoptic
    imagery related to hallucinogenic visions

28
What can Pottery Tell Us?
  • Subsistence (food production and consumption)
  • Analogy certain types of vessels historically
    used for certain foods may have been the same in
    prehistory?
  • Residue Analysis (Lipids, Alkaloids)
  • GC/MS related chromatographic techniques
  • Phytolith analysis
  • Raman microscopy
  • Alkaloids medicinal/psychoactive
  • Nicotine, Morphine, Caffeine, etc.

29
Non-Vessel Pottery
  • Plasticity and Flexibility of pottery amenable
    to a variety of functions
  • Artistic (figurines, etc.)
  • Industrial (Spindle Whorls, etc.)
  • Mortuary (e.g., Terra Cotta Sarcophagi)
  • Smoking pottery smoking pipes vs. stone smoking
    pipes
  • North American Example did the shift to pottery
    smoking pipes after 500 AD lead to a
    secularization of tobacco smoking, as opposed
    to its initial sacred context?

30
Stone vs. Ceramic Pipes
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