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An Assessment and Archaeological Application of Cortex Measurement in Lithic Assemblages

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Matthew J. Douglass
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland, PB 92109 Auckland, New Zealand
Simon J. Holdaway
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland, PB 92109 Auckland, New Zealand
Patricia C. Fanning
Affiliation:
Graduate School of the Environment, Macquarie University Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia
Justin I. Shiner
Affiliation:
Heritage, Rio Tinto Aluminium, P.O. Weipa, North Queensland 4874, Australia

Abstract

We describe an experimental test and archaeological application of the solid geometry method for the interpretation of cortical surface area in lithic assemblages proposed by Dibble et al. (2005). Experimental results support the method's accuracy while archaeological application to assemblages from western New South Wales, Australia suggests a repeated pattern of the selective removal of artifacts away from their location of manufacture. These findings shed light on the role curation and mobility play in the use and eventual discard of those artifact classes for which conventional measures of curation are not applicable. The results raise new questions about Aboriginal technological organization and land use, while simultaneously highlighting the complex relationship between past human behavior and archaeological assemblage content.

Résumé

Résumé

Describimos una prueba experimental y la consiguiente aplicación arqueológica del método geométrico sólido para interpretar así, la capa lítica externa de las colecciones propuestas por Dibble et al. (2005). Los resultados experimentales apoyan la precisión del método, mientras que su aplicación arqueológica a colecciones pertenecientes al oeste de Nueva Gales del Sur en Australia, sugiere un patrón repetitivo en cuanto a la remoción selectiva de artefactos fuera de su lugar de fabricación. Estos resultados arrojan luz sobre el rol que tanto la conservación como el movimiento juegan en el uso y eventual descarte de esta clase de artefactos para los cuales medidas convencionales de conservación no son aplicables. Los resultados generan nuevas preguntas en relación a la organización tecnológica de los Aborígenes y uso de la tierra, destacando de manera simultánea, la compleja relación entre comportamiento humano y el contenido arqueológico de las colecciones.

Type
Reports
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 2008

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References

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