Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T05:21:01.989Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Hunter-Gatherer Earth Ovens in the Archaeological Record: Fundamental Concepts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Stephen L. Black
Affiliation:
Texas State University, San Marcos, TX 78666 (sblack@txstate.edu)
Alston V. Thorns
Affiliation:
Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-4352 (a-thoms@tamu.edu)

Abstract

Remains of earth ovens with rock heating elements of various sizes and configurations are common at hunter-gatherer sites around the world. They span the last 30,000 years in the Old World and some 10,000 years in the New World. Although various foods were baked in these ovens, plants predominate. Earth ovens are ethnographically well documented as family-size and bulk cooking facilities, but related technology and its archaeological signatures remain poorly understood and understudied. These ubiquitous features are often mischaracterized as generic cooking facilities termed hearths. It is proposed that, in fact, most rock “hearths” are heating elements of earth ovens. Reliable identification and interpretation of earth ovens requires documentation of heating elements, pit structure, rock linings, and various remnants thereof. Fundamental technological concepts for investigating their archaeological signatures include thermodynamics, construction designs, and life cycles in systemic context, as informed by ethnographic, archaeological, and experimental data. Earth oven technology explains well the primary purpose of labor-intensive thermal storage for long-term cooking and conserving fuel. Information from the extensive archaeological record of earth ovens on the Edwards Plateau of south-central North America illustrates these points.

Resumen

Resumen

Los restos de homos de tierra con elementos de calefacción de roca de varios tamaños y configuraciones son comunes en los sitios de cazadores-recolectores de todo el mundo. Ellos abarcan los últimos 30,000 años en el Viejo Mundo y cerca de 10,000 años en el Nuevo Mundo. Aunque varios alimentos se cuecen en estos hornos, predominan las plantas. Hornos de la tierra están bien documentados etnográficamente como de tamaño familiar y las instalaciones de cocina a granel, pero la tecnología conexa y sus firmas arqueológicos siguen siendo poco conocidos y poco estudiado. Estas características ubicuas son a menudo mal identificados como instalaciones de cocina genéricos denominados hogares. Se propone que, de hecho, la mayoría de los “hogares de roca” son elementos de calentamiento de hornos de tierra. La identificación fiable e interpretación de los hornos de tierra requiere documentación de los elementos de calefacción, la estructura de pozo, revestimientos de piedra, y varios restos de los mismos. Conceptos tecnológicos fundamentales para la investigación de sus firmas arqueológicos incluyen la termodinámica, diseños de construcción, y los ciclos de vida en el contexto sistémico, según se informa en los datos etnográficos, arqueológicos y experimental. Tecnología de horno de la tierra explica bien el objetivo principal de almacenamiento térmico de mano de obra para cocinar a largo plazo y la conservación de combustible. Información del extenso registro arqueológico de hornos de tierra en la Edwards Plateau en el sur-centro de América del Norte ilustra estos puntos.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 2014

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Ames, Kenneth E. 2005 Intensification of Food Production on the Northwest Coast and Elsewhere. In Keeping It Living: Traditions of Plant Use and Cultivation on the Northwest Coast of North America, edited by Douglas Deur and Nancy J. Turner, pp. 67100. University of Washington Press, Seattle, and University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver.Google Scholar
Ataer, O. Ercan 2006 Storage of Thermal Energy in Energy Storage Systems. In Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems, edited by Yalcin Abdullah Gogus. Eolss Publishers, Oxford. Electronic document, http://www.eolss.net/ebooks/Sample%20Chapters/C08/E3-14-02-00.pdf, accessed March 27, 2012.Google Scholar
Benison, Christopher J. 1999 Burned Rock Complexes, Baked Clay Objects, Steatite, and Ceramics: Evolutionary Implications for Plains/Eastern Woodlands Cooking Technologies. North American Archaeologist 24:287317.Google Scholar
Binford, Lewis R. 2001 Constructing Frames of Reference: An Analytical Method for Archaeological Theory Building Using Hunter-Gatherer and Environmental Data Sets. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Black, Stephen L. 1997 Oven Cookery at the Honey Creek Site. In Hot Rock Cooking on the Greater Edwards Plateau: Four Burned Rock Midden Sites in West Central Texas, by Stephen L. Black, Linda W. Ellis, Darrell G. Creel, and Glenn T. Goode, pp. 255268. Studies in Archeology 22. Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Ames, Kenneth E. 2003 Research Module 2: Studying the Hearths of the Greater Edwards Plateau. In Pavo Real (41BX52): A Paleoindian and Archaic Camp and Workshop on the Balcones Escarpment, South-Central Texas, by Michael B. Collins, Dale R. Hudler, and Stephen L. Black, pp. 375405. Studies in Archeology 41. Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Black, Stephen L., and Creel, Darrell G. 1997 The Central Texas Burned Rock Midden Reconsidered. In Hot Rock Cooking on the Greater Edwards Plateau: Four Burned Rock Midden Sites in West Central Texas, by Stephen L. Black, Linda W. Ellis, Darrell G. Creel, and Glenn T. Goode, pp. 269301. Studies in Archeology 22. Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Black, Stephen L., Ellis, Linda W., Creel, Darrell G., and Goode, Glenn T. 1997 Hot Rock Cooking on the Greater Edwards Plateau: Four Burned Rock Midden Sites in West Central Texas. Studies in Archeology 22. Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Black, Stephen L., Karbula, James W., Frederick, Charles D., and Mear, Charles G. 1998 Archeology along the Wurzbach Parkway, Module 5: Testing and Geoarcheological Evaluation at the Number-6 Site (41BX996) and Other Sites. Studies in Archeology 29. Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Black, Stephen L., and McGraw, Alfred J. 1985 The Panther Springs Creek Site: Cultural Change and Continuity in the Upper Salado Creek Drainage, South Central Texas. Archaeological Survey Report 100. Center for Archaeological Research, University of Texas at San Antonio.Google Scholar
Boyd, Douglas R., Ringstaff, Christopher W., and Mehalchick, Gemma 2004 Analysis and Interpretations of Cultural Occupations at the Firebreak Site. In Shifting Sands and Geophytes: Geoarchaeological Investigations at Paluxy Sites on Fort Hood, Texas, by Gemma Mehalchick, Douglas R. Boyd, Karl W. Kibler, and Christopher W. Ringstaff, pp. 129198. Research Report 48. Archaeological Resource Management Series, United States Army Fort Hood, Texas.Google Scholar
Brace, C. Loring 2005 “Neutral Theory” and the Dynamics of the Evolution of “Modern” Human Morphology. Human Evolution 20:1938.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buckelew, Francis M. 1911 Buckelew, The Indian Captive, or. The Life Story of F. M. Bucklew [sic]while a Captive among the Lipan Indians in the Western Wild of Frontier Texas, as Related by Himself. Written by S. E. Banta. Mason Herald, Mason, Texas.Google Scholar
Castetter, Edward F., Bell, Willis H., and Grove, Alvin R. 1938 The Early Utilization and Distribution of Agave in the American Southwest. University of New Mexico Bulletin 335, Ethnobiological Studies in the American Southwest VI. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Collins, Michael B. 2004 Archeology in Central Texas. In The Prehistory of Texas, edited by Timothy K. Perttula, pp. 101126. Texas A&M University Press, College Station.Google Scholar
Collins, Michael B. (editor) 1998 Wilson-Leonard: An 11,000-Year Archeological Record of Hunter-Gatherers in Central Texas. Studies in Archeology 31. Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dering, J. Phillip 1997 Macrobotanical Remains. In Hot Rock Cooking on the Greater Edwards Plateau: Four Burned Rock Midden Sites in West Central Texas, by Stephen L. Black, Linda W. Ellis, Darrell G. Creel, and Glenn T. Goode, pp. 571600. Studies in Archeology 22. Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Dering, J. Phillip 1999 Earth Oven Plant Processing in Archaic Period Economies: An Example from a Semi-Arid Savannah in South-Central North America. American Antiquity 64:659674.Google Scholar
Dering, J. Phillip 2004 Analysis of Macrobotanical Remains from Three Paluxy Sites on Fort Hood, Texas. In Shifting Sands and Geophytes: Geoarchaeological Investigations at Paluxy Sites on Fort Hood, Texas, by Gemma Mehalchick, Douglas R. Boyd, Karl W. Kibler, and Christopher W. Ringstaff, pp. 245257. Research Report 48. Archaeological Resource Management Series, United States Army Fort Hood, Texas.Google Scholar
Dogome, H. 2000 Summary (in English). In Yokomine C Iseki (Yokomine C Site; in Japanese), edited by K. Sakaguchi and H. Dogome, pp. 12. Minami Tane Board of Education, Kagoshima.Google Scholar
Driver, Harold E., and Massy, William C. 1957 Comparative Studies of North American Indians. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, New Series, Vol. 47, Pt. 2. Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Ellis, Linda W. 1997 Hot Rock Technology. In Hot Rock Cooking on the Greater Edwards Plateau: Four Burned Rock Midden Sites in West Central Texas, by Stephen L. Black, Linda W. Ellis, Darrell G. Creel, and Glenn T. Goode, pp. 4381. Studies in Archeology 22. Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Fedoroff, Michael 2009 Earth-Oven Technology in the Mississippi Pine Hills: An Experimental Approach to Archaeological Investigations and Method Development. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology and Sociology, University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg.Google Scholar
Fish, Suzanne K., and Fish, Paul R. 1992 Prehistoric Landscapes of the Sonoran Desert Hohokam. Population and Environment 13:269283.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gillespie, Richard 1997 Burnt and Unburnt Carbon: Dating Charcoal and Burnt Bone from the Willandra Lakes, Australia. Radiocarbon 39:239250.Google Scholar
Goodale, Nathan B., Prentiss, William C., and Kuijt, Ian 2004 Cultural Complexity: A New Chronology of the Upper Columbia Drainage Area. In Complex Hunter-Gatherers: Evolution and Organization of Prehistoric Communities on the Plateau of Northwestern North America, edited by William C. Prentiss and Ian Kuijt, pp. 3648. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Hayden, Brian, and Dietler, Michael (editors) 2001 Feasts: Archaeological and Ethnographic Perspectives on Food, Politics, and Power. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Hester, Thomas R. 1970 Burned Rock Middens on the Southwestern Edge of the Edwards Plateau, Texas. Plains Anthropologist 15:237250.Google Scholar
Hester, Thomas R. (editor) 1991 The Burned Rock Middens of Texas: An Archeological Symposium. Studies in Archeology 13. Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Jackson, Michael A. 1998 The Nature of Fire-Cracked Rock: New Insights from Ethnoarchaeological and Laboratory Experiments. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, Texas A&M University, College Station.Google Scholar
Johnson, LeRoy Jr. 1994 The Life and Times of Toyah-Culture Folk as Seen from the Buckhollow Encampment, Site 41KM16 of Kimble County, Texas. Office of the State Archeologist Report 38. Texas Historical Commission, Austin.Google Scholar
Kelley, J. Charles, and Campbell, Thomas N. 1942 What Are the Burnt Rock Mounds of Texas? American Antiquity 7:319322.Google Scholar
Kludt, Trevor J. 2006 Batch Processing and Bulk Acquisition of Agave in the Desert Southwest. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Kramer, Stephanie 2000 Camas Bulbs, the Kalapuya, and Gender: Exploring Evidence of Plant Food Intensification in the Willamette Valley of Oregon. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, Eugene.Google Scholar
Leach, Jeff D., and Britt Bousman, C. 2001 Cultural and Secondary Formation Processes: On the Dynamic Accumulation of Burned Rock Middens. In Test Excavations at the Culebra Creek Site, 41BX126, Bexar County, Texas, by David L. Nickels, C. Britt Bousman, Jeff D. Leach, and Diane A. Cargill, pp. 119145. Archaeological Survey Report 265. Center for Archaeological Research, University of Texas at San Antonio.Google Scholar
Leach, Jeff D., Britt Bousman, C., and Nickels, David L. 2005 Assigning Context to Artifacts in Burned-Rock Middens. Journal of Field Archaeology 30:201203.Google Scholar
Leach, Jeff D., Gibson, Glenn R., and Van Loo, Jan 2006 Human Evolution, Nutritional Ecology and Prebiotics in Ancient Diet. Bioscience and Microflora 25:18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lepofsky, Dana, and Lertzman, Ken 2008 Documenting Ancient Plant Management in the Northwest of North America. Botany 86:129145.Google Scholar
Lepofsky, Dana, and Peacock, Sandra 2004 A Question of Intensity: Exploring the Role of Plant Foods in Northern Plateau Prehistory. In Complex Hunter-Gatherers: Evolution and Organization of Prehistoric Communities on the Plateau of Northwestern North America, edited by William C. Prentiss and Ian Kuijt, pp. 3648. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Lepofsky, Dana, Schaepe, David M., Graesch, Anthony P., Lenert, Michael, Ormerod, Patricia, Carlson, Keith Thor, Arnold, Jeanne E., Blake, Michael, Moore, Patrick, and Clague, John J. 2009 Exploring Stó:Lō-Coast Salish Interaction and Identity in Ancient Houses and Settlements in the Fraser Valley, British Columbia. American Antiquity 74:595626.Google Scholar
Lewis, R. Barry 1988 Fires on the Bayou: Cultural Adaptations in the Mississippi Sound Region. Southeastern Archaeology 7:109123.Google Scholar
Luke, Clive J. 1983 The Musk Hog Canyon Project, Crockett County, Texas. Publications in Archaeology Report 24. Texas State Department of Highways and Transportation, Highway Design Division.Google Scholar
Mauldin, Raymond P., Nickels, David L., and Broehm, Cory J. 2003 Archaeological Testing to Determine the National Register Eligibility Status of 18 Prehistoric Sites on Camp Bowie, Brown County, Texas. Archaeological Survey Report 334. Center for Archaeological Research, University of Texas at San Antonio.Google Scholar
Mehalchick, Gemma, Boyd, Douglas R., Kibler, Karl W., and Ringstaff, Christopher W. 2004 Shifting Sands and Geophytes: Geoarchaeologkal Investigations at Paluxy Sites on Fort Hood, Texas. Research Report 48. Archaeological Resource Management Series, United States Army Fort Hood, Texas.Google Scholar
Mentzer, Susan M. 2012 Microarchaeological Approaches to the Identification and Interpretation of Combustion Features in Prehistoric Archaeological Sites. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, DOI:10.1007/sl0816-012-9163-2.Google Scholar
Milburn, Douglas M., Doan, U. K., and Huckabee, Joanna 2009 Spatial and Temporal Distributions of Archaeological Heated-Rock Cooking Structures in the Transverse Mountain Range: Proposed Markers of Land-Use Shifts since the Early Holocene. Proceedings of the Society of California Archaeology 22:121.Google Scholar
Miller, Myles R., Graves, Tim B., Ernst, Moira, and Stowe, Michael 2011 Burned Rock Middens of the Southern Sacramento Mountains. Cultural Resource Report 09-28. Environmental Division, Directorate of Public Works, Fort Bliss Garrison Command, El Paso.Google Scholar
Movius, Hallam L. Jr. 1966 The Hearths of the Upper Perigordian and Aurignacian Horizons at the Abri Pataud, Les Eyzies (Dordogne) and Their Possible Significance. American Anthropologist 68:296325.Google Scholar
Nelson, Kit 2010 Environment, Cooking Strategies and Containers. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 29:238247.Google Scholar
Petraglia, Michael D. 2002 The Heated and the Broken: Thermally Altered Stone, Human Behavior, and Archaeological Site Formation. North American Archaeologist 23:241269.Google Scholar
Pollack, David (editor) 2008 The Archaeology of Kentucky: An Update, Vol. I. State Historic Preservation Comprehensive Plan Report No. 3. Kentucky Heritage Council, Frankfort.Google Scholar
Rehder, J. E. 2000 The Mastery and Uses of Fire in Antiquity. McGill-Queen’s University Press, Montreal.Google Scholar
Ricklis, Robert A., and Collins, Michael B. 1994 Archaic and Late Prehistoric Human Ecology in the Middle Onion Creek Valley, Hays County, Texas. Studies in Archeology 19. Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Schalk, Randall, and Meatte, Daniel 1993 The Archaeological Features. In The Archaeology of Chester Morse Lake: Long-Term Human Utilization of the Foothills in the Washington Cascade Range, edited by Stephen R. Samules, pp. 10.310.42. Center for Northwest Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman.Google Scholar
Schlanger, Sarah H. 1992 Recognizing Persistent Places in Anasazi Settlement Systems. In Space, Time and Archaeological Landscapes, edited by Jaqueline Rossignol and LuAnn Wandsnider, pp. 91112. Plenum Press, New York.Google Scholar
Siegel, Robert, and Howell, John R. 2001 Thermal Radiation Heat Transfer. 4th ed. Taylor and Francis, New York.Google Scholar
Smith, Craig S., and Martin, William 2001 Sego Lilies and Prehistoric Foragers: Return Rates, Pit Ovens and Carbohydrates. Journal of Archaeological Science 28:169183.Google Scholar
Stark, Richard T. 1997 Piedras Calientes: Ethnohistory, Experimental Archaeology, and Cooking with Hot Stones. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Stark, Richard T. 2002 Comidas de la Tierra: An Ethnoarcheology of Earth Ovens. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Straus, Lawrence G. 2006 Of Stones and Bones: Interpreting Site Function in the Upper Paleolithic and Mesolithic of Western Europe. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 25:500509.Google Scholar
Sullivan, Alan P. III, Cook, Robert A., Purtill, Matthew P., and Uphus, Patrick M. 2001 Economic and Land-Use Implications of Prehistoric Fire-Cracked-Rock Piles in Northern Arizona. Journal of Field Archaeology 28:367382.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thorns, Alston V. 1989 The Northern Roots of Hunter-Gatherer Intensification: Camas and the Pacific Northwest. Ph.D. dissertation, Washington State University, Pullman. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Thorns, Alston V. 2003 Cook-Stone Technology in North America: Evolutionary Changes in Domestic Fire Structures during the Holocene. In Le Feu Domestique et ses Structures au Neolithique et aux Ages des Metaux, edited by Marie-Chantal Frère-Sautot and Christophe Bontemps, pp. 8796. Collections Prehistoires. Editions Monique Mergoil, Saint-Apollinaire, France.Google Scholar
Thorns, Alston V. 2008a Ancient Savannah Roots of the Carbohydrate Revolution in South-Central North America. Plains Anthropologist 53:121136.Google Scholar
Thorns, Alston V. 2008b The Fire Stones Carry: Ethnographic Records and Archaeological Expectations for Hot-Rock Cookery in Western North America. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 27:443460.Google Scholar
Thorns, Alston V. 2009 Rocks of Ages: Propagation of Hot-Rock Cookery in Western North America. Journal of Archaeological Science 36:573591.Google Scholar
Thoms, Alston V., Montgomery, John L., and Portnoy, Alice W. 1981 An Archaeological Survey of a Portion of the Choke Canyon Reservoir Area in McMullen and Live Oak Counties, Texas. Choke Canyon Series 3. Center for Archaeological Research, University of Texas at San Antonio.Google Scholar
Torrence, Robin, Neal, Vince, Doelman, Trudy, Rhodes, Ed, McKee, Chris, Davies, Hugh, Bonetti, Roberto, Gugliemetti, Alessandra, Manzoni, Alberty, Oddone, Massimo, Parr, Jeff, and Wallace, Cleland 2004 Pleistocene Colonization of the Bismarck Archipelago: New Evidence from West New Britain. Archaeology in Oceania 39:101130.Google Scholar
Waechter, Sharon A. 2005 Late-Period Resource Intensification in Sierra Valley, Eastern Plumas County: A Response to the Medieval Climatic Anomaly. Proceedings of the Society of California Archaeology 18:4552.Google Scholar
Wandsnider, LuAnn 1997 The Roasted and the Boiled: Food Composition and Heat Treatment with Special Emphasis on Pit-Hearth Cooking. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 16:148.Google Scholar
Wandsnider, LuAnn 1999 Late Prehistoric High Plains Foragers: Starving Nomads or Affluent Foragers? Great Plains Research: A Journal of Natural and Social Science 9:939.Google Scholar
Wandsnider, LuAnn, and Chung, Y. S. 2003 Islands of Geophytes: Sego Lily Patch Density in a High Plains Habitat, ta Islands on the Plains: Ecological, Social, and Ritual Use of Landscapes, edited by Marcel Kornfeld and Alan J. Osborn, pp. 220242. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Whalen, Michael E., and Minnis, Paul E. 2009 The Neighbors of Casas Grandes: Medio Period Communities of Northwestern Chihuahua. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Wilson, Ernest W. 1930 Burned Rock Mounds of South-West Texas. Bulletin of the Texas Archeological and Paleontological Society 2:5963.Google Scholar
Wrangham, Richard 2009 Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human. Basic Books, New York.Google Scholar
Yu, Pei-Lin 2009 Ancient Pit Cooking in the American Southwest and Pacific Northwest: A Study in Foraging Intensification. VDM Verlag, Saarbrücken.Google Scholar