Open Access
Experimentation and scientific inference building in the study of hominin behavior through stone artifact archaeology
Sam C. Lin
- 01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: Dibble as mentioned in this paper argued that the ability to move beyond the constraint of modern analogs in archaeological knowledge production lies in the use of uniformitarian principles that operate independently from the research questions archaeologists wish to evaluate.
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Abstract: Since the beginning of prehistoric archaeology, various methods and approaches have been developed to describe and explain stone artifact variability. However, noticeably less attention has been paid to the ontological nature of stone artifacts and the adequateness of the inferential reasoning for drawing archaeological interpretations from these artifacts. This dissertation takes a scientific perspective to rethink critically the ways that current lithic approaches generate knowledge about past hominin behavior from stone artifacts through experimentation (Chapter 2), and further, to explore the use of controlled experiments and uniformitarian principles for deriving inferences. The latter is presented as two case studies about Late Pleistocene Neanderthal behavior in southwestern France (Chapter 3 & 4). Archaeological reasoning is inescapably analogical, and archaeological knowledge is bound to be established on the basis on modern observations. However, simplistic treatments of archaeological analogs often result in inferences of questionable validity. In this dissertation, it is argued that greater attention is required to consider the implication of experimental design, variable control, and analogic reasoning in the construction of archaeological inference from stone artifacts. It is argued that the ability to move beyond the constraint of modern analogs in archaeological knowledge production lies in the use of uniformitarian principles that operate independently from the research questions archaeologists wish to evaluate. By examining the uniformitarian connection between platform attributes and flake morphology, the first case study explores how the production of unretouched flakes can be altered in ways that increase their relative utility, as reflected in the ratio of edge length to mass. Application of this relationship to Middle Paleolithic assemblages shows two modes of flake production pattern, possibly related to different ways Neanderthal groups managed the utility of transported tool-kits. The second case study applies a geometric model to assess the lithic cortex proportion in the Middle Paleolithic study assemblages. An excess or deficit of cortex relative to artifact volume provides an indication of possible artifact transport to or from the assemblage locality. Results show correlation between assemblage cortex proportions and paleoenvironmental conditions, suggesting possible shifts in Neanderthal artifact transport pattern and land use during the late Pleistocene. Degree Type Dissertation Degree Name Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Graduate Group Anthropology First Advisor Harold L. Dibble This dissertation is available at ScholarlyCommons: http://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/1346
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Citations
How heat alters underlying deposits and implications for archaeological fire features: A controlled experiment
Vera Aldeias,Harold L. Dibble,Dennis Sandgathe,Paul Goldberg,Paul Goldberg,Paul Goldberg,Shannon P. McPherron +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of some of the most important variables underlying the transfer of heat to subsurface sediments, including temperature, duration, sediment type, moisture, and mineralogy, are altered in ways that bracket the range of conditions under which past fires may have existed.
139
Measuring the complexity of lithic technology
Charles Perreault
- 01 Jan 2015
TL;DR: It is proposed, in the spirit of Oswalt’s techno-units, that the complexity of lithic technology can be quantified by counting the procedural units involved in tool manufacture, and results provide a quantitative benchmark confirming that lithic technological complexity increased throughout the Paleolithic period.
62
Rethinking Use-Wear Analysis and Experimentation as Applied to the Study of Past Hominin Tool Use
João Marreiros,João Marreiros,Ivan Calandra,Walter Gneisinger,Eduardo Paixão,Eduardo Paixão,Antonella Pedergnana,Lisa Schunk +7 more
- 01 Sep 2020
TL;DR: This discussion focuses on the need for fundamental improvements by adopting established methods and techniques from similar research fields, the need to implement and combine different levels of experimentation, and the crucial need to establish standards and protocols in order to improve data quality, standardization, repeatability, and reproducibility.
Iconographies supplémentaires de l'article : Méthodes et rythmes du débitage laminaire au Châtelperronien : comparaison avec le Protoaurignacien
Morgan Roussel
- 21 Jul 2013
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose an evolution graduelle du Châtelperronien vers le Protoaurignacien, and analyze the production laminaire des trois niveaux de la sequence châtelparronienne du site de Quincay and compare it with the productions laminaires protoaurignaciennes.
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