OFFICIAL67 Look at thefoursquares[■]that indicate where the following sentence could be added to thepassage.
Where would the sentence best fit? Click onasquare[■]to add the sentence to thepassage.
Archaeologists distinguish the “cultural” formation processes of the archaeologicalrecord (those involving some kind of human activity) from the “natural” formation processes (those involving nonhuman activity, such as river action disturbing archaeologicalmaterial). There are two kinds of cultural formation processes: those that reflect the original human behavior and activity before a find or site became buried, and those (such as looting) that came after burial. Of course, most majorarchaeological sites are formed as the result of a complexsequence of use, burial, and reuse so that a simple twofold division of cultural formation processes may not be so simple to apply in practice, but the distinction is still useful.
Original human behavior is often reflected archaeologically in at least four major activities. In the case of a tool, for example, there may be (1) acquisition of the rawmaterial, (2) manufacture, (3) use, and (4) disposal or discard when the tool is worn out or broken. (The tool may of course be reworked and recycled, thus repeating stages 2 and 3.) Similarly, a food crop such as wheat will be acquired (harvested), manufactured (processed), used (eaten), and discarded (digested and the waste products excreted), although here one might add a commonintermediatestage of storage before use. From the archaeologist's point of view, the criticalfactor is that remains can enter the archaeologicalrecord at any one of these stages. A tool may be lost or thrown out for being of inferiorquality during manufacture, or a crop may be accidentally burnt and thus preserved during processing. In order to reconstruct the originalactivity accurately it is thereforecrucial to try to understand which of the stages one is looking at. It may be quite easy to identify the first stage for stone tools, for instance, because stone quarries can often be recognized by deep holes in the ground with piles of associated waste flakes that survive well. But it is much more difficult to know beyond reasonabledoubt where a sample of charred plant remains comes from, whether from an area where harvested wheat was taken for threshing or from the area where the grain was eaten. This may also make it difficult to reconstruct the true plant diet, since certain activities may favor the preservation of certain species of plant.
Deliberateburial of valuables or the dead is another human behavior that has left its mark on the archaeologicalrecord. In times of conflict or war, people often deposit prized possessions in the ground, intending to reclaim them at a later date; but sometimes, for one reason or another, they fail to do so. These hoards are a primesource of evidence for certain periods, such as the European Bronze Age, for which hoards of metal goods are common, or later Roman Britain, which has yielded buried treasures of silver and other precious metals. The archaeologist, however, may not find it easy to distinguish between hoards originally intended to be reclaimed and valuables buried—perhaps as offerings to supernatural powers—with no reclamation intended.
In addition to burial hoards, a majorsource of archaeologicalevidence comes from burial of the dead, whether in simple graves, elaborateburial mounds, or giant pyramids, usually with grave goods such as ceramic vessels or weapons, and sometimes with painted tomb-chamber walls, as in ancient Mexico or Egypt. The Egyptians indeed went so far as to mummify their dead—to preserve them, they hoped, for eternity—as did the Incas of Peru, whose kings were kept in the Temple of the Sun at Cuzco and brought outside for special ceremonies.
Human destruction of the archaeologicalrecord might be caused by burials of the kind just described being dug into earlier deposits. But people in the past deliberately or accidentally obliterated traces of their predecessors in innumerable other ways. Rulers often destroyed monuments or erased inscriptions belonging to previous chiefs or monarchs. [■]On the other hand, some human destruction meant to obliterate has inadvertently preserved material for the archaeologist to find. [■]Burning, for example, may not always destroy. [■]Clay daubing and adobe usually decay, but if a structure has been burned, the mud is baked to the consistency of a brick. [■]
9.Look at thefoursquares[■]that indicate where the following sentence could be added to thepassage.
Where would the sentence best fit? Click onasquare[■]to add the sentence to thepassage.
Thousands of clay writing tablets from the Near East have been preserved by being baked in this way..