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Investigating the Archaeological Consequences of Short-Duration Occupations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Alan P. Sullivan III*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45221-0380

Abstract

Contemporary research in settlement archaeology often concentrates on inferring how people used landscapes. This research focus has prompted archaeologists to explore the interpretive potential of the full range of archaeological remains, including surface artifact scatters. One difficulty, however, is the identification of distinct occupations, especially those of short duration. Unless archaeologists isolate the remains of individual occupations, inferences about prehistoric land use may be unreliable because they would be based on conflated data. An approach for surmounting this problem is illustrated with the analysis of material recovered from the Voigt Mesa site in east-central Arizona. A key element of the approach consists of procedures for establishing units of spatial analysis (subsite areas) for partitioning surface artifact scatters. Statistical tests performed on several key technological variables common to the debitage assemblages of the subsite areas support the partitioning. Additional discussion explores how models of settlement-system change can be evaluated once artifact scatters have been separated into their constituent occupations.

Resumen

Resumen

La investigación actual en arqueología de patrones de asentamientos se concentra a menudo en inferir cómo diferentes pueblos hicieron uso del paisaje. Este tema de estudio ha conducido a los arqueólogos a explorar el potencial interpretativo del rango total de restos arqueológicos, incluyendo conjuntos de artefactos en superficie. Una dificultad, sin embargo, es la identificación de distintas ocupaciones, especialmente aquellas de corta duración. A menos que los arqueólogos consigan separar los restos de ocupaciones individuales, las inferencias acerca del uso prehistórico del espacio resultan inciertas puesto que están basadas en datos combinados. Mediante el análisis de materiales recuperados en Voigt Mesa, se ilustra un enfoque que permite superar este obstáculo. Un elemento crucial de este enfoque consiste en una serie de procedimientos para establecer unidades de análisis espacial (áreas dentro del sitio) a fin de dividir conjuntos de artefactos en superficie. Pruebas estadísticas efectuadas sobre una serie de variables tecnológicas claves compartidas por los conjuntos de debitage provenientes de diversas áreas del sitio ratifican la validez de la división. Se analiza además cómo modelos de cambio del sistema de asentamiento pueden ser evaluados una vez que los conjuntos de superficie han sido subdivididos en las ocupaciones que los integran.

Type
Reports
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 1992

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