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3 - Completeness of the Archaeological Record

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Stephen Weiner
Affiliation:
Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel
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Summary

It is not easy to forget that the familiar macroscopic archaeological record is missing a huge amount of information when compared to the same site when occupied. Any interpretation of the excavated record thus requires a serious assessment of what is missing, and in particular, differentiating between what is missing because it was never present or because of degradation (diagenesis). The microscopic record is, in many respects, the key to understanding the missing part of the archaeological record. The focus of this chapter is on better understanding the completeness of the whole archaeological record through the microscopic record.

Darwin (1859, chap. 9) addressed the issue of completeness in the context of paleontology when he wrote about the “imperfection of the fossil record.” Darwin recognized that the fossil record was a direct source of information for evaluating his theory of evolution and was concerned that an uncritical reading of this record would compromise his hypothesis. He was particularly concerned with the fact that fossils rarely show any morphological change over time and hence contradicted his predictions. Gaps exist in the fossil record, and any reading of the record obviously needs to take this into account. In fact, it is not only the gaps that can cause confusion, but also the quality of the record: the proportion of past life that is not recorded, the information content of the record that is preserved, the bias that this introduces, and so on (Kidwell and Holland, 2002).

Type
Chapter
Information
Microarchaeology
Beyond the Visible Archaeological Record
, pp. 46 - 67
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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