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11 - Reading the Microscopic Record On-Site

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Stephen Weiner
Affiliation:
Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel
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Summary

The division of the archaeological record into the microscopic and macroscopic records is based only on the fact that instrumentation is necessary to read the microscopic record. In reality, both are part of the same entity, and as such, they should ideally be exposed and investigated in an integrated manner. A very helpful approach for partially achieving this goal is to obtain some data on the microscopic record on-site during the excavation.

BENEFITS OF AN ON-SITE INTERACTIVE LABORATORY

Some benefits of an on-site laboratory follow:

  1. The key element in this concept is that the results of the analyses obtained on-site are immediately integrated into the overall effort to better understand the significance of the excavation under way. This necessitates that the work on-site adopt an interactive problem-solving mode that provides answers in minutes, hours, or at most, from one day to the next. The ideal mode of operation of the on-site laboratory is to define a specific question, take a few samples that can address this question, and analyze them immediately. With the results in hand, the question can be refined or rejected. The next round of sampling can then be based on the new information. In this way, ideas can be efficiently tested, and if they appear to be well based, a full and effective sample set can be obtained for analysis off-site. This sample set will be better able to validate or negate an hypothesis, as compared to a sample set collected “blind.”

  2. The process of excavation is irreversible and destructive. It is therefore invaluable to have information available in “real time” so that the mode of excavation can be adjusted to the nature of the materials being exposed.

  3. […]

Type
Chapter
Information
Microarchaeology
Beyond the Visible Archaeological Record
, pp. 261 - 274
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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