Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1035896 Journal of Archaeological Science 2012 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper investigates directional influences in the distribution of Bronze Age surface pottery in the northern Murghab Delta, Turkmenistan. Drawing upon a continuous dataset of pottery sherd counts obtained by intensive field survey, it examines the degree to which we can make sense of the archaeological processes at work in a heavily obstructed and dynamic landscape. In so doing, it makes use of two analytical methods that have rarely been used in archaeology: a) geostatistical analysis using variograms to investigate directional spatial autocorrelation in recorded sherd counts; and b) angular wavelet analysis in evaluating directional influences in the sherd distributions for particular chronological periods. While some kinds of directional influence can be identified visually, a quantitative approach is particularly useful in deconstructing such patterns. In this particular dataset, distinct but related directional processes can be identified and measured: a) the impact of the complex system of watercourses in the delta on both settlement and post-depositional processes; and b) recovery bias in the observations made during survey.

► Exploration of anisotropy (directionality) in surface artefact distributions. ► Two methods: geostatistics/variography and angular wavelet analysis. ► Depositional/post-depositional processes behave differently in different directions. ► Watercourses influence anisotropy in surface scatter; sand dunes cause recovery bias. ► Important to consider directional influences in sampling methodologies.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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