Skip to content

Lecture 3 — Archaeological Fundamentals: Principles, Units of Analysis, Context

Big idea: Archaeologists translate material traces into claims about past life by combining (a) a shared analytic vocabulary, (b) careful attention to context, and (c) explicit research design.

Four underlying principles (analytic lenses)

  • Form: what something is like physically.
  • Function: what it was used for (or how it worked socially/technically).
  • Process: how it was made/used/deposited/altered through behavior and time.
  • Meaning: what it signified to people (symbolic, social, political).

Case study framework: Sake in Japanese American internment camps

Historical record exists (documents, photos, some oral histories), but archaeology asks:

  • What did daily life look like beyond official supplies?
  • How did people maintain relationships and cultural practices?
  • Were traditions suppressed, adapted, or enabled?

Using form/function/process/meaning helps infer:

  • access to goods and networks,
  • cultural persistence under constraint,
  • unofficial economies and social life.

Units of analysis (review)

  • Artifact (portable, human‑made/modified)
  • Ecofact (natural material meaningful by association)
  • Feature (non‑portable; destroyed by removal)
  • Site (cluster of materials/features)
  • Region (group of sites with shared cultural attributes)

Site formation processes and context

  • Behavioral processes: acquisition → manufacture → consumption/use → deposition/discard.
  • Transformational processes (taphonomy): natural + human (e.g., reuse, looting, construction).
  • Primary vs secondary context: whether provenience/associations remain intact.

Research design & sampling (field logic)

Because excavation is destructive:

  1. Ask a research question.
  2. Form hypotheses.
  3. Select sampling + analytic methods (replicable).
  4. Excavate/record/analyze.
  5. Interpret and publish.

Sampling strategies

  • Judgmental, random, stratified—each produces different inferences; match strategy to the question.