Lecture 5 — Archaeological Excavation: Provenience, Stratigraphy, and Curation
Big idea: Excavation is controlled, systematic removal of matrix to expose contexts. The core technical challenge is provenience control so associations can be reconstructed later.
Before excavation
- Research design and sampling strategy are determined in advance.
- Key decisions: where on the site, area size, number of units (pits/trenches).
Why squares?
Excavation units are typically square because they:
- define a known area to control context,
- simplify quantifying volume and comparing units.
Excavation workflow (a “day in the field”)
- Archaeology is early‑morning, weather‑specific work: sun protection, close‑toed shoes, etc.
- Low‑tech essentials: nails, string, rulers; plus trowels/brushes/brooms/dental picks.
Provenience and context (the “paperwork” is the science)
Provenience = 3D location within matrix:
- horizontal: X/Y on a grid,
- vertical: depth below a fixed datum.
Tools:
- High‑tech: total station, differential GPS.
- Low‑tech: line level, plumb bob.
Context = artifacts + matrix + associations
- Associations are the inferential gold: spatial relationships among artifacts/features and environments.
Stratigraphy and the Law of Superposition
- Stratification: layered matrices/features.
- Law of superposition: (in undisturbed sequences) lower strata are older than higher strata.
- Caveats: inverted stratigraphy, burrowing animals, disturbance.
Profiles: exposed stratigraphic walls used to interpret formation processes and site history.
Screening / sifting
- Recovers small artifacts missed during digging.
- Loses exact micro‑provenience, but retains association with stratum/level.
After excavation: backfill, conservation, and curation
- Backfilling: most excavations refill the unit after recording; leave indicators of archaeological work.
- Conservation/restoration: protect features that cannot be removed; can involve mechanical supports or chemical stabilization.
- Curation & cataloguing: classification by shared attributes for analysis and collections management:
- technological (raw materials, manufacture),
- form (shape, dimensions),
- style (color, texture, decoration).
Ethics
Excavation = assuming custody of cultural patrimony:
- follow regulations/best practices,
- collaborate with stakeholders,
- plan for long‑term conservation (circumstances change; solutions must adapt).