The first edition of this book was perhaps the most widely used volume in paleoanthropology. It was both a general reference source for researchers in physical anthropology and archaeology and a textbook for students. This edition is a fully and impressively updated version of the original. Ten year
Experimental hearths and the thermal alteration of Caliche on the Southern High Plains
β Scribed by Paul N. Backhouse; Eileen Johnson; Alexander Brackenreed-Johnston; Briggs Buchanan
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 657 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0883-6353
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Throughout the Holocene, caliche has been a ubiquitous technological resource for the people of the Southern High Plains. Archaeological sites on the Southern High Plains often contain thermal features that appear to utilize caliche nodules in various cultural processes. These processes usually involve some degree of thermal dynamic alteration to the caliche, identified in the archaeological record as fireβscorched or blackened nodules. Previous studies of the pyrodynamic properties of caliche have focused on quantification of color and fracture patterns within a laboratory setting, without direct involvement of cultural processes or problems associated with thermal features. Thermal alteration variables of caliche are examined from an actualistic perspective, utilizing previously excavated basin feature geometry and local caliche outcrops. Results indicate that sustained, intense heating of caliche (above 204Β°C) causes significant, but variable, structural transformations at the specimen level. The experimental use of shallow basin hearths demonstrates that hearth structures were easily capable of achieving and sustaining temperatures that would result in the physical alteration of individual caliche nodules, defined here as hearthstones. The broader implications of this study suggest that the interpretation of archaeological hearthstone assemblages should reflect variability, as observed during this experiment. Β© 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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