Good Questions Met by Archaeological Revelations
Part of: Society for Historical Archaeology 2014
This symposium presents experiences with a different approach to the conference theme of «Questions that Count» Some of the greatest moments in our scientific practice come when we launch rigorous investigations, based on robust, theoretically informed, and contextually tailored questions, only to see the archaeological record confront us with astonishing and unexpected revelations about the past. Each of these presentations provides an account of a project in which the evidence surprised and thwarted expectations and opened new avenues of inquiry. Some investigators demand that the expense of archaeology be justified by indications that documentary records and oral history accounts alone cannot provide ample evidence to understand particular cultural dynamics. Others insist that well-framed questions will always be best applied by addressing the often contrastive data sets of material culture, documents, and oral histories. A third observation can be equally poignant -- sometimes the archaeology will just astound us.
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-16 of 16)
- Documents (16)
- The Accotink Quarter (2014)
- Can See to Can’t See: Surprises at Montpelier’s Home Quarter (2014)
- Colonial Subsistence Strategies: Resource Use in English Charleston and Spanish St. Augustine (2014)
- Confronting a Dragon’s Offspring in the Americas (2014)
- Deep Urban Reverberations: Exploring the Historical Trajectory of African Atlantic Cities (2014)
- From Historic Houston Cemetery to a 17th Century English Colony? (2014)
- Hidden in Plain Sight: A Tornadic Discovery of Enslaved African American Life in Missouri’s Little Dixie (2014)
- Insights in the Unexpected: A Discovery of Cattle Horns and Beads (2014)
- Interpretive Inertia and Data Concatenation at Cannon’s Point, Georgia (2014)
- Preparing for the Unpredictable: When Research Questions and the Unknown Collide (2014)
- Questions, Methods, and Interpretations that Count: Reflections on Collaborative Archaeology in Nevis, West Indies (2014)
- Reading Ceramic Use Wear: A Twist in the Plot (2014)
- Reframing Material Culture Meaning using the Elements (INAA) of Surprise (2014)
- The Slave Water Well at Kingsley Plantation: The Unexpected Possibilities of an African Religiosity within a Secular Context (2014)
- Take Five: The Unexpected in Historical Archaeology (2014)
- The Unanticipated Consequences of Purposive Archaeological Research: Examples from the Comparative Study of New World English Colonial Capitals (2014)