Finding, Analyzing and Interpreting Organic Matter in Archaeology: A Complex Subject

Author(s): Ramiro Javier March

Year: 2017

Summary

Reconstructing the history of organic matter in archaeological context presents a challenge. Organic chemical signatures are the consequence of complex natural and anthropic processes that must be decoded in order to understand their hypothetical significations. This task follows different epistemological, methodological, and practical choices and needs to integrate knowledge from different disciplines. As a consequence, the characterization of the different molecules is related to the original question, the methods put in practice, and differential hypothetical environmental processes. For example, soils, ceramics or stones, may contain organic matter from different anthropic activities that can be unique or repeated. Further, these artifacts can subsequently be exposed to different kinds of natural interactions. Experimental approaches try to solve these difficulties but sometimes can lead to new and interesting questions about supposed paradigmatic explanations. We present here some case studies showing this complexity and their evolving answers.

Cite this Record

Finding, Analyzing and Interpreting Organic Matter in Archaeology: A Complex Subject. Ramiro Javier March. Presented at The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Vancouver, British Columbia. 2017 ( tDAR id: 431907)

Record Identifiers

Abstract Id(s): 15064