ROI085, A Rapid and Inexpensive Method for Investigating Community Structure in the Eastern Lake Erie Basin: A Pilot Study

Summary

This is the tDAR Project page that represents Reports of Investigation 085 from the Applied Anthropology Laboratories, Ball State University. Drs. Brian G. Redmond and Kevin C. Nolan undertake an investigation of community structure at three northern Ohio habitation sites: White Fort (33Ln2), a multi-component, Late Prehistoric (Sandusky Tradition) site in Lorain County; Burrell Orchard (33Ln15), a multi-component site with a substantial Late Archaic component in Lorain County; and Heckleman (33Er14), a multi-component Woodland Period enclosure and habitation in Erie County. We explore the application of an inexpensive and less-invasive method of discovering community patterning that may help in building a robust sample of sites with known community structure in order to address a variety of anthropological questions at a regional scale. In this pilot study we employ systematic soil phosphate and soil magnetic susceptibility analysis on these three northeast Ohio archaeological sites. This is the first such effort in the Lake Erie basin to combine soil phosphate and magnetic susceptibility surveys to understand site structure. Ohio archaeology saw early application of soil phosphate analysis; however, after a series of equivocal applications in the early 1980s little or no use was made of this avenue of investigation as an independent source of information about local or regional activity patterning. Meanwhile geochemistry has proven extremely useful for prospecting and activity pattern analysis in a variety of contexts. Analytical techniques have improved since the 1980s, and phosphate is once again being employed in Ohio. Our investigation demonstrates the promise and problems of this analytical technique and we shed light on the applicability of this method of prospection to the Lake Erie Basin of Ohio. Especially when used in a multi-pronged research design, soil analysis is a powerful supplement to traditional techniques and enables whole-site analysis without full excavation.

Cite this Record

ROI085, A Rapid and Inexpensive Method for Investigating Community Structure in the Eastern Lake Erie Basin: A Pilot Study. ( tDAR id: 463072) ; doi:10.48512/XCV8463072

This Resource is Part of the Following Collections

URL: http://www.bsu.edu/aal


Keywords

Site Name
33ER14 33Ln15 33Ln2

Investigation Types
Environment Research Systematic Survey

Geographic Keywords
Erie County Lorain County Ohio

Spatial Coverage

min long: -82.849; min lat: 41.133 ; max long: -81.88; max lat: 41.511 ;

Record Identifiers

Reports of Investigation(s): 085

Source Collections

Ball State University Applied Anthropology Laboratories

Resource Inside this Project (Viewing 1-1 of 1)

  • Document (1)

Documents

  1. ROI085, A Rapid and Inexpensive Method for Investigating Community Structure in the Eastern Lake Erie Basin: A Pilot Study (2014)