首页> 外文学位 >Dead trees do tell tales: Investigations into the role of fires on archaeological site location and recognition in the Piney Creek Drainage of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.
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Dead trees do tell tales: Investigations into the role of fires on archaeological site location and recognition in the Piney Creek Drainage of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.

机译:枯树确实能说明问题:调查大火在大黄石生态系统的皮尼溪河排水中对考古现场位置和识别的作用。

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摘要

The discovery and documentation of an archaeological site is dependent on three conditions. First, that people in the past left something behind; second, that those materials preserved; finally, that location is observed and documented by a researcher. Fires impact all three. Past fires would have interacted with available resources and caused changes to local and regional geomorphologic processes (conditions one and two). Perishable artifacts can be burned and destroyed in the heat of a fire. Even durable items such as projectile points can be modified by heat fracturing, spalling, and potlidding (condition two). Modern fires substantially increase the efficiency of the discovery and surface documentation of this material (condition three).;During the summer of 2006, a large stand replacing fire, the Little Venus Fire (LVF), burned 14,164 ha acres of the Greybull River Drainage in Northwestern Wyoming. Under the burn were hundreds of archaeological sites that had been recorded before the LVF burned. After the fire, most of the reexamined sites revealed a wealth of new cultural material and added a previously undocumented Protohistoric record to this region.;Fire scars on the whitebark pines in the Piney Creek Drainage in the Shoshone National Forest of Northwestern Wyoming show evidence of past fires. Crossdating these fire scars to tree ring samples from this drainage showed when this drainage burned in the past. Multiple fire scars dated to 1648. Temporally diagnostic artifacts including obsidian tri-notched projectile points, metal arrow points, and trade beads, as well as radiocarbon samples taken from processed bison bone, suggest that humans were present in this drainage in the years surrounding this fire. This research examines impacts of fires on both the resources available to prehistoric humans, and to research conducted by present-day archaeologists.
机译:考古遗址的发现和记录取决于三个条件。首先,过去的人们留下了一些东西。第二,这些材料要保存下来;最后,由研究人员观察并记录该位置。火灾影响所有这三个方面。过去的大火会与可用资源发生相互作用,并导致局部和区域地貌过程发生变化(条件一和条件二)。易腐烂的文物可以在火中燃烧并破坏。即使是耐用物品,如弹丸,也可以通过热压裂,剥落和下陷(条件二)进行修改。现代大火大大提高了这种材料的发现和地表记录的效率(条件三)。; 2006年夏季,代替大火的小金星小火势(LVF)烧毁了Greybull河排水系统14,164公顷英亩在怀俄明州西北部。烧毁的地方是LVF燃烧之前记录的数百个考古现场。火灾发生后,大部分经过重新检查的地点都揭示了许多新的文化材料,并向该地区添加了以前未记录的原始历史记录。怀俄明州西北肖肖尼国家森林的松树溪流域的白皮松树上的火灾留下了疤痕。过去的大火。将这些火疤与该排水系统的年轮样本相交,表明该排水系统过去曾燃烧过。始于1648年的多处火伤疤痕。临时诊断的工件,包括黑曜石三槽式弹丸点,金属箭头点和商业珠子,以及从加工过的野牛骨头中采集的放射性碳样品,表明人类在此环境中存在于该排水系统中火。这项研究考察了火灾对史前人类可用资源以及当今考古学家进行的研究的影响。

著录项

  • 作者

    Thompson, Abraham Kvale.;

  • 作者单位

    Colorado State University.;

  • 授予单位 Colorado State University.;
  • 学科 Anthropology Archaeology.;Agriculture Forestry and Wildlife.;Biology Ecology.
  • 学位 M.A.
  • 年度 2012
  • 页码 197 p.
  • 总页数 197
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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