Why do archaeologists classify artifacts




















Colton , H. Museum of Northern Arizona, Bulletin. Cruxent , J. Fairbanks , C. Ford , C. In Studies in the Science of Society, edited by G. Yale University Press, New Haven. Ford , J. New York. Gifford , J. Salt Lake Cirv. Gladwin , H. Bond, Wheelwright, Portland Maine. Gladwin , Winifre and H. Medallion Papers, No. Halry , E. Heizer , R. Third revised edition. National Press, Palo Alto.

Krieger , A. American Antiquity, Vol 9, No. Linton , Ralph The Study of Man. Appieton, Century, New York. Matson , F. Ann Arbor.

Neilson , W. Knott , and P. Second edition. Merriam Co. Yale University Publications m Anthropology. New Haven. Salt Lake City. Phillips , Philip , J. Artifacts are then sorted according to type of material, e. The notion that artifacts can be classified into types rests on the principles of typological analysis.

What is the purpose of artifacts? Can a person be an artifact? Is food an artifact? Can a picture be an artifact? Is the Bible considered an artifact? What is another word for artifacts? What are some examples of social artifacts? What is artifact made of? How do you analyze artifacts? Analyze an Artifact. Meet the artifact. What do artifacts teach us? What is the oldest religious artifact?

Why are artifacts important to archaeologists? What is the context of an artifact? What does Ecofact mean? What is Isarchaeology? What is artifact in Java? Similar Asks. Popular Asks. An archaeologist wouldn't just look at the shape of something and decide what it was for - its function. First, an archaeologist would look at it very carefully measure it, research it and ask questions like: -How old is it? The archaeologist would then decide what the object might be. So, first comes the research, then the conclusion and the name or label for the artifact.

With more information, an archaeologist could change her or his mind. Arrows weren't used in Canada until about B. The point in the drawing is too big for an arrow and came from a layer from B.

It isn't an arrowhead. It's a dart point. The things an archeologist looks at on an artifact - its size, shape, material, colour, etc. By looking at attributes very carefully, archaeologists can sort artifacts into groups e.

The groups could be made of: -different types of the same thing e. All the artifacts together from a site are the assemblage for the site. Once the archaeologists have sorted our classified the artifact assemblage, they can notice patterns such as: -the places different types of artifacts were used on the site; -how the artifacts were used on the site; -which kinds of artifacts were local and which were from elsewhere.



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