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The Reliability of Using Surface Data for Seriation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2017

Jordan T. Downey*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Western Ontario (alumni), 748 Platt's Lane, London, Ontario, Canada, N6G 5E5 ([email protected])

Abstract

Archaeological sites are often dated through seriation analysis of artifacts found on the site's surface. This relative dating method remains common despite the widespread availability of absolute dating methods because it is fast and cost-effective compared to scientific dating methods such as radiocarbon dating. Surface seriation is especially important for regional survey studies that involve a large number of sites and little to no excavation. In this context it is important to ask: are surface assemblages as reliable an indicator of the age of a site as determined through excavation? This unique study addresses this question using data from seven sites in the Virú Valley on the north coast of Peru. Surface assemblages are compared with excavated ones using the G-test statistic. It is found that surface assemblages do not closely resemble excavated ones in a statistically significant sense. Nevertheless, the relative date of surface assemblages typically resembles the relative date of excavated assemblages. Caution is urged when dating surface assemblages purely through seriation because the surface may not actually be representative of excavated assemblages.

Los sitios arqueológicos son a menudo fechados a través del análisis por seriación de los artefactos encontrados en superficie. Este método de datación relativa sigue siendo común a pesar de la amplia disponibilidad de métodos de datación absoluta, ya que es rápido y económico en comparación con los métodos de datación científica tales como la datación por radiocarbono. La seriación de superficie es especialmente importante para los estudios de reconocimiento regional que incluyen un gran número de sitios con poca o ninguna excavación. En este contexto, es importante preguntarse: ¿Es el análisis de las recolecciones de superficie un indicador tan confiable de la edad de un sitio como lo es la excavación? Este es un estudio único que analiza la pregunta utilizando datos de siete sitios en el valle de Virú, en la costa norte de Perú. Se comparan los conjuntos de superficie y los conjuntos excavados utilizando el metodo estadístico de la prueba G. Encontramos que, estadísticamente, los conjuntos de superficie no se parecen mucho a los excavados. Sin embargo, el fechamiento relativo de los conjuntos de superficie normalmente es parecido al fechamiento relativo de los conjuntos excavados. Se recomienda precaución al asignar una fecha a los conjuntos de superficie solamente por medio de seriación ya que es posible que estos no representen los conjuntos excavados.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright 2017 © Society for American Archaeology 

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References

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