Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gxg78 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T07:35:45.808Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Geoarchaeology of Place: The Effect of Geological Processes on the Preservation and Interpretation of the Archaeological Record

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Michael R. Waters
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Texas A & M University, College Station, TX 77843–4352
David D. Kuehn
Affiliation:
Center for Environmental Archaeology, Texas A & M University, College Station, TX 77843–4352

Abstract

Because the landscape on which prehistoric people lived was dynamic and continually changed, the record of prehistoric activities across the landscape has been differentially preserved and destroyed. Insightful reconstructions of human organizational (settlement) systems from the archaeological record require a full understanding of the geological forces and history that have shaped that record. The landscape histories of the North Dakota Badlands and the stream systems of southern Arizona illustrate these points and the importance of geoarchaeological investigations to properly interpret the archaeological record.

Debido a que las formaciones terrestres que grupos prehistóricos ocuparon eran dinámicas y siempre cambiantes, el registro de actividades prehistóricas en el paisaje ha sido diferencialmente preservado y destruido. Reconstrucciones significativas de los sistemas organizacionales humanos (de asentamiento) requieren un entendimiento completo de lasfuerzas geológicas y la historia que le dio forma a dicho registro. La historia de las formaciones terrestres de los “Badlands” de Dakota del Norte y de los sistemas fluviales del sur de Arizona ilustra estos puntos y la importancia que guardan las investigaciones geoarqueológicas para interpretar propiamente el registro arqueológico.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Albanese, J. P. 1978a Archeogeology of the Northwestern Plains. In Prehistoric Hunters of the High Plains, edited by Frison, G. C., pp. 375389. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Albanese, J. P. 1978b Paieotopography and Bison Traps. In Bison Procurement and Utilization : A Symposium. Plains Anthropologist, Memoir 14, edited by Davis, L. B. and Wilson, M., pp. 5862.Google Scholar
Artz, J. A. 1995 Geological Contexts of the Early and Middle Holocene Archaeological Record in North Dakota and Adjoining Areas of the Northern Plains. In Archaeological Geology of the Archaic Period in North America, edited by Bettis, E. A. III, pp. 6786. Geological Society of America Special Paper 297, Boulder, Colorado.Google Scholar
Beckes, M. R., and Keyser, J. D. 1983 The Prehistory of the Custer National Forest : An Overview. USDA Forest Service, Custer National Forest, Billings, Montana.Google Scholar
Bettis, E. A. III (editor) 1995 Archaeological Geology of the Archaic Period in North America. Geological Society of America Special Paper 297, Boulder, Colorado.Google Scholar
Bettis, E. A. III, and Hajic, E. R. 1995 Landscape Development and the Location of Evidence of Archaic Cultures in the Upper Midwest. In Archaeological Geology of the Archaic Period in North America, edited by Bettis III, E. A., pp. 87113. Geological Society of America Special Paper 297, Boulder, Colorado.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bettis, E. A. III, and Thompson, D. M. 1981 Holocene Landscape Evolution in Western Iowa : Concepts, Methods and Implications for Archaeology. In Current Directions in Midwestern Archaeology : Selected Papers from the Mankato Conference, edited by Anfinson, S. F., pp. 114. Occasional Publications in Minnesota Anthropology No. 9. Minnesota Archaeological Society, St. Paul.Google Scholar
Bettis, E. A. Ill, and Thompson, D. M. 1982 Interrelations of Cultural & Fluvial Deposits in Northeast Iowa. Association of Iowa Archaeologists Field Trip Guidebook, Vermillion, South Dakota. Settlement Systems and Archaeological Site Formation. American Antiquity 45 : 420.Google Scholar
Binford, L. R. 1980 Willow Smoke and Dogs’ Tails : Hunter-Gatherer 1982 The Archaeology of Place. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 1 : 531.Google Scholar
Binford, S. R., and Binford, L. R. 1969 Stone Tools and Human Behavior. Scientific American 220(1) : 7084.Google Scholar
Bowers, A. W. 1948 A History of the Mandan and Hidatsa. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Bowers, A. W. 1965 Hidatsa Social and Ceremonial Organization. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 194.Google Scholar
Butzer, K. W. 1982 Archaeology as Human Ecology : Method and Theory for a Contextual Approach. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clayton, L., Moran, S. R., and Bickley, W B., Jr. 1976 Stratigraphy, Origin, and Climatic Implications of Late Quaternary Upland Silt in North Dakota. North Dakota Geological Survey Miscellaneous Series 54.Google Scholar
Clayton, L., Moran, S. R., and Bickley, W B., Jr. 1971 Rates of Hillslope Lowering in the Badlands of North Dakota. North Dakota Water Resources Research Institute Report WI-221-012-71.Google Scholar
Davidson, D. A. 1985 Geomorphology and Archaeology. In Archaeological Geology, edited by Rapp, G., Jr., and Gifford, J. A., pp. 2555. Yale University Press, New Haven.Google Scholar
East, T. C, Jorstad, T. F., Adovasio, J. M., Donahue, J., 1985 Archaeological Investigations on Cinnamon Creek Ridge, McKenzie County, North Dakota. Submitted to Penzoil Exploration and Production Company, Denver. University of Pittsburgh Cultural Resource Management Program, Pittsburgh.Google Scholar
Eddy, F. W, and Cooley, M. E. 1983 Cultural and Environmental History of Cienega Valley Southeastern Arizona. Anthropological Papers No. 43. University of Arizona, Tucson.Google Scholar
Frison, G. C. 1978 Prehistoric Hunters of the High Plains. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Frison, G. C, Wilson, M., and Wilson, D. J. 1976 Fossil Bison and Artifacts from an Early Altithermal Period Arroyo Trap in Wyoming. American Antiquity 41 : 2857.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greiser, S. T. 1985 Predictive Models of Hunter-Gatherer Subsistence and Settlement Strategies on the Central High Plains. Plains Anthropologist, Memoir 20.Google Scholar
Hanson, J. R. 1983 Bison Ecology and Nomadic Settlement/Subsistence Structure for the North Dakota Region. In Archeology of the Northern Border Pipeline, North Dakota : Test Excavations, edited by Root, M. J. and Gregg, M.L. pp. 13421417. Department of Anthropology Contribution No. 195, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks.Google Scholar
Haury, E. W, Antevs, E., and Lance, J. F. 1953 Artifacts with Mammoth Remains, Naco, Arizona. American Antiquity 19 : 124.Google Scholar
Haury, E. W, Sayles, E. B., and Wasley, W. W. 1959 The Lehner Mammoth Site, Southeastern Arizona. American Antiquity 25 : 230.Google Scholar
Haynes C., V, Jr. 1981 Geochronology and Paleoenvironments of the Murray Springs Clovis Site, Arizona. National Geographic Society Research Reports 13 : 243251.Google Scholar
Haynes C., V, Jr. 1982 Archeological Investigations at the Lehner Site, Arizona, 1971-1975. National Geographic Society Research Reports 14 : 325334.Google Scholar
Hill, M. A. 1988 Observations on Culture, Settlement, and Subsistence in the Little Missouri Badlands. Paper presented at the 46th Annual Plains Anthropological Conference, Wichita, Kansas.Google Scholar
Huckell, B. B. 1982 The Distribution of Fluted Points in Arizona : A Review and an Update. Archaeological Series No. 145. Cultural Resources Management Division, Arizona State Museum, Tucson.Google Scholar
Huckleberry, G. A. 1993 Late-Holocene Stream Dynamics on the Middle Gila River, Pinal County, Arizona. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson.Google Scholar
Jochim, M. A. 1976 Hunter-Gatherer Subsistence and Settlement : A Predictive Model. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Johnson, C. M. 1983 Native Ceramics. In Archeology of the Mondrian Tree Site, Part 2, edited by Toom, D. L. and Gregg, M.L. pp. 9.1-9.7. Department of Anthropology Contribution No. 193, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks.Google Scholar
Kuehn, D. D. 1990 The Archeology of Theodore Roosevelt National Park : Final Results of the 1987-1989 University of North Dakota Investigations. Department of Anthropology Contribution No. 257, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks.Google Scholar
Kuehn, D. D. 1993 Landforms and Archaeological Site Location in the Little Missouri Badlands : A New Look at Some Weil- Established Patterns. Geoarchaeology 8 : 313332.Google Scholar
Kuehn, D. D. 1995 The Geoarchaeology of the Little Missouri Badlands : The Late Quaternary Stratigraphic and Paleoenvironmental Context of the Archaeological Record. Ph.D. dissertation, Texas A&M University, College Station. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Loendorf, L. L., Brownell, J., Weston, L., Montgomery, S., 1982 Cultural Resource Survey on the Little Missouri Buttes and Adjacent Areas, Western North Dakota. Department of Anthropology Contribution No. 167, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks.Google Scholar
Mandel, R. D. 1995 Geomorphic Controls of the Archaic Record in the Central Plains of the United States. In Archaeological Geology of the Archaic Period in North America, edited by Bettis III, E. A., pp. 3766. Geological Society of America Special Paper 297, Boulder, Colorado.Google Scholar
Mandel, R. D. 1987 Cultural Resource Investigations on the North Dakota Segment of Exxon Company, USA, Bairoil- Dakota C02 Pipeline Project, Western North Dakota. Submitted to Exxon Company, Denver. Copies available from Western Wyoming College, Rock Springs.Google Scholar
Nelson, B. 1946 Land of the Dacotahs. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Nicholson, B. A. 1988 Modeling Subsistence Strategies in the Forest/Grassland Transition Zone of Western Manitoba During the Late Prehistoric and Early Historic Periods. Plains Anthropologist 33 : 351365.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rossignol, J., and Wandsnider, L. (editors) 1992 Space, Time, and Archaeological Landscapes. Plenum Press, New York.Google Scholar
Schiffer, M. B. 1987 Formation Processes of the Archaeological Record. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Simon, A. 1982 Prehistoric Pathways Across the North Dakota Badlands. Journal of the North Dakota Archaeological Association 1 : 5561.Google Scholar
Simon, A., and Keim, K. 1983 The Marsh Hawk Site, 32BI317, Billings County, North Dakota. Department of Anthropology Contribution No. 190, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks.Google Scholar
Stafford, C. R. 1994 Structural Changes in Archaic Landscape Use in the Dissected Uplands of Southwestern Indiana. American Antiquity 59 : 219237.Google Scholar
Thompson, D. M., and Bettis III, E. A. 1982 Out of Sight, Out of Planning : Assessing and Protecting Cultural Resources in Evolving Landscapes. Contract Abstracts and CRM Archeology 2(3) : 1622.Google Scholar
Waters, M. R. 1986 The Geoarchaeology of Whitewater Draw, Arizona. Anthropological Papers No. 45. University of Arizona, Tucson.Google Scholar
Waters, M. R. 1988 Holocene Alluvial Geology and Geoarchaeology of the San Xavier Reach of the Santa Cruz River, Arizona. Geological Society of America Bulletin 100 : 479191.Google Scholar
Waters, M. R. 1992 Principles of Geoarchaeology : A North American Perspective. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Waters, M. R. 1997 Geoarchaeological Investigations of the Tonto Basin, Arizona. In Anthropological Field Studies, edited by G. Rice. Arizona State University, Tempe.Google Scholar
Wilson, G. L. 1928 Hidatsa Eagle Trapping. American Museum of Natural History Anthropological Papers 30(Pt 4) : 101245.Google Scholar