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Archaeology Vocabulary

Read the definition and type the term it defines.

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Quiz by arjaygee
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Last updated: February 19, 2024
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First submittedFebruary 19, 2024
Times taken12
Average score52.0%
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Definition
First
Letter
Term
Ascertaining the age of an object with reference to a fixed and specific time scale (as opposed to ascertaining its age relative to the age of other objects in the same or a related context).
A
Absolute dating
Soil deposited by running water, such as streams, rivers, and flood waters.
A
Alluvial deposit
To re-fill a trench once an excavation has been completed.
B
Backfill
A heap of earth placed over one or more prehistoric tombs, often surrounded by ditches.
B
Barrow
Stone tools that have been worked on both sides or faces, meaning that flakes have been intentionally (not naturally) chipped off from both sides of the stone.
B
Biface tools
A mound of stones erected as a memorial or marker.
C
Cairn
A stone or metal axelike instrument with a bevelled edge.
C
Celt
Information relating to where an artifact or feature was found and what it was found in association with.
C
Context
Any change to an archaeological site due to events which occurred after the site was laid down.
D
Disturbance
Artificial changes in land level, typically made from piles of artificially placed or sculpted rocks and soil.
E
Earthworks
The science of reconstructing the relationships between past societies and the environments they lived in.
E
Environmental archaeology
The exposure, processing, and recording of archaeological sites, including uncovering and recording the provenience, context, and three-dimensional location of archaeological finds.
E
Excavation
Detailed, written accounts of archaeological research, excavation, and interpretation made during an ongoing project.
F
Field notes
Material that has accumulated, or been deposited, within a negative feature such as a cut, ditch, or a hollow in a building.
F
Fill
A fragment removed by chipping or hammering from a larger stone used as a tool or weapon.
F
Flake
The application of archaeological techniques and theory in a legal context.
F
Forensic archaeology
An object which has been deliberately broken or damaged in such a way as to make it unusable.
K
Killed object
The physical material in which finds and other cultural remains are found, e.g. soil or rock.
M
Matrix
A site that is anomalously large in comparison to others from the same period and region.
M
Mega-site
An absolute dating technique used to determine the age of organic materials less than 50,000 years old by examining the loss of the unstable carbon-14 isotope, which is absorbed by all living organisms during their lifespan.
R
Radiocarbon dating
The preparation of finds from an excavation for storage or further specialist analysis, typically including washing, labelling, sorting and listing in an inventory.
P
Finds processing
The use of screens and meshes to improve the recovery rate of artifacts from excavated sediments.
S
Sieving
Loose sediment excavated from a trench.
S
Spoil
A rapid and relatively inexpensive method of archaeological evaluation used to estimate the archaeological potential of a site.
T
Trial trenching
The classification of objects according to their physical characteristics.
T
Typology
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