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Cut (archaeology)

 

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Cut (archaeology)



 
 
In Archaeology
Archaeology

Archaeology, archeology, or arch?ology is the science that studies Homo cultures through the recovery, documentation, analysis, and interpretation of material remains and environmental data, including architecture, Artifact , features, Biofact s, and cultural landscape....
 and archeological stratification a cut or truncation is a context
Archaeological context

In archaeology, not only the context of a discovery is a significant fact, but the formation of the context is as well. An archaeological context is an event in time which has been preserved in the archaeological record....
 that represents a moment in time when other archaeological deposits were removed for the creation of some feature
Feature (archaeology)

Feature in archaeology and especially excavation has several different but allied meanings. A feature is a collection of one or more archaeological context representing some human non-portable activity that generally has a vertical direction characteristic to it in relation to site stratification ....
 such as a ditch or pit. In laymans terms a cut can be thought of a hole that was dug in the past, though cut also applies to other parts of the archaeological record
Archaeological record

The archaeological record is a term used in archaeology to denote all archaeological evidence, including the physical remains of past human activities which archaeologists seek out and record in an attempt to analyze and reconstruct the past....
 such as horizontal truncations like terraced ground.






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Pitsection
In Archaeology
Archaeology

Archaeology, archeology, or arch?ology is the science that studies Homo cultures through the recovery, documentation, analysis, and interpretation of material remains and environmental data, including architecture, Artifact , features, Biofact s, and cultural landscape....
 and archeological stratification a cut or truncation is a context
Archaeological context

In archaeology, not only the context of a discovery is a significant fact, but the formation of the context is as well. An archaeological context is an event in time which has been preserved in the archaeological record....
 that represents a moment in time when other archaeological deposits were removed for the creation of some feature
Feature (archaeology)

Feature in archaeology and especially excavation has several different but allied meanings. A feature is a collection of one or more archaeological context representing some human non-portable activity that generally has a vertical direction characteristic to it in relation to site stratification ....
 such as a ditch or pit. In laymans terms a cut can be thought of a hole that was dug in the past, though cut also applies to other parts of the archaeological record
Archaeological record

The archaeological record is a term used in archaeology to denote all archaeological evidence, including the physical remains of past human activities which archaeologists seek out and record in an attempt to analyze and reconstruct the past....
 such as horizontal truncations like terraced ground. A cut context is sometimes referred to as a "negative context" as opposed to a "positive context". The term denotes that a cut has removed material from the archaeological record or natural
Archaeological natural

Natural in Archaeology is a term to denote a horizon in the stratigraphic record representing the point from which there is no anthropogenic activity on site and the archaeological record ends....
 at the time of its creation as opposed to a positive context which adds material to the archaeological record. A cut has zero thickness and no material properties of its own and is defined by the limits of other contexts. Cuts are seen in the record by virtue of the difference between the material it was cut through and the material that back fills it. This difference is seen as an "edge" by the archaeologists on site. This is shown in the picture above (Fig 1.), where a half sectioned
Archaeological section

In archaeology a section is a view in part of the Archaeological record showing it in the vertical plane, as a cross section , and thereby illustrating its profile and stratigraphy....
 Saxon pit has had half its backfill
Fill (archaeology)

In archaeology fills are archaeological context representing material that has accumulated or has been deposited into a cut feature such as ditch or pit of some kind....
 removed and we can clearly see a difference between the ground the pit was cut into and the material originally filling the pit . Sometimes these differences are not clear and an archaeologist must rely on experience and insight to discover cuts.

Re-cuts

Re-cuts are cuts made within the confines or near confines of other cuts often to regain the function of the original cut or harvest material from the original fill. Re-cuts are considered quite valuable as a source of information because they can shed insight on function and attitude over time . A example of re-cutting would be a road side ditch being re-cut and emptied of silt and detritus as a form of maintenance. Conversley a road side ditch that is never re-cut gives a certain impression about the attitude towards the investment in infrastuctue the road represents. Re-cuts by their nature are hard to discern because the re-cut can truncate the original cut in part and be completely with in the confines of the original fill in other parts. They can even be absent from the record. Cutting is the reason why not all past activity on a site leaves traces of its existence in the sequence
Sequence (archaeological)

The archaeological sequence or sequence for short, on a specific archaeological site can be defined on two levels of rigour.# Normally it is adequate to equate it to archaeological record....


Hypothetical ditch re-cuts shown in section
Fig 2 shows how a ditch re-cut with at least two re-cuts may appear when viewed in section
Archaeological section

In archaeology a section is a view in part of the Archaeological record showing it in the vertical plane, as a cross section , and thereby illustrating its profile and stratigraphy....
. It is possible that numerous other re-cuts took place and where truncated out of the archaeological record
Archaeological record

The archaeological record is a term used in archaeology to denote all archaeological evidence, including the physical remains of past human activities which archaeologists seek out and record in an attempt to analyze and reconstruct the past....
 by one or more of the re-cuts that has survived.

See also

  • Single context recording
    Single context recording

    Single context recording was initially developed by Ed Harris and Patrick Ottaway in 1976, from a suggestion by Lawrence Keene. It was further developed by the Department of Urban Archaeology from where it was then exported, in the mid 1980s by Pete Clarke to the Scottish Urban Archaeological Trust and Nicky Pierce to the York Archaeological Tru...
  • Harris matrix
    Harris matrix

    The Harris matrix or Winchester seriation diagram is a tool used to depict the temporal succession of archaeological contexts and thus the sequence of deposition on a 'dry land' archaeological site....
  • Archaeological plan
    Archaeological plan

    An archaeological plan in an archaeological excavation, is a technical drawing of feature s in the horizontal plane....
  • Archaeological association
    Archaeological association

    Association in archaeology has more than one meaning and is confusing to the layman. Archaeology has been critiqued as a soft science with a somewhat poor standardization of terms....
  • Relationship (archaeology)
    Relationship (archaeology)

    An archaeological relationship is the position in space and by implication, in time, of an object or Archaeological context with respect to another....
  • Archaeological context
    Archaeological context

    In archaeology, not only the context of a discovery is a significant fact, but the formation of the context is as well. An archaeological context is an event in time which has been preserved in the archaeological record....
  • Archaeological section
    Archaeological section

    In archaeology a section is a view in part of the Archaeological record showing it in the vertical plane, as a cross section , and thereby illustrating its profile and stratigraphy....
  • Feature (archaeology)
    Feature (archaeology)

    Feature in archaeology and especially excavation has several different but allied meanings. A feature is a collection of one or more archaeological context representing some human non-portable activity that generally has a vertical direction characteristic to it in relation to site stratification ....
  • Fill (archaeology)
    Fill (archaeology)

    In archaeology fills are archaeological context representing material that has accumulated or has been deposited into a cut feature such as ditch or pit of some kind....
  • Alignment (archaeology)
    Alignment (archaeology)

    An alignment in archaeology is a secondary or circumstantial form of evidence used to Archaeological association feature such as postholes by virtue of their physical relationships rather than stratification ones....