Conjoinable Pieces and Site Formation Processes

Evidence provided by conjoined bone and lithic fragments from Old World sites such as Gombe Point, Meer II. Terra Amata, and Hortus shows that disturbance during burial, or following deposition, may affect archaeological assemblages to a much larger extent than previously imagined. The existence of an apparently undisturbed matrix, or of a finely stratified sequence, is not enough to rule out vertical displacement of artifacts and, in the case of multilevel sites, mixture of assemblages. As a result, many inferences based on fine stratigraphic controls may be open to question. Conjoined pieces can be used to test the presence and extent of stratigraphic disturbances that have not left clear, macroscopic traces in archaeological sediments and which have, therefore, few chances of being recognized. Before all things, brethren, we admonish and command you … that when you hear an exposition of the mystery of the Scriptures telling of things that took place, you believe what is read to have actually taken place as the reading narrates; lest undermining the foundation of actuality, you seek, as it were, to build'in the air. St. Augustine

[1]  F. Bordes Sur la notion de sol d'habitat en préhistoire paléolithique , 1975 .

[2]  P. Goldberg,et al.  New excavations at the Tabun Cave, Mount Carmel, Israel, 1967-1972: a preliminary report , 1973 .

[3]  Edward C. Harris,et al.  Principles of archaeological stratigraphy , 1979 .

[4]  F. Hole,et al.  Introduction To Prehistoric Archaeology , 1965 .

[5]  H. Deacon Excavations at Boomplaas cave ‐ a sequence through the upper Pleistocene and Holocene in South Africa , 1979 .

[6]  James A. Ford A quantitative method for deriving cultural chronology , 1972 .

[7]  R. Whallon Spatial Analysis of Occupation Floors II: The Application of Nearest Neighbor Analysis , 1974, American Antiquity.

[8]  Louis Méroc,et al.  Application des coordonnées cartésiennes à la fouille d'un gisement , 1954 .

[9]  C. M. Baker The Size Effect: An Explanation of Variability in Surface Artifact Assemblage Content , 1978, American Antiquity.

[10]  R. Atkinson Worms and Weathering , 1957, Antiquity.

[11]  L. Freeman Acheulean Sites and Stratigraphy in Iberia and Maghreb , 1975 .

[12]  D. Cahen,et al.  A Paleolithic Campsite in Belgium , 1980 .

[13]  John Howland Rowe,et al.  Stratigraphy and Seriation , 1961, American Antiquity.

[14]  P. Katz,et al.  Stone Tools, Toolkits, and Human Behavior in Prehistory [and Comments and Reply] , 1979, Current Anthropology.

[15]  A. Behrensmeyer,et al.  Observed Formation and Burial of a Recent Human Occupation Site in Kenya , 1977, Quaternary Research.

[16]  John W. Rick,et al.  Downslope Movement and Archaeological Intrasite Spatial Analysis , 1976, American Antiquity.

[17]  I. Glover The effects of sink action on archaeological deposits in caves: An Indonesian example , 1979 .

[18]  J. Moeyersons,et al.  Subsurface movements of stone artefacts and their implications for the prehistory of Central Africa , 1977, Nature.

[19]  P. Hughes,et al.  Occupational disturbance and types of archaeological deposit , 1977 .

[20]  G. Isaac,et al.  Olorgesailie: Archaeological Studies of a Middle Pleistocene Lake Basin in Kenya , 1978 .

[21]  F. Hole,et al.  An Introduction to Prehistoric Archeology , 1969 .

[22]  Donald L. Johnson,et al.  A Survey of Disturbance Processes in Archaeological Site Formation , 1978 .

[23]  R. Whallon Spatial Analysis of Occupation Floors I: Application of Dimensional Analysis of Variance , 1973, American Antiquity.

[24]  R. Clay Concerning the Spatial Analysis of Occupation Floors , 1975, American Antiquity.

[25]  H. Lumley Cultural Evolution in France in its Paleoecological Setting During the Middle Pleistocene , 1975 .

[26]  V. Haynes Paleoenvironments and Cultural Diversity in late Pleistocene South America: A Reply to A. L. Bryan , 1974, Quaternary Research.

[27]  L. Freeman The Analysis of Some Occupation Floor Distributions from Earlier and Middle Paleolithic Sites in Spain , 1978 .