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Introduction to Archaeology [repost]

Posted By: FenixN
Introduction to Archaeology [repost]

Introduction to Archaeology
24xVHSRip | AVI / DivX, ~430 kb/s | 640x480 | 24x~45 min | English: MP3, 128 kb/s (2 ch) | 4.12 GB
Genre: Archaeology

Have you ever found yourself, perhaps after visiting a museum, an art gallery, or a historic site, wanting to know more about a long-lost civilization, a fortress that was bitterly fought over ages ago, or a ruined city sitting mute but poignant in the midst of what was once a thriving human world but is now a trackless jungle or a lonely plain? If such experiences have gripped your imagination, then you have probably also wondered how, more generally, groups of human beings dealt at different times and places with the challenges of their environments, and how, in turn, the environment shaped past peoples across the unchronicled millennia of human prehistory.

The first scientific excavation occurred in 1784 when Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826), 17 years before he became president, excavated native burial mounds according to the Law of Superposition (the earliest remains are those which were laid down first, and the latest remains are those which were laid down last). He recorded everything he found and published his data. Essentially, Jefferson conducted a modern scientific excavation.

As the 19th century progressed, antiquarianism set the stage for scientific archaeology. You will learn about General Augustus Lane-Fox Pitt-Rivers, Sir Flinders Petrie, Sir Arthur Evans, Alfred Kidder, and George BassΓΓé¼ΓÇ¥British and American founders of the scientific methods of archaeology.

Scientific Archaeology has three goals:

- to describe and classify what is found
- to figure out the function of what is found
- to explain how and why ancient cultures changed over time.

Discover the Archaeological Process

Along with history and basic concepts, much of the course's first half, "The Archaeological Process," introduces you to the ways in which archaeologists find, excavate, preserve, and date valuable sites (using everything from tree rings and changing pottery styles to atomic technology) and the assemblages of artifacts associated with them. You learn about such topics as:

- why archaeological surveys must cover the same ground at several different times of day
- how archaeologists learn volumes from discards and garbage
- why ceramic artifacts are so important to the study of the past
- how the presence of glaciers assists archaeological research in Scandinavia.

01. What is Archaeology?
02. The Scientific Underpinnings
03. Historians, Treasure Hunters, and Antiquarians
04. The Fathers of Scientific Excavation
05. Preservation of Archaeological Remains
06. Stratigraphic and Sequence Dating
07. Seriation, Ancient Sources, and Sediments
08. Dating Using Flora and Fauna
09. Radiocarbon and Potassium-Argon Dating
10. Other Scientific Dating Methods
11. Archaeological Survey
12. Excavation
13. Interpreting Finds
14. Stone Tools
15. Pottery
16. Bones
17. Features and Structures
18. Reconstructing Ancient Cultures
19. Archaeological Theories about Change
20. Paleolithic Art
21. The Neolithic Revolution
22. Catal Huyuk
23. The Rise of Civilizations
24. Archaeology and Ethics


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Introduction to Archaeology [repost]

Introduction to Archaeology [repost]

Introduction to Archaeology [repost]

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