Archaeological methodology 4
Study Cycle: 2
Lectures: 30
Seminars: 0
Tutorials: 80
ECTS credit: 10
Lecturer(s): doc. dr. Vinazza Manca, izr. prof. dr. Mlekuž Vrhovnik Dimitrij, pred. Grosman Darja, prof. dr. Novaković Predrag
The course is made of three topics:
a) ARCHAEOLOGICAL STRATIGRAPHY AND STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS deals with the principles of identification and analysis of the elements of archaeological stratification. Using selected case studies, students learn about different techniques and procedures of archaeological excavation and recording, problems of post-deposition processes and interdisciplinary approach to archaeological stratigraphy. The architectural-stratigraphical method (structural analysis) includes and supplements knowledge from technical, natural and social sciences about the construction of objects. In historical architecture research, understanding of the historical context of the buildings is included.
b) ARCHAEOLOGICAL CERAMOLOGY. This topic includes more detailed knowledge of pottery raw materials, techniques of pottery making and shaping, surface finishing, refill techniques, the technology of clay firing, and other techniques of finalisation of ceramic objects. Other topics include conceptualisation and implementation of concrete typological classifications (based on different criteria), organisation of object and data archives, (standardised recording, descriptive statistics), and training for catalogue publishing.
c) DATA ANALYSES IN ARCHAEOLOGY is aimed at teaching major methods in data management (databases and their manipulation), data retrieval (data mining) and most frequent types of data analyses in archaeology, and interpretation and visualisation of their results. Particular stress is on quantitative methods needed in sampling, spatial analyses, trends modelling, and pattern recognition in different data sets in archaeology.
1. ROSKAMS, S., Excavation. Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology 2001. (328 str.) COBISS.SI-ID - 18443821
2. BRANCH, N., CANTI, M., CLARK, P., TURNE, C. Environmental Archaeology. theorethical and practical approaches, London Hodder Education 2005. (240 str.) https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=e000xww&AN=32774…
3. RYE, O.S. Pottery technology. Principles and reconstruction, Manuals in archaeology 4 (Washington DC: Taraxacum), 1981, 1-134 COBISS.SI-ID - 29737826
4. RICE, P. M.,1987, Pottery analysis, Chicago, 559 str.. COBISS.SI-ID - 57903
5. Kenneth, C. The Potter`s Manual. London, 1989, 1-208. COBISS.SI-ID - 68640866
6. ORTON, C., TYERS, P., VINCE, A. Pottery in archaeology. Cambridge, 1995 ,1-242 COBISS.SI-ID - 2175584
7. SHENNAN S. 1988. Quantifying archaeology. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh. COBISS.SI-ID - 74639875
8. BAXTER M. J. 1994. Exploratory Multivariate Analysis in Archaeology. Edinburg University Press, Edinburg COBISS.SI-ID - 10114658
9. DIETRICH D. et al. (ur.) 2015. Data Science and Big Data Analytics: Discovering, Analyzing Vizualizing and Presenting Data. Wiley. COBISS ID=128631299
10. SKIBO, J. M. 2013. Understanding pottery function. Springer, New York. COBISS.SI-ID – 65248610.
11. HUNT, A. M. W. 2017. The Oxford Handbook of Archaeological Ceramic Analysis. Oxford University, Oxford. COBISS.SI-ID – 70882402.
12. QUINN, P. 2022. Thin section petrography, geochemistry & scanning electron microscopy of archaeological ceramics. Archeopress, Oxford. COBISS.SI-ID – 143793667.
Priporočena literatura:
ROUX, V. 2019. Ceramics and Society. Springer Cham. https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-03973-8