Describe with examples the differences between Artifacts and Acofacts. (Ay 304)
Archaeology,
like most disciplines, relies on various sources to obtain its archaeological
information. In archaeology, such sources are material remains of the past
which are, normally, excavated from different sites and critically analyzed to
provide reliable archaeological information that can be used for different
purposes including supporting research in various other disciplines. According
to Hines (2004:9) such material remains of the past notably; ecofacts,
artifacts, structures and features are a huge source of information such that
academic discipline of archaeology is, at most, the study of these.
In
his book “Field Archaeology: An introduction”, Drewett (2012: 100) documents
the importance of each individual type of material remain as having different
value and role to archaeologists. In his account, however, such material
remains are considered to have slight demarcations that are unclear to most
people. It is from such pretext that this paper attempts, among other things,
to elucidate the differences between artifacts and ecofacts. For the purpose of
this discussion, such analysis will be preceded by conceptualization of the
terms artifacts and ecofacts, the importance or usefulness of such material
remains in archaeology discipline and the manner in which they can be used to
provide multitude archaeological information. Finally, the challenges facing
preservation of both artifacts and ecofacts together with their solutions shall
also be discussed.
The
term artifact has been defined differently by different scholars. According to
Fagan (2010) Artifacts are objects found in archaeological sites that exhibit
features resulting from human activities. Artifacts, therefore, covers every
form of portable archaeological findings from stone axes to gold ornaments as
well as food remains such as broken bones. As such, artifacts are product of
human ideas, ideas that people had about the way object looks or is used.
On the other hand Ewen (2003: 5) in his book
“Artifacts” defines artifacts by using modification criterion. As such,
Artifacts are defined as the objects that are made or modified by humans. The
major weakness of this seemingly straightforward definition is it can quickly
become fatally vague if subjected to intense scrutiny. The major challenge to this definition ,has to do with objects
that fits modification criterion but are never referred to as artifacts, for
instance, building foundations, trashpit, the unmodified rocks, surrounding
hearths, a deer ulna found in trashpit. All of these items can appear on
archaeological sites and aid in archaeological interpretation, but calling them
all artifacts stretches the definition to the breaking point.
Feder (1996:458) offers a definition that
clarifies the situation somewhat: “artifact-Any object manufactured by a human
being or human ancestor, but usually a portable object like a stone spear point
or a clay pot as distinguished from more complex archaeological features”. The
concept of artifact portability is also stressed by Sharer and Ashmore who on
their book “Archaeology: Discovering of our past” defines artifact as a portable object whose
form has been modified wholly or
partially by human activity object such as stone hammer and fired clay vessel.
Ecofacts
has been defined by Fagan (2009:61) as archaeological findings of cultural
significance that were not manufactured by humans. These include bones and
plant remains. They are non-artifactual materials that are not directly created
or modified by humans, but have cultural relevance. Examples of artifacts
include remnants of both wild and domesticated animals and plant species i.e.
bones and seeds. Although they are neither directly created nor significantly
modified by human activity, ecofacts provide reliable information about past
human activities. These and other ecofacts such as soils contribute to our
understanding of the past because they reflect ancient environmental conditions
diet, and resource exploitation.
At
this level it should be emphasized that sometimes the line between ecofacts and
artifacts is a bit ambiguous. For
example, bones with cut marks from butchering might be considered artifact
reflecting human technology as well as ecofacts yielding clues to the ancient
environment. As such, archaeologists agree that artifacts consist of inorganic
materials and ecofacts consist of organic materials such as plants and animals that
may become artifacts when they are modified or used for certain purpose.
Artifacts
and ecofacts are important in the discipline archaeology in many ways.
Archaeologists can analyze artifacts and ecofacts to determine the approximate
time of occupation. For example at an early nineteenth-century fur-trading post
excavated in northwestern Wisconsin, Ewen examined the faunal remains that were
able to determine the season of occupation for the site and the dietary
preferences of the fur traders, and they even contributed to a determination of
which cabin was occupied by the high-status company partner and which was used
by the lower-status employees. (Ewen 1986)
In
addition, artifacts and ecofacts can also be used to determine occupational
sequence, site activities, and site functions. Site activities include animal
hide processing, cooking, and tool making. Site function is the overall use of
the site. Examples of function include temporary camps, permanent villages, and
special purpose sites such as cemeteries or bead manufacturing sites. (Ewen
1986)
The
differences between Artifacts and Eco-facts can be explained in various
criterions as follows;
The
modification or usability criterion. For material remains to be regarded as
artifacts they must be inorganic materials and have been modified or used by
humans. In contrast, material remains are regarded as ecofacts when they are
organic. However when ecofacts are used or modified by human beings they tend
to shift from being ecofacts into becoming artifacts. According to Kowta
(1980:1), archaeological materials which bear the imprint of human
modification, occur primarily, though by no means exclusively, in the form of
artifacts. Artifacts are, thus, discrete objects which bear some modification
from the natural state attributable to man .One of the first and basic tasks of
archaeology is that of differentiating such man modified materials from
materials that are unaltered from their natural state.
In
supporting such argument Kowta (1980:1) mentions four major forms through which
artifacts can be modified;
First,
natural objects may be purposefully modified or moved by man to serve some end.
Tools, utensils, and weapons are familiar artifacts of this kind.
Second,
natural objects may become modified in physical form as the incidental result
of use. The worn surface of a cobble pestle or the dulling of the sharp edge
ofa stone flake used as a knife represents examples of modification of this
kind.
Third,
the processes of manufacture, preparation or use may result in waste materials
which may not be used further but which nevertheless reveal human activity.
Flakes removed in shaping a stone tool, the discarded shells of seeds ground
for food, the ash remaining from a log burned for heat all represent this form
of modification.
Fourth,
objects may be modified with respect to provenience with or without physical
form. This kind of modification is represented by, for example, an otherwise
unmodified quartz crystal found in a dead shaman's ceremonial pouch or a river
cobble located on a ridge top.
On
the other hand ecofacts have the property of not being modified or used by
human beings at all. It should be noted, however, when an ecofact is
intentionally or unintentionally used by human it tends to move from the
category of ecofacts into artifacts (Algeo : 1988:345).
Artifacts
and ecofacts also differ in the type of archaeological and historical
information that each of them provides. Fagan and Beck (1996) argues that
artifacts preserved in the site provide information on the length of
occupations and the range of activities performed at the site. Artifacts
provide reliable information about past human activities, and they may also be
able to provide information about the environment in which such artifacts
existed.
An
example of information provided by artifacts can be obtained from
archaeological excavations conducted at Southern Guatemala, specifically at
Cotzumalhuapa. The excavations led to the discovery of obsidian debris
recovered in the El Baúl workshop area. Such obsidian debris confirmed the
existence of a large-scale obsidian industry, which included the manufacture of
both prismatic blades and projectile points. Raw materials were imported mainly
from the El Chayal and San MartÃn Jilotepeque sources in highland Guatemala,
and there are indications that a small amount came from the San Bartolomé
Milpas Altas source. (Oswaldo:2004)
On
the contrary, ecofacts provides somewhat different information. Common type of ecofacts includes plant seed
and other plant remains. Plant remains often referred to as macro botanicals,
provide a variety of information ranging from diet to medicine to textile
production. Pollens found on archaeological sites inform researchers on the
environmental and dietary changes. A seed can be linked to the species of plant
that produced it; if massive numbers of seeds of a cultivated species are found
at a site, it may be inferred that the species may have been grown for food or
other products that are useful to humans, such as clothing, bedding or building
materials.
Another
type of ecofact (biofact) is wood. Wood is made up cellulose, carbohydrates,
and lignin. Every year that passes a new ring is added to the trunk of tree
allowing for dendochronological dating. Charcoal is burned wood that
archaeologist are able to extract. It can be dated using carbon-14, and through
other methods, information such as local environment and human adaptation can
be revealed from the charcoal. Wagner, G. A. (1998). To help determine the date
during which a site was occupied, Dendochronological analysis can be used on
wood samples. It should be noted that when such wood is modified and or used by
humans it becomes an artifact and not an ecofact. (Renfrew & Bahn: 2008).
Dating
methods that are used to date artifacts are somewhat different from those that
are used to date ecofacts. In this aspect it should be noted that in most cases
the dating of artifacts brings about relative date as opposed to absolute date
that is normally obtained when dating an ecofact. The major reasons for
differences in dating methods have to do with the nature of materials i.e.
inorganic (artifacts) versus organic (ecofacts). Dig argues that most dating
methods that archaeologists use are radiometric--that means they measure the
rate of decay, or change, of particular radioactive elements that materials
might contain. In such a way most organic materials which are likely to decay
can be measured by most decaying related methods.
As such, methods that can be used to date
ecofacts respectively include radiocarbon dating or Carbon 14. This method
works on the principle of decay i.e decay happens because the carbon is
unstable, radioactive carbon decays to nitrogen with a half-life of 5568 years.
In dead material, the decayed carbon 14 is not replaced and its concentrations
in the object decreases slowly. To obtain a truly absolute chronology,
corrections must be made, provided by measurements on samples of know age.
The
most suitable types of sample for radiocarbon dating are charcoal and well-preserved
wood, although leather, cloth, paper, peat, shell and bone can also be used.
Because of the somewhat short half-life of 14C, radiocarbon dating is not
applicable to samples with ages greater than about 50,000 years, because the
remaining concentration would be too small for accurate measurement. On the
contrary non decaying materials like minerals and stiff rocks make it
impossible to use Carbon 14 methods.
Some
ecofacts like trees and woods can be dated using a relatively simple method
called dendochronology or tree-ring dating. Tree-ring dating is a method that
is less difficult to understand. Tree rings grow annually--in sensitive trees
like oak, rings varying thickness from year to year, depending on growing
conditions. Using many trees, scientists have built up tree-ring sequence going
back beyond 7,500 B.C.
On the other hand, artifacts can be dated
using dating methods like Typological sequence that considers things that were
made at the same time to be similar and viceversa. For example, typology in
1899 by Flinders Petrie for the objects (mainly pottery) found in 900
prehistoric Egyptian graves. This typology formed the basis for his manual
seriation of the graves. (Kendall: 1971). While most of the non decaying
artifacts can be dated through other methods like stratigraphy and
superposition, some artifacts made from organic materials like animal and plant
remains can still be dated through Carbon 14 method and dendrochronology
Artifacts
are in most cases used as a principle means of archaeological survey as opposed
to ecofacts. Thomas (2009:44) argued
that because artifacts constitute most constituents of sites, one of the clues
being looked for in the process of site survey is simply the presence of
artifact. Although whether the presence of artifacts on surface area reflects
their presence in subsurface area is a matter of debate, many archaeologists
agree that artifacts as opposed to ecofacts are more likely to be found in
archaeological sites.
To
many archaeologists, this argument has been linked to the question of
availability of artifacts. In most cases artifacts are available more than
ecofacts, and given the non-decaying nature of some artifacts it goes without
saying that artifacts can endure surviving in the surface area for a long
period of time. According to Linda (2010:608), discovery of archaeological site
is a function of the number of artifacts in the site matrix and the size of
subsurface tests.
Another
difference has to do with influence of artifacts and ecofacts on culture.
Archaeologists agree that ecofacts have less cultural evidence than artifact.
In this aspect, it is strongly argued that artifacts are great cultural
reflections because they reflect what humans did through their own efforts.
Artifacts are cultural; they give information about culture of a person or a
certain group of people. On the contrary most of the ecofacts are in most cases
human themselves, and given the state of decaying, it might not even be
possible to closely examine the influence of culture on such material remains.
Most artifacts are kept in museums and are used to reflect people’s culture.
Although,
artifacts and ecofacts are different material remains, there are some aspects
that are similar among them. They include the following:
Both
ecofacts and artifacts talk about past events, activities and environment; they
are essential and helpful features in finding out about past culture. For
example, artifacts can help archaeologists to understand more about the status
of people who lived on a site. For example, if records indicate that porcelain
was extraordinarily expensive during the early eighteenth century and a soil
layer dating to that period contains a lot of porcelain, the occupant of the
site was probably quite wealthy. If, in a privy dating to that same time
period, seeds or pollen from imported (and therefore expensive) spices are
discovered, the case is further strengthened. Conversely, if food and bones
found on the site indicate that the occupants were eating mostly stews rather
than individual cuts of meat, it might suggest that they were attempting to
stretch their meat as far as possible.
Less expensive ceramics and well-worn utensils
are additional indications that the site was occupied by poorer people. Of
course, not everyone spends money in the same way. Someone with very little
money and a love for exotic spices might scrimp and save to buy spices to
satisfy that craving. It is possible that a poorer person had been given spices
as a gift. All these information can be obtained by using artifacts.
Both
of them result from archaeological research. The relationship between them can
be observed in archaeological sites which are locations for past human
activities. For example, the remains of a long time ago abandoned village or
the place where an ancient hunter skinned and butchered a buffalo. Generally
they arise when archaeologists conduct researches about various past events. In
conducting research archaeologists needs to analyze artifacts and ecofacts
recovered from a site to determine the approximate time of occupation,
occupational sequence, site activities, and site function(s). Site activities
include animal hide processing, cooking, and tool making. Site function is the
overall use of the site.
Examples
of function include temporary camps, permanent villages, and special purpose
sites such as cemeteries or bead manufacturing sites. Archaeologists may also
research to know how sites interrelate in order to determine how prehistoric
populations operated across the landscape. For example, by plotting the
locations of sites exhibiting similar distinctive (diagnostic) artifacts,
archaeologists figured out the connections among the Indian groups. As such it
is from archaeological researches that the need for both artifacts and ecofacts
arise.
Both
of them are helpful in understanding spatial distribution and organization of
human activities. The artifact assemblage resulting from household activities
looks very different than an assemblage excavated from a blacksmith's shop.
Artifacts from a household site usually include primarily wine bottle glass,
nails, ceramic shards, animal bones, oyster shells, and tobacco pipe fragments.
Artifacts from the site of a blacksmith's shop would include lots of iron (much
of it unidentifiable, since it never made it out of the shop). There would also
be fewer artifacts relating to cooking or eating, since a blacksmith's shop is
a workplace, not a site where people lived. Dairying, brick making, gardening,
tavern keeping-just about any activity one can imagine-had some impact on the
artifacts found on a site. They also show spatial distribution of people in
relation to climatic condition, economic specialization and geographical zones.
Following
from above it can be said that both artifacts and ecofacts have archaeological
importance. As such their preservation has been faced by several challenges as
follows;
Constant
environmental changes may lead to destruction and disappearance of ecofacts and
artifacts in undiscovered archaeological sites.
Natural calamities like flood, volcanic eruption, and soil erosion are
noted as having the largest influence in destroying archaeological sources like
artifacts and ecofacts especially in areas where such materials have never been
discovered.
Human
activities also threaten the preservation of artifacts and ecofacts. This can
be due to both accidental and intentional activities of man that may lead to
destruction and disappearance of artifacts and ecofacts. Such human activities
include reoccupation of archaeological site. This may cause earlier artifacts
and ecofacts to be destroyed and being mixed around. Also large scale human
events like war. Development of antiquity market has influenced looting of
artifacts and ecofacts. Reuse of materials such as whalebone or wood house
rafters also destroys artifacts and ecofacts. Also disturbance processes in
recent times also helps to change the context of materials in the
archaeological site. This includes development that are influenced by
technological changes such construction of physical infrastructures, creation
of nuclear bombs.
Improper
care on artifacts and ecofacts that have already been discovered also threatens
preservation of both artifacts and ecofacts. Many archaeologists agree that
housing the artifacts is also a challenge towards preservation of most
archaeological remains. Most museums lack skilled expert’s techniques and
equipments that may aid preservation of archaeological for a long period of
time.
Financial
problems also face preservation of both artifacts and ecofacts. It should be
noted that for museums to ensure effective preservation of both artifacts and
ecofacts. Financial resources are necessary to ensure availability of modern
technology and equipments. Financial resources are also important in paying the
skilled experts and supporting researches for better ways of preserving
artifacts and ecofacts.
The
problems that face preservation of artifacts and ecofacts can be solved if the
respective authorities will embark on long term programmes of educating the
people about the importance of archaeological remains in preserving culture of
society for the present and coming generations. This should be fortified with
creation of various acts and laws that enforces archaeological sites to be
preserved.
In
preserving artifacts and ecofacts conservators should work closely with
archaeologists to determine the best care for them. They should assess objects and decide the
best treatment while keeping the integrity of the artifacts and ecofacts
intact. Light, humidity, insects, and
mold can damage an artifact. Artifacts and ecofacts should be stored in a
climate and light controlled case if it is to be viewed in a museum.
It
should be noted that when artifacts and ecofacts are unearthed, they must
re-assimilate to the new environment. In
most cases artifacts and ecofacts are used to their surroundings, therefore
when artifacts and ecofacts are exposed to a different environment, damage may
occur. To avoid such damage intensive measures should be employed when accommodating
artifacts and ecofacts to new environment. In addition,artifacts and ecofacts
should be packaged or stored in special boxes to prevent further damage or
decay (Busch 2013: 25).
It
should be emphasized that preservation of artifacts and ecofacts takes a lot of
time and care, both of which cost money. The preservation methods of artifacts
and ecofacts are also specific to each type of artifact and ecofacts, even
within the same collection. Therefore, museums first must understand how each
specific artifact and ecofact will deteriorate before they can acquire the
materials necessary to preserve them (Busch 2013: 30).
Finally,
it should be argued that both artifacts and ecofacts are important in providing
information about culture of particular society as well as supporting various
archaeological researches. Artifacts and ecofacts can be used to provide
information about the approximate time of occupation of certain people in a
particular society, changes in climatic conditions, and cultural evidence of
past humans. Discovered artifacts and ecofacts are kept in museums for storage
and viewing.
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