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MACROFLORAL
Macrofloral
remains can be charred or uncharred and
include remains such as seeds, charcoal, wood, corn
cobs, kernels, and other plant parts. These remains
are usually recovered from sediment samples by water
flotation or directly from their cultural contexts during
excavation. Macrofloral remains can provide evidence
for the utilization, processing, or domestication of
plant resources by the occupants of an archaeological
site, which can help answer questions regarding diet,
subsistence, season of occupation, trade, and site function.
Macrofloral remains also can provide environmental information.
In addition to archaeology, macrofloral analysis is
being used in other areas of research including paleoflood
studies, paleoseismology, and paleoclimatology to separate
and identify charred organic material to submit for
radiocarbon analysis, rather than trying to date bulk
soil samples (See POSTED PAPERS for "Dating
Bulk Soil vs. Identified Organics at Archaeological
Sites").
In
archaeological sites, macrofloral remains most often
are recovered in cultural features such as hearths,
fire pits, thermal features, middens, structure floors,
structure fill, rooffall, storage pits, burials, vessels,
ash/charcoal lens, extramural activity areas, and others,
as well as from cultural strata in stratified deposits.
Paleofeces (coprolites) contain macrofloral remains
that indicate directly what people (or animals) ate.
Some large macrofloral remains such as corn, charcoal,
large seeds, and other plant material do not require
flotation to remove them from sediment and can be submitted
as single specimens for identification. Artifacts such
as basketry, textiles, sandals, digging sticks, and
roof beams also should be submitted for macrofloral
analysis to identify the plant resources used in making
these objects.
When
collecting flotation samples from archaeological features,
a standard sample size is 2 to 4 liters of fill. For
large features such as structure floors or deep, stratified
roasting pits, multiple samples should be collected.
For stratified features, it is important to sample and
process each layer separately. Often, this can provide
a more detailed record of how the feature was used,
rather than mixing the deposits in a single sample.
We
process flotation samples using a "bucket" method. One
to two liters of each sample is added to approximately
3 gallons of water, then stirred until a strong vortex
formed. The floating material (light fraction) is poured
through a 150 micron mesh sieve. Additional water is
added and the process repeated until all floating material
is removed from the sample (a minimum of 5 times). The
material which remains in the bottom (heavy fraction)
is poured through a 0.5 mm mesh screen. The floated
portions are allowed to dry, then examined under a binocular
microscope at magnifications of 10-70x. This process
is repeated for each one to two liters of sample until
the entire sample is floated.
Flotation
samples commonly contain both charred and uncharred
macrofloral remains. At most sites, only charred macrofloral
remains are considered prehistoric. This is because
few seeds live longer than a century, and most live
for a much shorter period of time. Most uncharred seeds
will not survive through common archaeological time
spans. It is presumed that once seeds have died, decomposing
organisms act to decay the seeds. Sites in caves, water-logged
areas, and in very arid areas, however, can contain
uncharred prehistoric remains. Interpretation of uncharred
macrofloral remains to represent presence in the prehistoric
record is considered on a sample-by-sample basis. Extraordinary
conditions for preservation are required.
Updated
01-13-2008
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