TY - JOUR
T1 - The Sedimentary Context of Open-Air Archaeology
T2 - A Case Study in the Western Cape’s Doring River Valley, South Africa
AU - Phillips, Natasha
AU - Moffat, Ian
AU - Mackay, Alex
AU - Jones, Brian G.
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - Despite the wealth of Late Pleistocene archaeology that exists across southern Africa’s open landscape, it is routinely neglected in favour of rock shelter (re)excavation, biasing interpretation of human–environment interaction. This is compounded by the scarcity of open-air studies that use geoarchaeological methods to investigate the history and processes involved in their formation. The open-air archaeology of the Doring River Valley is an example of this, despite nearly a decade of dedicated study and publication. Consequently, there remains a limited and untested understanding of the valley’s formation history. This paper rectifies this by providing a sedimentary context for the surface archaeology exposed across one of the Doring River Valley’s artefact-baring localities, Uitspankraal 7 (UPK7). Characterisation, particle size, mineralogical, morphometric, and geophysical analysis of UPK7′s sand mantle resulted in the identification of four artefact-bearing sedimentary units, the aeolian and pedogenic processes involved in their formation, and their proposed order of deposition. This provides a stratigraphic, taphonomic, and environmental context against which chronometric dating and an analysis of the taphonomic, spatio-temporal, and technological composition of UPK7′s surface archaeology can be compared. This work is the first vital step towards understanding the depositional and behavioural history of a landscape, irrespective of context type.
AB - Despite the wealth of Late Pleistocene archaeology that exists across southern Africa’s open landscape, it is routinely neglected in favour of rock shelter (re)excavation, biasing interpretation of human–environment interaction. This is compounded by the scarcity of open-air studies that use geoarchaeological methods to investigate the history and processes involved in their formation. The open-air archaeology of the Doring River Valley is an example of this, despite nearly a decade of dedicated study and publication. Consequently, there remains a limited and untested understanding of the valley’s formation history. This paper rectifies this by providing a sedimentary context for the surface archaeology exposed across one of the Doring River Valley’s artefact-baring localities, Uitspankraal 7 (UPK7). Characterisation, particle size, mineralogical, morphometric, and geophysical analysis of UPK7′s sand mantle resulted in the identification of four artefact-bearing sedimentary units, the aeolian and pedogenic processes involved in their formation, and their proposed order of deposition. This provides a stratigraphic, taphonomic, and environmental context against which chronometric dating and an analysis of the taphonomic, spatio-temporal, and technological composition of UPK7′s surface archaeology can be compared. This work is the first vital step towards understanding the depositional and behavioural history of a landscape, irrespective of context type.
KW - aeolian deposition
KW - formation processes
KW - geomorphology
KW - geophysics
KW - granulometry
KW - Holocene
KW - Late Pleistocene
KW - mineralogy
KW - open-air geoarchaeology
KW - surface archaeology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85150970555&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://purl.org/au-research/grants/ARC/DE160100703
U2 - 10.3390/soilsystems7010025
DO - 10.3390/soilsystems7010025
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85150970555
SN - 2571-8789
VL - 7
JO - Soil Systems
JF - Soil Systems
IS - 1
M1 - 25
ER -