This paper presents the motivation, procedures, and results of an experiment that examines short episodes of animal trampling in dry and water saturated substrates in South India. While horizontal artifact displacement was similar to that modeled by other trampling experiments, vertical artifact displacement in water saturated substrates was greater than any reported experiment to date. The toolstone used in this experiment, a silicious limestone, exhibited minimal damage after trampling. Artifact inclination patterning appeared to be a potentially diagnostic middle-range marker of trampling in water saturated substrates. Given the abundant number of Paleolithic sites that are located on flat, open surfaces near water-bodies, or experience ...
Few neotaphonomic studies of trampling on bones have been made, especially in fine and soft sediment...
Ground stone technology is present in various Upper Paleolithic chronologies of Portuguese sites cov...
Sedimentary abrasion and postdepositional damage to fossil remains are of great interest if consider...
This paper presents the motivation, procedures, and results of an experiment that examines short epi...
Micromorphologists are often interested in identifying surfaces intercalated within stratified seque...
Controlled experiments in lithic technology tend to focus on controlling the human component of lith...
Understanding post-depositional movement of artefacts is vital to making reliable claims about the f...
An often cited but little understood archaeological disturbance process is the effect of a site\u27s...
This article enters into the general problem of the characteri-zation of the natural ant anthropic p...
Experiments based on the premise of uniformitarism are an effective tool to establish patterns of ta...
We present a trampling experiment aimed at evaluating the overall morphological modifications on sto...
Stone tools can, apart from human-made retouch, exhibit traces of damage due to post depositional pr...
Qualitative observations in an area with steep scree slopes in Turkey suggested that trampling by go...
Functional analyses of stone tool assemblages face a number of methodological challenges. Aside from...
The goal of this research is to contribute to an understanding of how natural site- formation proces...
Few neotaphonomic studies of trampling on bones have been made, especially in fine and soft sediment...
Ground stone technology is present in various Upper Paleolithic chronologies of Portuguese sites cov...
Sedimentary abrasion and postdepositional damage to fossil remains are of great interest if consider...
This paper presents the motivation, procedures, and results of an experiment that examines short epi...
Micromorphologists are often interested in identifying surfaces intercalated within stratified seque...
Controlled experiments in lithic technology tend to focus on controlling the human component of lith...
Understanding post-depositional movement of artefacts is vital to making reliable claims about the f...
An often cited but little understood archaeological disturbance process is the effect of a site\u27s...
This article enters into the general problem of the characteri-zation of the natural ant anthropic p...
Experiments based on the premise of uniformitarism are an effective tool to establish patterns of ta...
We present a trampling experiment aimed at evaluating the overall morphological modifications on sto...
Stone tools can, apart from human-made retouch, exhibit traces of damage due to post depositional pr...
Qualitative observations in an area with steep scree slopes in Turkey suggested that trampling by go...
Functional analyses of stone tool assemblages face a number of methodological challenges. Aside from...
The goal of this research is to contribute to an understanding of how natural site- formation proces...
Few neotaphonomic studies of trampling on bones have been made, especially in fine and soft sediment...
Ground stone technology is present in various Upper Paleolithic chronologies of Portuguese sites cov...
Sedimentary abrasion and postdepositional damage to fossil remains are of great interest if consider...