Like all typologies the different types eventually blend. For example,
in back yards of individual households the residents dug pits (or used
natural pits) and dumped discrete trash (usually kitchen or sometimes
building items). These "dumps" were specific and created over brief
periods. In contrast general "fall out" of trash into the soil - usually
walked on and broken up - takes the form of "sheet trash." A midden sort
of combines the two - usually a product of some type of specific
activity (shell fish gathering), over a longer period of time, and
usually more concentrated than "sheet trash" but more diffused in time
and size than a "dump."
Does any one have any primary sources on what people who created such
features originally called them, assuming they had any emic terminology?
The only thing I remember was as a small child being told not to dig in
the back yard because I would find "trash." Later (1950s) we had a dump,
and called it "a dump", of non-organic materials on the edge of our
back yard going into the woods (on a downward sloping hill).
Such terminology would be different from period to period (colonial vs.
19th-20th centuries), from culture to culture, and also from formal
settings vs. general settings. (e.g. city trash collectors vs.
individuals and home sites).
I do not think there is any agreed upon terminology among archaeologists
and I wonder about "natives."
On 5/11/2010 2:24 PM, Mark Branstner wrote:
> Conrad,
>
> By your own definition, you appear to be separating middens and dumps
> ... A shell midden is far more than just a dump site ... it is a
> working area resulting from the processing of molluscs.
>
> I agree with Andy ... middens are accretionary deposits associated
> with distinct activity areas, and dumps are remote refuse disposal
> sites. We have had the same discussion here in Illinois relative to
> nineteenth century farmsteads.
>
> Mark
>
>
> At 2:16 PM -0400 5/11/10, Conrad Bladey wrote:
>
>> I have seen middens described as containing many different types of
>> deposit- even burials.
>>
>> I believe that it is the same as a dump. Refuse
>>
>> Most likely it is a British Term or archaic American term for a dump.
>>
>> Middens are often qualified by type as in Shell, bone but so are dumps.
>>
>> Shell middens were often some ways from settlements at the sites of
>> gathering of shellfish for example lightening the load
>>
>> Conrad Bladey
>> Peasant
>>
>> Andy Sewell wrote:
>>
>>
>>> I also tend to think of a midden as something that gradually
>>> accumulates as a result of disposal activities over time, while a
>>> dump may represent a discrete occurrence of disposal, often of just
>>> a few classes of artifacts (bottles, broken dishes). A dump may
>>> also be located at some distance from the place of residence, or
>>> deposited in a specific landform, such as a ravine, whereas I tend
>>> to think of a midden as something that would likely be found around
>>> a domestic structure, such as a kitchen. I also think that using a
>>> term that a historical occupant or producer of such a deposit would
>>> use might be a good approach to consider.
>>>
>>>
>>> Andrew R. Sewell, MS, RPA
>>> Principal Investigator
>>> Hardlines Design Company
>>> ? Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail
>>>
>>> Andy
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of
>>> Jeanette Mckenna
>>> Sent: Tuesday, May 11, 2010 1:57 PM
>>> To: [log in to unmask]
>>> Subject: Re: terminology
>>>
>>> I tend to think of "midden" and household or more organic waste, while
>>> trash dump or refuse may include many other items - like industrial waste,
>>> metals, etc.
>>>
>>> Jeanette McKenna
>>> California
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> [Original Message]
>>>> From: Chuck Carrig<[log in to unmask]>
>>>> To:<[log in to unmask]>
>>>> Date: 5/11/2010 10:53:55 AM
>>>> Subject: terminology
>>>>
>>>> Is there a consensus on the proper terminology for the discussion of
>>>> historic refuse concentrations?
>>>>
>>>> I've always used the terminology historic midden as opposed to historic
>>>> trash dump.
>>>>
>>>> Chuck Carrig - RPA
>>>> Archaeologist
>>>> BLM - Dillon Field Office
>>>> 1005 Selway Drive
>>>> Dillon, MT 59725
>>>> (406)683-8029
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>
>
--
Robert L. Schuyler
University of Pennsylvania Museum
3260 South Street
Philadelphia, PA l9l04-6324
Tel: (215) 898-6965
Fax: (215) 898-0657
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