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Date: | Tue, 9 Jun 1998 23:09:19 +0200 |
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John W. Dougherty schrieb:
> Soil description at what level of detail? Any serious soil scientist is
> going to
> want to give a good taxonomic description of a soil. Usually that level of
> classification is beyond what an archaeologist will require - at least with
> typical funding. You can generally give a fair description of the fines -
> clay,
> clay loam, sandy clay, sandy loam etc. using your feel technique.
yeah, but there just tends to be too much difference between what different
people will get - and even what the same digger will get on different occasions
- just downright too subjective (ever tried a blind test? take about 20
bags full, do your descriptions, come back a few days later and do it again,
then compare results... could be quite humbling!)
Books such
> as
> Michael Waters' "Principles of Geoarchaeology" can help with recognizing
> diagnostic horizons other soil phenomena. Who could I contact about the
> Museum of
> London flow chart?
>
[log in to unmask] - they have an excellent site manual for #14 (plus postage):
mention my name (i've been sending a lot of business their way of late) and
maybe they'll send along some copies of their 5 (or is it
6?) different, colour-coded context sheets (for wood, coffins, skeletons, etc.)
- will see if i can maybe e-mail you a copy tomorrow
lazy bastard finally set up a website:
http://home.t-online.de/home/gcarver/
geoff carver
[log in to unmask]
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