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Palynology and archaeological inference: bridging the gap between pollen washes and past behavior
Authors:Phil R. Geib  Susan J. Smith
Affiliation:1. University of New Mexico, Anthropology Department, MSC01 1040, Albuquerque, NM, 87131, USA;2. Laboratory of Paleoecology, Box 6013, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ 86011, USA
Abstract:Credible interpretation of pollen recovered from archaeological sites hinges upon understanding how pollen becomes deposited by both the environment and human behavior. The environmental role has been studied to some extent, but how the activities of people have formed the pollen assemblages at archaeological sites is usually just assumed rather than considered explicitly. Moreover, the complexity involved in the interaction between human behavior and pollen ecology is seldom considered. An archaeological case study of grinding tool pollen washes highlights the ambiguities of standard practice because the results confound common assumptions about pollen washes. A series of experimental seed and grinding tool washes designed to test the relationships between the processing of seeds and the deposition of pollen help explain why, for most situations, artifact pollen washes do not provide direct or even faithful records of plant processing. These results highlight the need for further experimental research with pollen so that we are warranted in making behavioral inferences from palynology. This conclusion is easily extended to other microbotanical data classes that archaeologists regularly employ.
Keywords:Palynology   Pollen washes   Grinding tools   Maize pollen   Experimental archaeology   Food processing   Middle range research
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