2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)

Paper No. 9
Presentation Time: 10:00 AM

GEOARCHAEOLOGICAL INVESTIGATION OF FEATURE PRESERVATION AND VARIABILITY AT DUST CAVE, ALABAMA


HOMSEY, Lara K., Geosciences, Murray State University, 104A Wilson Hall, Murray, KY 42071 and CAPO, Rosemary C., Geology and Planetary Science, University of Pittsburgh, 200 Space Research and Coordination Center, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, lara.homsey@murraystate.edu

Rarely are features preserved at open-air archaeological sites. Cave environments, on the other hand, offer exceptional preservation conditions for this under-represented aspect of material culture. Such is the case at Dust Cave, a Late Paleoindian through Middle Archaic (10,650-3,600 cal. B.C.) archaeological site in northwest Alabama. Using an interdisciplinary approach integrating geochemistry and micromorphology, we develop a typology of feature types, ranging from in situ hearths to charcoal and ash concentrations in secondary context. Elemental analysis of HCl leachates of cave sediments by ICP-AES indicates: 1) anthropogenic sediments differ significantly from geogenic sediments; 2) phosphorus (P) levels serve as a useful indicator of occupation intensity; 3) strontium/calcium (Sr/Ca) and potassium/phosphorus (K/P) ratios help identify anthropogenic materials; 4) calcium (Ca) levels serve as a proxy for feature decalcification and preservation potential; and 5) calcium (Ca), K, and Sr levels highlight diagenetic hydrologic perturbations. Micromorphological samples provide additional information on post-depositional processes that modify features, including bioturbation, sheetwash, and decalcification. This combined knowledge adds significantly to our understanding of activity variation at the site, as well as post-depositional processes that may obscure the archaeological record in karstic environments and therefore lead to inaccurate reconstructions of human activity.