Settlement Patterns - Studying The Evolution of Societies
Settlement Patterns - Studying The Evolution of Societies
Settlement Patterns - Studying The Evolution of Societies
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Panoramic aerial view from on high of oldest town in Corfu - ancient mountain village of Old Perithia
nestled in mountains, Greece. Tim Graham / Getty Images Europe / Getty Images
In the scientific field of archaeology, the term "settlement pattern" refers to the evidence within a given
region of the physical remnants of communities and networks. That evidence is used to interpret the
way interdependent local groups of people interacted in the past. People have lived and interacted
together for a very long time, and settlement patterns have been identified dating back to as long as
humans have been on our planet.
The study of settlement patterns in archaeology involves a set of techniques and analytical
methods to examine the cultural past of a region.
The method allows examination of sites in their contexts, as well as interconnectedness and
change across time.
Anthropological Underpinnings
Settlement pattern as a concept was developed by social geographers in the late 19th century. The term
referred then to how people live across a given landscape, in particular, what resources (water, arable
land, transportation networks) they chose to live by and how they connected with one another: and the
term is still a current study in geography of all flavors.
What led to that was the implementation of a regional surface survey, also called pedestrian survey,
archaeological studies not focused on a single site, but rather on an extensive area. Being able to
systematically identify all the sites within a given region means archaeologists can look at not just how
people lived at any one time, but rather how that pattern changed through time. Conducting regional
survey means you can investigate the evolution of communities, and that's what archaeological
settlement pattern studies do today.
Patterns Versus Systems
Archaeologists refer to both settlement pattern studies and settlement system studies, sometimes
interchangeably. If there is a difference, and you could argue about that, it might be that pattern studies
look at the observable distribution of sites, while system studies look at how the people living at those
sites interacted: modern archaeology can't really do one with the other.
Settlement pattern studies were first conducted using regional survey, in which archaeologists
systematically walked over hectares and hectares of land, typically within a given river valley. But the
analysis only truly became feasible after remote sensing was developed, beginning with photographic
methods such as those used by Pierre Paris at Oc Eo but now, of course, using satellite imagery and
drones.
Modern settlement pattern studies combine with satellite imagery, background research, surface
survey, sampling, testing, artifact analysis, radiocarbon, and other dating techniques. And, as you might
imagine, after decades of research and advances in technology, one of the challenges of settlement
patterns studies has a very modern ring to it: big data. Now that GPS units and artifact and
environmental analysis are all intertwined, how to do you analyze the huge amounts of data that are
collected?
By the end of the 1950s, regional studies had been performed in Mexico, the United States, Europe, and
Mesopotamia; but they have since expanded throughout the world.
New Technologies
Although systematic settlement patterns and landscape studies are practiced in many diverse
environments, before modern imaging systems, archaeologists attempting to study heavily vegetated
areas were not as successful as they might have been. A variety of means to penetrate the gloom have
been identified, including the use of high definition aerial photography, subsurface testing, and, if
acceptable, deliberately clearing the landscape of growth.
LiDAR (light detection and ranging), a technology used in archaeology since the turn of the 21st century,
is a remote sensing technique that is conducted with lasers connected to a helicopter or drone. The
lasers visually pierce the vegetative cover, mapping huge settlements and revealing previously unknown
details that can be ground-truthed. Successful use of LiDAR technology has included mapping the
landscapes of Angkor Wat in Cambodia, the Stonehenge world heritage site in England, and previously
unknown Maya sites in Mesoamerica, all providing insight for regional studies of settlement patterns.
Selected Sources
Curley, Daniel, John Flynn, and Kevin Barton. "Bouncing Beams Reveal Hidden
Archaeology." Archaeology Ireland 32.2 (2018): 24–29.
Feinman, Gary M. "Settlement and Landscape Archaeology." International Encyclopedia of the
Social & Behavioral Sciences (Second Edition). Ed. Wright, James D. Oxford: Elsevier, 2015. 654–
58, doi:10.1016/B978-0-08-097086-8.13041-7
Golden, Charles, et al. "Reanalyzing Environmental Lidar Data for Archaeology: Mesoamerican
Applications and Implications." Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 9 (2016): 293–308,
doi:10.1016/j.jasrep.2016.07.029
Hamilton, Marcus J., Briggs Buchanan, and Robert S. Walker. "Scaling the Size, Structure, and
Dynamics of Residentially Mobile Hunter-Gatherer Camps." American Antiquity 83.4 (2018):
701-20, doi:10.1017/aaq.2018.39
Ethnoarchaeology
By
K. Kris Hirst
History of Ethnoarchaeology
Ethnographic data was used by some late 19th century/early 20th century
archaeologists to understand archaeological sites (Edgar Lee Hewett leaps to
mind), but the modern study has its roots in the post-war boom of the 1950s and
60s. Beginning in the 1970s, a huge burgeoning of literature explored the
potentialities of the practice (the processual/post-processual debate driving
much of that). There is some evidence, based on the decrease in the number of
university classes and programs, that ethnoarchaeology, although an accepted,
and perhaps standard practice for most archaeological studies in the late 20th
century, is fading in importance in the 21st.
Modern Critiques
Since its first practices, ethnoarchaeology has often come under criticism for
several issues, primarily for its underpinning assumptions about how far the
practices of a living society can reflect the ancient past. More recently, scholars as
archaeologists Olivier Gosselain and Jerimy Cunningham have argued that
western scholars are blinded by assumptions about living cultures. In particular,
Gosselain argues that ethnoarchaeology doesn't apply to prehistory because it
isn't practiced as ethnology--in other words, to properly apply cultural templates
derived from living people you can't simply pick up technical data.
But Gosselain also argues that doing a full ethnological study would not be useful
expenditure of time, since equating present-day societies are never going to be
sufficiently applicable to the past. He also adds that although ethnoarchaeology
may no longer be a reasonable way to conduct research, the main benefits of the
study has been to amass a huge amount of data on production techniques and
methodologies, which can be used as a reference collection for scholarship.
Selected Sources
Cunningham, Jerimy J., and Kevin M. McGeough. "The Perils of Ethnographic
Analogy. Parallel Logics in Ethnoarchaeology and Victorian Bible Customs
Books." Archaeological Dialogues 25.2 (2018): 161–89. Print.
González-Urquijo, J., S. Beyries, and J. J. Ibáñez. "Ethnoarchaeology and
Functional Analysis." Use-Wear and Residue Analysis in Archaeology. Eds. Marreiros,
João Manuel, Juan F. Gibaja Bao and Nuno Ferreira Bicho. Manuals in
Archaeological Method, Theory and Technique: Springer International
Publishing, 2015. 27–40. Print.
Gosselain, Olivier P. "To Hell with Ethnoarchaeology!" Archaeological Dialogues
23.2 (2016): 215–28. Print.
Kamp, Kathryn, and John Whittaker. "Editorial Reflections: Teaching
Science with Ethnoarchaeology and Experimental Archaeology."
Ethnoarchaeology 6.2 (2014): 79–80. Print.
Parker, Bradley J. "Bread Ovens, Social Networks and Gendered Space: An
Ethnoarchaeological Study of Tandir Ovens in Southeastern Anatolia ." American
Antiquity 76.4 (2011): 603–27. Print.
Politis, Gustavo. "Reflections on Contemporary Ethnoarchaeology." Pyrenae 46 (2015).
Print.
Schiffer, Michael Brian. "Contributions of Ethnoarchaeology." The Archaeology of
Science. Vol. 9. Manuals in Archaeological Method, Theory and Technique:
Springer International Publishing, 2013. 53–63. Print.
Processual Archaeology
The New Archaeology's Application of the Scientific Method
Processual archaeology was an intellectual movement of the 1960s, known then as the "new
archaeology", which advocated logical positivism as a guiding research philosophy, modeled on
the scientific method—something that had never been applied to archaeology before.
The processualists rejected the cultural-historical notion that culture was a set of norms held by a group
and communicated to other groups by diffusion and instead argued that the archaeological remains of
culture were the behavioral outcome of a population's adaptation to specific environmental conditions.
It was time for a New Archaeology that would leverage the scientific method to find and make clear the
(theoretical) general laws of cultural growth in the way that societies responded to their environment.
New Archaeology
The New Archaeology stressed theory formation, model building, and hypothesis testing in the search
for general laws of human behavior. Cultural history, the processualists argued, wasn't repeatable: it is
fruitless to tell a story about a culture's change unless you are going to test its inferences. How do you
know a culture history you've built is correct? In fact, you can be gravely mistaken but there were no
scientific grounds to rebut that. The processualists explicitly wanted to go beyond the cultural-historical
methods of the past (simply building a record of changes) to focus on the processes of culture (what
kinds of things happened to make that culture).
There's also an implied redefinition of what culture is. Culture in processual archaeology is conceived
primarily as the adaptive mechanism that enables people to cope with their environments. Processual
culture was seen as a system composed of subsystems, and the explanatory framework of all of those
systems was cultural ecology, which in turn provided the basis for hypotheticodeductive models that the
processualists could test.
New Tools
To strike out in this new archaeology, the processualists had two tools: ethnoarchaeology and the
rapidly burgeoning varieties of statistical techniques, part of the "quantitative revolution" experienced
by all sciences of the day, and one impetus for today's "big data". Both of these tools still operate in
archaeology: both were embraced first during the 1960s.
Ethnoarchaeology is the use of archaeological techniques on abandoned villages, settlements, and sites
of living people. The classic processual ethnoarchaeological study was Lewis Binford's examination of
the archaeological remains left by mobile Inuit hunters and gatherers (1980). Binford was explicitly
looking for evidence of patterned repeatable processes, a "regular variability" that might be looked for
and found represented on archaeological sites left by Upper Paleolithic hunter-gatherers.
With the scientific approach aspired to by processualists came a need for lots of data to examine.
Processual archaeology came about during the quantitative revolution, which included an explosion of
sophisticated statistical techniques fueled by growing computing powers and growing access to them.
Data collected by processualists (and still today) included both material culture characteristics (like
artifact sizes and shapes and locations), and data from ethnographic studies about historically known
population makeups and movements. Those data were used to build and eventually test a living group's
adaptations under specific environmental conditions and thereby to explain prehistoric cultural systems.
Subdisciplinary Specialization
Processualists were interested in the dynamic relationships (causes and effects) that operate among the
components of a system or between systematic components and the environment. The process was by
definition repeated and repeatable: first, the archaeologist observed phenomena in the archaeological
or ethnoarchaeological record, then they used those observations to form explicit hypotheses about the
connection of that data to the events or conditions in the past that might have caused those
observations. Next, the archaeologist would figure out what kind of data might support or reject that
hypothesis, and finally, the archaeologist would go out, collect more data, and find out if the hypothesis
was a valid one. If it was valid for one site or circumstance, the hypothesis could be tested in another
one.
The search for general laws quickly became complicated, because there were so much data and so much
variability depending on what the archaeologist studied. Rapidly, archaeologists found themselves in
subdisciplinary specializations to be able to cope: spatial archaeology dealt with spatial relationships at
every level from artifacts to settlement patterns; regional archaeology sought to understand trade and
exchange within a region; intersite archaeology sought to identify and report on sociopolitical
organization and subsistence; and intrasite archaeology intended to understand human activity
patterning.
Prior to processual archaeology, archaeology was not typically seen as a science, because the conditions
on one site or feature are never identical and so by definition not repeatable. What the New
Archaeologists did was make the scientific method practical within its limitations.
However, what processual practitioners found was that the sites and cultures and circumstances varied
too much to be simply a reaction to environmental conditions. It was a formal, unitarian principle that
archaeologist Alison Wylie called the "paralyzing demand for certainty". There had to be other things
going on, including human social behaviors that had nothing to do with environmental adaptations.
The critical reaction to processualism born in the 1980s was called post-processualism, which is a
different story but no less influential on archaeological science today.
Sources
Anthropology 24(3):267-275.
American Antiquity 45(1):4-20.
Binford LR. 1980. Willow smoke and dog's tails: Hunter gatherer settlement systems and archaeological site formation.
Processual Archaeology
Earle TK, Preucel RW, Brumfiel EM, Carr C, Limp WF, Chippindale C, Gilman A, Hodder I, Johnson GA, Keegan WF et al. 1987.
and the Radical Critique [and Comments and Reply] . Current Anthropology 28(4):501-538.
Basimane Ward, Serowe, Botswana. The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 12(1):61-87.
Kobylinski Z, Lanata JL, and Yacobaccio HD. 1987. On Processual Archaeology and the Radical Critique. Current
Anthropology 28(5):680-682.
Anthropology. American Antiquity 35(2):125-132.
Patterson TC. 1989. History and the Post-Processual Archaeologies . Man 24(4):555-566.
Wylie A. 1985. The Reaction against Analogy. Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory 8:63-111.
Post-Processual Archaeology - What is Culture in Archaeology
Anyway?
Underlying all of that was also a movement to challenge the authority of the
archaeologist and focus on identifying the biases which grew out of his or her
gender or ethnic make-up. One of the beneficial outgrowths of the movement,
then, was towards creating a more inclusive archaeology, an increase in the
number of indigenous archaeologists in the world, as well as women, the LGBT
community, and local and descendant communities. All of these brought a
diversity of new considerations into a science that had been dominated by white,
privileged, western outsider males.
The culture-historical method was developed out of the theories of historians and
anthropologists, to some degree to help archaeologists organize and comprehend
the vast amount of archaeological data that had been and was still being collected
in the 19th and early 20th centuries by antiquarians. As an aside, that hasn't
changed, in fact, with the availability of power computing and scientific advances
such as archaeo-chemistry (DNA, stable isotopes, plant residues), the amount of
archaeological data has mushroomed. Its hugeness and complexity today still
drives the development of archaeological theory to grapple with it.
At the end of the 19th century, there was a wild assertion of what is now
considered "hyper-diffusion", that all of the innovative ideas of antiquity
(farming, metallurgy, building monumental architecture) arose in Egypt and
spread outward, a theory thoroughly debunked by the early 1900s. Kulturkreis
never argued that all things came from Egypt, but the researchers did believe
there was a limited number of centers responsible for the origin of ideas which
drove the social evolutionary progress. That too has been proven false.
Childe took the comparative method to its ultimate limits, modeling the process
of the inventions of agriculture and metal-working from eastern Asia and their
diffusion throughout the Near East and eventually Europe. His astoundingly
broad-sweeping research led later scholars to go beyond the culture-historical
approaches, a step Childe did not live to see.
Archaeology and Nationalism: Why We Moved On
The culture-historical approach did produce a framework, a starting point on
which future generations of archaeologists could build, and in many cases,
deconstruct and rebuild. But, the culture-historical approach has many
limitations. We now recognize that evolution of any kind is never linear, but
rather bushy, with many different steps forward and backward, failures and
successes that are part and parcel of all human society. And frankly, the height of
"civilization" identified by researchers in the late 19th century is by today's
standards shockingly moronic: civilization was that which is experienced by
white, European, wealthy, educated males. But more painful than that, the
culture-historical approach feeds directly into nationalism and racism.
By developing linear regional histories, tying them to modern ethnic groups, and
classifying the groups on the basis of how far along the linear social evolutionary
scale they had reached, archaeological research fed the beast of Hitler's "master
race" and justified the imperialism and forcible colonization by Europe of the rest
of the world. Any society that hadn't reached the pinnacle of "civilization" was by
definition savage or barbaric, a jaw-droppingly idiotic idea. We know better now.
Sources
Eiseley LC. 1940. Review
of The Culture Historical Method of Ethnology, by Wilhelm Schmidt, Clyde
Kluchhohn and S. A. Sieber. American Sociological Review 5(2):282-284.
Heine-Geldern R. 1964. One
Hundred Years of Ethnological Theory in the German-Speaking Countries:
Some Milestones. Current Anthropology 5(5):407-418.
Kohl PL. 1998. Nationalism
and Archaeology: On the Constructions of Nations and the
Reconstructions of the Remote past. Annual Review of Anthropology 27:223-246.
Michaels GH. 1996. Culture historical theory. In: Fagan BM, editor. The Oxford Companion to Archaeology. New
York: Oxford University Press. p 162.
Phillips P, and Willey GR. 1953. Method
and Theory in American Archeology: An Operational Basis for
Culture-Historical Integration. American Anthropologist 55(5):615-633.
Trigger BG. 1984. Alternative Archaeologies: Nationalist, Colonialist, Imperialist . Man 19(3):355-370.
Willey GR, and Phillips P. 1955. Method
and theory in American archaeology II: Historical-
Developmental interpretation. American Anthropologist 57:722-819.