How Linguistic Data Can Inform Archaeological Investigations: An Australian Pilot Study Around Combustion Features

IF 0.9 3区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY
I. Ward, Maïa Ponsonnet, L. Miceli, Emilie Dotte-Sarout, Jason Rustandi
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Abstract

Abstract We present an interdisciplinary collaboration whereby linguistic data are explored with the aim of gaining new insights on archaeological features to enrich investigations of the past. Archaeology on its own relies on a very discontinuous record and here we argue that a fuller use of linguistic resources can offer more nuanced insights of the cultural context, and thus a more comprehensive reconstruction of both archaeological histories in general and archaeological features specifically. Languages, as complex human artefacts, often develop vocabularies that reflect speakers’ need to communicate about everyday objects and actions. Therefore, it makes sense to turn to lexicographic and semantic data as sources of additional clues about various aspects of the past. To date, this kind of collaboration has either focused on aspects of culture that leave little trace in the archaeological record or on aspects of material culture that informs wider histories of migrations and contacts. Collaboration has also, more often than not, had the goal of answering linguistic rather than archaeological questions. The novel approach we propose here is a focus on a domain which does leave a substantial trace in the archaeological record and that falls in the realm of mundane aspects of the universal human experience – i.e. domestic fire use – with the aim of gaining a more nuanced and culturally grounded understanding of archaeological features and their investigation. This article is a demonstration in principle for the potential of this approach, illustrated here with a pilot study of combustion features on the Australian continent. Having collected fire-related words in a sample of dictionaries of Australian Indigenous languages, we explain how and why the information they encapsulate can support archaeological studies.
语言数据如何为考古调查提供信息:澳大利亚关于燃烧特征的试点研究
摘要:我们提出了一个跨学科的合作,其中语言学数据进行了探索,目的是获得新的见解考古特征,以丰富过去的调查。考古学本身依赖于一个非常不连续的记录,在这里我们认为,更充分地利用语言资源可以提供更细致的文化背景的见解,从而更全面地重建考古历史和考古特征。语言作为复杂的人类人工制品,经常会发展出反映说话者对日常事物和行为交流需要的词汇。因此,将词典编纂和语义数据作为关于过去各个方面的额外线索的来源是有意义的。迄今为止,这种合作要么集中在在考古记录中几乎没有留下痕迹的文化方面,要么集中在为更广泛的迁徙和接触历史提供信息的物质文化方面。合作的目的往往是回答语言学问题,而不是考古学问题。我们在这里提出的新方法是关注一个领域,这个领域确实在考古记录中留下了大量的痕迹,并且属于人类普遍经验的世俗方面,即家庭使用火,目的是对考古特征及其调查获得更细致入微的文化基础理解。这篇文章从原则上论证了这种方法的潜力,这里用澳大利亚大陆燃烧特征的试点研究来说明。在澳大利亚土著语言的词典样本中收集了与火有关的单词,我们解释了它们所包含的信息如何以及为什么可以支持考古研究。
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来源期刊
Open Archaeology
Open Archaeology ARCHAEOLOGY-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
12.50%
发文量
38
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Open Archaeology is a forum of novel approaches to archaeological theory, methodology and practice, and an international medium for the dissemination of research data and interdisciplinary projects. Scope of the journal includes, but is not restricted to: World Archaeology - discoveries and research Archaeological science Theory and interpretation in archaeology Archaeological heritage preservation and management.
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