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Aggregate Analysis in Chipped Stone

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Edited by Christopher T. Hall and Mary Lou Larson

336 pp. 6 x 9
32 illustrations
Cloth $50.00
ISBN 978-0-87480-796-7
Archaeology

Less than two decades ago, archaeologists considered lithic debitage, the flakes and debris left from the manufacture of stone tools, little more than uninformative waste. Since then, fieldworkers have increasingly recognized that stone flakes can provide information both singly and in aggregate.

Many methods are now available for analyzing lithic debitage, yet no single method is entirely reliable as a vehicle to meaningful interpretation of past behavior. Part of the problem lies in the disparity between tightly controlled experimental conditions and the difficulty of sorting individual sequences out of the masses of stone found in many archaeological sites. Contributors to this volume seek to identify the strengths and weaknesses in the more widespread and competing analytical forms while arguing for the use of multiple lines of evidence. As the title indicates, their primary focus is on mass analysis of aggregates rather than individual flakes. Thus several chapters also address problems of subdividing aggregates to better deal with the “mixed assemblages” generated by multiple factors over time.

“This volume is a shot in the arm.” —William Prentiss, University of Montana

Christopher Hall is staff archaeologist with Cultural Resource Analysts, Inc., Lexington, Kentucky.

Mary Lou Larson is associate professor of anthropology at the University of Wyoming, Laramie, and associate director of the George C. Frison Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology.

Contributors:
William Andrefsky Jr., Washington State University
Mark F. Baumler, Montana Historical Society
Peter Bleed, University of Nebraska
Andrew P. Bradbury, Cultural Resource Analysts, Inc. Lexington, Kentucky
Philip J. Carr, University of South Alabama
Leslie B. Davis, Montana State University
Judson B. Finley, Washington State University
Christopher T. Hall, Cultural Resource Analysts, Inc. Lexington, Kentucky
Edward J. Knell, Washington State University
Mary Lou Larson, University of Wyoming
Jeffrey T. Rasic, Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve Fairbanks, Alaska
Matthew J. Root, Washington State University
Michael J. Shott, University of Northern Iowa