Modelling the palimpsest: An exploratory agent-based model of surface archaeological deposit formation in a fluvial arid Australian landscape
Authored by Benjamin Davies, Simon J Holdaway, Patricia C Fanning
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1177/0959683615609754
Sponsors:
Australian Research Council (ARC)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Archaeologists make inferences about past human behaviour based on
patterned material residues in various depositional contexts, including
existing landsurfaces. These deposits are generated by processes that
may obscure patterns at some observational scales while highlighting
others, and interpretive differences can arise from a lack of explicit
models of deposit formation. Here, an exploratory agent-based model
based on the concept of the palimpsest is used to examine the effects of
episodic sediment transport on the visibility and preservation of
surface archaeological deposits in a fluvial context. Outcomes from the
model indicate that the compound influences of preservation and
visibility are capable of transforming a static radiocarbon record into
one of increasing intensity towards the present, while simultaneously
displaying periodic chronological gaps - features that have been used in
our Australian study area to argue for demographic change driven by
social or environmental factors. To differentiate between
interpretations, expectations derived from the model are assessed
against a second proxy from the same study area: Optically Stimulated
Luminescence dates from hearth stones in surface contexts. Results
indicate that patterns in the chronometric proxies from the study area
are more consistent with episodic geomorphic change than explanations
invoking changes in the local organization of human activity.
Tags
Simulation
Geoarchaeology
time
Science
Hominin dispersal
History
New-south-wales
Site formation
Geomorphic controls
Record