Addressing Taphonomic Complications in the Use of Archaeological Radiocarbon Assemblages as Population Proxies: A Case Study in the Bonneville Basin
Abstract
One of the imperatives driving reconstructions of past demography is the desire to analyze the impacts of past climate changes on human populations. An increasingly popular tool is the analysis of archaeological radiocarbon record, but the very paleoclimate changes that are of interest also have geomorphic effects - and the consequent erosive and depositional processes figure in the archaeological record as taphonomic agents. Taphonomic effects have the potential to mask some population responses and exaggerate others, as the relative frequencies of archaeological radiocarbon dates from different periods can be structured not only by population but by these confounding factors. Here we use coupled geomorphic and archaeological data to assess the effects of local taphonomy in the Bonneville Basin, drawing on the relative frequencies of terminal Pleistocene and Holocene landforms to assess the likelihood of survival of archaeological material of different ages and to correct population estimates according.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2020
- Bibcode:
- 2020AGUFMPP0040006C
- Keywords:
-
- 1105 Quaternary geochronology;
- GEOCHRONOLOGY;
- 9350 North America;
- GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION;
- 4901 Abrupt/rapid climate change;
- PALEOCEANOGRAPHY;
- 4950 Paleoecology;
- PALEOCEANOGRAPHY