通过几何形态计量学研究物质文化的序列性--图瓦阿尔占-2 号荒冢出土的黄金野猪

IF 2.6 1区 地球科学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Journal of Archaeological Science Pub Date : 2024-07-24 DOI:10.1016/j.jas.2024.106021
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在物质文化领域,"系列化 "指的是对形状和大小几乎相同的物品进行系列化生产,生产出视觉上完全相同的工艺品。然而,根据所使用的技术或模具的数量和可靠性等因素,可能会出现微妙的差异。基于地标分析的几何形态计量学以及相应的统计技术,提供了非常适合在此类数据集中识别形状和尺寸方面微小但具有考古意义的变化的方法。在本研究中,我们利用在斯基泰早期的阿尔占 2 号荒冢中发现的一大批厘米大小的金野猪装饰弓箭盒,展示了几何形态计量学在序列性背景下的效率。每个标本共采集了 27 个二维地标,以高精度评估个体之间的相似程度,并研究是否存在亚群,这可能表明使用了多种模型。然而,由于数据集的同质性,显著的测量误差可能会掩盖所寻求的考古信号。为了减少这种情况,每个标本都由三个不同的操作员测量两次。然后对六个重复样本的博厄斯坐标取平均值,从而减少了测量误差的影响。结果发现了两个不同的形状组,由数量大致相同的个体组成。这些发现表明,整套野猪可能是通过两条独立的制造链生产出来的,可能是并行生产的,其中涉及两个不同的、尽管非常相似的实体模型。在每一组中,都观察到了大小不一的差异。这可能是由于铸造过程中的收缩率不同造成的。即使是该领域的专家,也很难用肉眼观察到这些变化,因为这一系列作品之间惊人的相似性以及金匠的后期加工掩盖了源自模具的形状信号。除了这里提供的有关阿尔占-2 号金野猪的原始信息外,值得强调的是,应鼓励使用这些技术,特别是在应用于序列性研究时。所描述的工作流程可以很容易地复制和调整用于几乎所有连续生产的考古组合。
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Studying seriality in material culture by geometric morphometrics–gold wild boars from the Arzhan-2 barrow, Tuva

In the field of material culture, seriality refers to the serial production of nearly the same object in terms of shape and size, yielding visually identical artefacts. Subtle variations may nevertheless occur, depending on the technologies used, or the number and reliability of moulds, for example. Geometric morphometrics based on landmark analysis, along with accompanying statistical techniques, provides methods well-suited for identifying small but archaeologically significant variations in shape and size within such datasets. In this study, we exemplify the efficiency of geometric morphometrics in a context of seriality, using a large series of centimetric-sized gold wild boars decorating a case for bow and arrows, discovered in the Arzhan-2 barrow of the early Scythian time. A total of twenty-seven 2D landmarks was collected for each specimen to assess the level of similarity between individuals with high precision, and to investigate the presence of subgroups, possibly indicating the use of several models. However, due to the homogeneous nature of the dataset, notable measurement errors may obscure the sought-after archaeological signal. To mitigate this, each specimen was measured twice by three different operators. Boas coordinates of the six replicates were then averaged, resulting in a reduction of the effect of measurement errors. Two distinct shape groups are identified, consisting of an approximately equal number of individuals. These findings suggest that the entire set of wild boars could have been produced via two separate manufacturing chains, possibly running in parallel, where two distinct, albeit very similar, solid models were involved. Within each group, discreet variations in size were observed. They are probably due to variable shrinkage during casting. These observations would have been difficult for the naked eye, even for an expert in the field, because the striking similarity within the series and the post-processing by the goldsmith obscure the shape signal originating from the moulds. Besides the original information provided here about the gold wild boars of Arzhan-2, it is worth emphasizing that the use of these techniques should be encouraged, particularly when applied to the study of seriality. The workflow described can easily be reproduced and adapted for almost any serially produced archaeological assemblage.

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来源期刊
Journal of Archaeological Science
Journal of Archaeological Science 地学-地球科学综合
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
7.10%
发文量
112
审稿时长
49 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Archaeological Science is aimed at archaeologists and scientists with particular interests in advancing the development and application of scientific techniques and methodologies to all areas of archaeology. This established monthly journal publishes focus articles, original research papers and major review articles, of wide archaeological significance. The journal provides an international forum for archaeologists and scientists from widely different scientific backgrounds who share a common interest in developing and applying scientific methods to inform major debates through improving the quality and reliability of scientific information derived from archaeological research.
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