Mossberga Mosse:挖掘档案和追踪博物馆生态

Q1 Arts and Humanities Journal of Wetland Archaeology Pub Date : 2019-07-03 DOI:10.1080/14732971.2020.1830622
C. Fredengren, J. Karlsson
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引用次数: 1

摘要

沼泽体是罕见的发现,偶尔与泥炭切割或挖掘排水沟有关。然而,这些记录可能比以前承认的更丰富,因为早期的发现可能作为博物馆藏品的未识别部分保存下来,因此被研究人员遗漏了。本文介绍了最近在博物馆仓库中重新发现的Öland岛上Mossberga沼泽的骨学发现。它提供了一个案例研究,追踪考古和古物过程如何在所谓的博物馆生态中“联系在一起”和“切割”材料。该组合包括来自沼泽遗址的人类和非人类遗骸,并调查了湿地考古学如何从挖掘进入公共领域。围绕这一发现的关系被折叠起来,使用放射性碳测年法、骨学分析、档案材料和景观描述,将在湿地存放尸体的做法如何延续了几个世纪的故事联系在一起并提出问题。
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Mossberga Mosse: Excavating the Archives and Tracing Museum Ecologies
ABSTRACT Bog bodies are rare finds occasionally revealed in connection with peat-cutting or excavation of drains. However, the record might be richer than formerly acknowledged, as earlier finds may survive as non-identified parts of museum collections, and have, therefore, been missed by researchers. This paper presents osteological finds from Mossberga bog on the island of Öland which were rediscovered in museum storage recently. It provides a case study that traces how the archaeological and antiquarian processes ‘tie together’ and ‘cut apart’ materials in what could be called museum ecologies. The assemblage includes human and non-human remains from a bog site and investigates how wetland archaeology is taken from excavation into the public domain. The relationships around this find are folded out, using radiocarbon dating, osteological analysis, archival materials and landscape descriptions to tie together and problematize stories of how the practice of depositing bodies in wetlands stretched across centuries.
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来源期刊
Journal of Wetland Archaeology
Journal of Wetland Archaeology Arts and Humanities-Archeology (arts and humanities)
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
期刊介绍: The Journal of Wetland Archaeology publishes a wide range of contributions in all fields of wetland archaeology. It includes scientific and methodological features, geoprospection, environmental reconstruction, wetland hydrology, cultural aspects of wetland archaeology, as well as conservation, site management, legislation, and site protection. All periods and all geographic regions are covered.
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