Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-hfldf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-08T15:58:15.667Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

USE-ALTERATION ANALYSIS OF FIRE-CRACKED ROCKS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 October 2018

Fernanda Neubauer*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin–Madison, 5240 Sewell Social Science Building, 1180 Observatory Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA

Abstract

Although it is now commonplace for archaeologists to study use-alteration patterns on ceramics, the same cannot be said of one of the most ubiquitous classes of hunter-gatherer artifacts, fire-cracked rocks (FCR). It can be shown, however, that many of the same methods and theories applied to the study of cooking ceramics are also relevant to the investigation of rocks used as heating elements. Because use alteration analyses of FCR are so scarce, I describe a range of attributes with the goal of helping researchers identify use alterations (e.g., sooting, reddening, various fracturing patterns) on lithic artifacts from sites worldwide and evaluate their potential function in various cultural practices. These attributes are also outlined in order to create a standardized terminology for describing FCR use-alteration patterns. I discuss my analysis of FCR from three Late Archaic sites (Duck Lake, 913, and 914) on Grand Island in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, followed by an interpretation of their cooking contexts, as a case study. The results indicate great intersite variability among FCR characteristics, cooking methods, and cooking facilities (earth oven, stone boiling, and rock griddle). This use alteration analysis can be applied in archaeological contexts worldwide where similar materials are recovered.

Aunque hoy en día es común estudiar los patrones de alteración causada por el uso en la cerámica, no se puede decir lo mismo para una de las clases más ubicuas de artefactos producidos por grupos cazadores-recolectores, las rocas agrietadas por el fuego (FCR, por sus siglas en inglés). Sin embargo, se puede demostrar que muchos de los métodos y teorías aplicados al estudio de la cerámica para cocinar también son relevantes para la investigación de las rocas utilizadas como elementos para calentar. Debido a que los análisis de alteración por uso de las FCR son escasos, se describe una gama de atributos para auxiliar con la identificación de alteraciones causadas por el uso (e.g., hollín, enrojecimiento, diversos patrones de fracturamiento) en artefactos líticos de sitios de todo el mundo, y para evaluar sus potenciales funciones en diversas prácticas culturales. También se esbozan estos atributos con el objetivo de establecer una terminología estandarizada para describir los patrones de alteración por uso de las FCR. Como estudio de caso se presenta el análisis de FCR procedentes de tres sitios del Arcaico Tardío (Duck Lake, 913 y 914) en Grand Island, en la península superior de Michigan, seguido de la interpretación de sus contextos de cocina. Los resultados indican una gran variabilidad entre sitios en las características de las FCR, los métodos y las instalaciones de cocción (horno de tierra, sancocho de piedras y parrilla de piedra). Este análisis de alteración por uso puede aplicarse en contextos arqueológicos de todo el mundo donde se presentan materiales similares.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2018 by the Society for American Archaeology 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Anderton, John 2004 The Geoarchaeological Context of Grand Island. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 29:113132.Google Scholar
Barnard, Hans, and Eerkens, Jelmer (editors) 2007 Theory and Practice of Archaeological Residue Analysis. BAR International Series 1650. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford.Google Scholar
Black, Stephen, Ellis, Linda, Creel, Darrel, and Goode, Glenn (editors) 1997 Hot Rock Cooking on the Greater Edwards Plateau: Four Burned Rock Midden Sites in West Central Texas. Studies in Archeology Vol. 1(22), Archeological Studies Program Report 2. Texas Archeological Research Laboratory and University of Texas at Austin, Austin.Google Scholar
Black, Stephen, and Thoms, Alston 2014 Hunter-Gatherer Earth Ovens in the Archaeological Record: Fundamental Concepts. American Antiquity 79:203226.Google Scholar
Blackwelder, Elliot 1927 Fire as an Agent in Rock Weathering. Journal of Geology 35:134140.Google Scholar
Brink, Jack, and Dawe, Bob 2003 Hot Rocks as Scarce Resources: The Use, Re-Use and Abandonment of Heating Stones at Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump. Plains Anthropologist 48:85104.Google Scholar
Buckelew, Francis M. 1911 Buckelew, the Indian Captive; or, The life Story of F.M. Bucklew [sic] While a Captive Among the Lipan Indians in the Western Wild of Frontier Texas, as Related by Himself [and] Written by S. E. Banta. Mason Herald, Mason, Texas.Google Scholar
Buckley, Victor M. 1990 Experiments Using a Reconstructed Fulacht with a Variety of Rock Types: Implications for the Petromorphology of Fulachta Fiadh. In Burnt Offerings: International Contributions to Burnt Mound Archaeology, compiled by Buckley, Victor, pp. 170172. Wordwell, Academic, Dublin, Ireland.Google Scholar
Canada Department of Agriculture 1978 Glossary of Terms in Soil Science. Canada Department of Agriculture, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Cavallo, John A. 1987 Area B Site (28-me1-B), Data Recovery, Trenton Complex Archaeology Report. Report 8. Louis Berger and Associates, East Orange, New Jersey. Submitted to the Federal Highway Administration and the New Jersey Department of Transportation, Bureau of Environmental Analysis, Trenton. Copies available from the Cultural Resource Group, Louis Berger and Associates, East Orange, New Jersey.Google Scholar
Coues, Elliott 1893 History of the Expedition under the Command of Lewis and Clark. Francis P. Harper, New York.Google Scholar
Crabtree, Don 1982 An Introduction to Flintworking. Occasional Papers of the Idaho Museum of Natural History 28. Idaho Museum of Natural History, Pocatello.Google Scholar
Crandell, Otis 2007 “Fire” Cracked Rocks—An Archaeological Experiment. Corviniana 10:110.Google Scholar
Darvill, Timothy 2008 The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Archaeology. 2nd ed. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Deal, Krista 2012 Fire Effects on Flaked Stone, Ground Stone, and Other Stone Artifacts. In Wildland Fire in Ecosystems: Effects of Fire on Cultural Resources and Archaeology, Vol. 3, edited by Ryan, Kevin, Jones, Ann, Koerner, Cassandra, and Lee, Kristine, pp. 97111. General Technical Report RMRS-GTR-42-Vol. 3. US Department of Agriculture, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fort Collins, Colorado.Google Scholar
Densmore, Frances 1928 Uses of Plants by the Chippewa. US Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Driver, Harold 1952 The Acorn in North American Indian Diet. Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science 62:5662.Google Scholar
Ellis, Linda 1997 Hot Rock Technology. In Hot Rock Cooking on the Greater Edwards Plateau: Four Burned Rock Midden Sites in West Central Texas, edited by Black, Stephen, Ellis, Linda, Creel, Darrel, and Goode, Glenn, pp. 4381. Studies in Archeology Vol. 1(22), Archeological Studies Program Report 2. Texas Archeological Research Laboratory and University of Texas at Austin, Austin.Google Scholar
Fish, Jefferson 2012 Mixed Blood. In Conformity and Conflict: Readings in Cultural Anthropology, 14th ed., edited by Spradley, James and McCurdy, David, pp. 217225. Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey.Google Scholar
Graesch, Anthony, DiMare, Tianna, Schachner, Gregson, Schaepe, David, and Dallen, John 2014 Thermally Modified Rock: The Experimental Study of “Fire-Cracked” Byproducts of Hot Rock Cooking. North American Archaeologist 35:167200.Google Scholar
Gregg, Michael, and Grybush, Richard 1976 Thermally Altered Siliceous Stone from Prehistoric Contexts: Intentional versus Unintentional Alteration. American Antiquity 41:189192.Google Scholar
Guimarães, Márcia, Gaspar, Maria Dulce, and Schell-Ybert, Rita 2005 Da Presença de Concreções em Sambaquis Brasileiros: O Caso dos Sambaquis Boa Vista da Planície Costeira do Rio São João, RJ [Of the Presence of Concretions in Brazilian Sambaquis: The Case of the Sambaquis Boa Vista of the Coastal Plain of the São João River, RJ]. In Extended Abstracts of the X ABEQUA: pp. 1–6. Guarapari, Brazil.Google Scholar
Gur-Arieh, Shira, Maeir, Aren, and Shahack-Gross, Ruth 2011 Soot Patterns on Cooking Vessels: A Short Note. In On Cooking Pots, Drinking Cups, Loomweights and Ethnicity in Bronze Age Cyprus and Neighbouring Regions, edited by Karageorghis, Vassos and Kouka, Ourania, pp. 349355. A. G. Leventis Foundation, Nicosia, Cyprus.Google Scholar
Hameister, Martha, Saldanha, João, and Dias, Adriana 1997 Pequeno Glossário Ilustrado para Representação Gráfica de Artefatos Líticos [Small Illustrated Glossary for Graphic Representation of Lithic Artifacts]. Revista do CEPA 21(26):733.Google Scholar
Heron, Carl, and Evershed, Richard 1993 The Analysis of Organic Residues and the Study of Pottery Use. In Archaeological Method and Theory, Vol. 5, edited by Schiffer, Michael B., pp. 247284. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Hough, Walter 1926 Fire as an Agent in Human Culture. US National Museum Bulletin 139. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
House, John 1975 Prehistoric Lithic Resource Utilization in the Cache Basin: Crowley's Ridge Chert and Quartzite and Pitkin Chert. In The Cache River Archeological Project: An Experiment in Contract Archeology, edited by Schiffer, Michael and House, John, pp. 8191. Research Series No. 8. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville.Google Scholar
House, John, and Smith, James 1975 Experiments in Replication of Fire-Cracked Rock. In The Cache River Archeological Project: An Experiment in Contract Archeology, edited by Schiffer, Michael B. and House, John, pp. 7591. Research Series No. 8. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville.Google Scholar
Hutchings, James 1888 In the Heart of the Sierras: The Yo Semite Valley. Pacific Press, Oakland, California.Google Scholar
Jackson, Michael 1998 The Nature of Fire-Cracked Rock: New Insights from Ethnoarchaeological and Laboratory Experiments. Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, Texas A&M University, College Station.Google Scholar
Leach, Jeff, Bousman, C. Britt, and Nickels, David 2005 Assigning Context to Artifacts in Burned-Rock Middens. Journal of Field Archaeology 30:201203.Google Scholar
Lovick, Steven 1983 Fire-Cracked Rock as Tools: Wear-Pattern Analysis. Plains Anthropologist 28:4152.Google Scholar
McDowell-Loudan, Ellis 1983 Fire-Cracked Rock: Preliminary Experiments to Determine Its Nature and Significance in Archaeological Contexts. Chesopiean 21(1):2029.Google Scholar
McParland, Pat 1977 Experiments in the Firing and Breaking of Rocks. Calgary Archaeologist 5:3133.Google Scholar
Mauldin, Raymond, Graves, Tim, and Bentley, Mark 1998 Small Sites in the Central Hueco Bolson: A Final Report on Project 90-11. Wendy Lopez and Associates, Dallas, Texas. Contract No. DACA63-97-D-0011 (WLA Project No. 97024.03). Submitted to the Conservation Division, Directorate of Environment, US Army Air Defense Artillery Center, Fort Bliss, Texas.Google Scholar
Milburn, Douglas H., Doan, Uyen K., and Huckabee, Joanna 2009 Spatial and Temporal Distributions of Archaeological Heated-Rock Cooking Structures in the Transverse Mountain Ranges: Proposed Markers of Land-Use Shifts since the Early Holocene. Society for California Archaeology Proceedings 22:121.Google Scholar
Neubauer, Fernanda 2016 Late Archaic Hunter-Gatherer Lithic Technology and Function (Chipped Stone, Ground Stone, and Fire-Cracked Rock): A Study of Domestic Life, Foodways, and Seasonal Mobility on Grand Island in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison.Google Scholar
Pagoulatos, Peter 1992 The Re-Use of Thermally Altered Stone. North American Archaeologist 13:115129.Google Scholar
Petraglia, Michael 2002 The Heated and the Broken: Thermally Altered Stone, Human Behavior, and Archaeological Site Formation. North American Archaeologist 23:241269.Google Scholar
Petraglia, Michael, Bupp, Susan L., Fitzell, Sean P., and Cunningham, Kevin W. (compilers) 2002 Hickory Bluff: Changing Perceptions of Delmarva Archaeology. Delaware Department of Transportation, Division of Transportation Solutions, Dover. DelDOT Archaeology Series No. 175. Submitted to the US Department of Transportation, the Federal Highway Administration, and the Delaware Department of State, Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs, Bureau of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Dover. Copies available from the Delaware Department of Transportation, Division of Transportation Solutions, Dover.Google Scholar
Pierce, Christopher 1988 A Functional Classification of Fire-Altered Rock Features from CA-SBr-5381. In The Archaeology of Tiefort Basin, Fort Irwin, San Bernardino County, California, edited by McGuire, Kelly and Hall, M. C., pp. H1H15. Far Western Anthropological Research Group, Davis, California.Google Scholar
Prous, André 2004 Apuntes para Análisis de Industrias Líticas [Notes for the Analysis of Lithic Industries]. Ortegalia No. 2, Fundación Federico Maciñeira; Monografías de Arqueología, Historia e Patrimonio, Ortegalia No. 2. Fundación Federico Maciñeira, Ortigueira, Spain.Google Scholar
Quigg, Michael, Malainey, Mary, Przybylski, Roman, and Monks, Gregory 2001 No Bones about It: Using Lipid Analysis of Burned Rock Groundstone Residues to Examine Late Archaic Subsistence Practices in South Texas. Plains Anthropologist 46:283303.Google Scholar
Quinteira, Ana Margarida 2013 Intervenção em Espólio Pétreo do Mosteiro de Santa Clara-a-Velha [Intervention in the Stoned Estate of the Monastery of Santa Clara-a-Velha]. Master's thesis, Department of Conservation and Restoration, Instituto Politécnico de Tomar, Tomar, Portugal.Google Scholar
Ryan, Kevin, Jones, Ann, Koerner, Cassandra, and Lee, Kristine (editors) 2012 Wildland Fire in Ecosystems: Effects of Fire on Cultural Resources and Archaeology, Vol. 3. General Technical Report RMRS-GTR-42-v.3. US Department of Agriculture, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fort Collins, Colorado.Google Scholar
Schalk, Randall, and Meatte, Daniel 1988 The Archaeological Features. In The Archaeology of Chester Morse Lake: The 1986–87 Investigations for the Cedar Falls Improvement Project, edited by Schalk, Randall and Taylor, R., pp. 8-18-9. Center for Northwest Anthropology, Washington State University, Seattle Research Unit. Submitted to the Seattle Water Department, Seattle, Washington. Copies available from the Center for Northwest Anthropology, Washington State University, Seattle Research Unit, Seattle.Google Scholar
Skibo, James 1992 Pottery Function: A Use-Alteration Perspective. Plenum Press, New York.Google Scholar
Skibo, James 2013 Understanding Pottery Function. Springer, New York.Google Scholar
Speth, John 2015 When Did Humans Learn to Boil? PaleoAnthropology 2015:5467.Google Scholar
Stark, Richard 2002 Fire-Cracked Rock Experiments: The Potential of Three Analytical Techniques. La Tierra: Journal of the Southern Texas Archaeological Association 29(4):1228.Google Scholar
Taggart, David W. 1981 Notes on the Comparative Study of Fire-Cracked Rock. In Report of Phase I and II Archaeological Survey of Proposed M-275 Right-of-Way through Western Oakland County, edited by Doreen Ozker and David W. Taggart, pp. 142–152. Museum of Anthropological Archaeology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Submitted to the Michigan Department of Transportation, Lansing. Copies available from the Museum of Anthropological Archaeology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Tennis, Cynthia, Hunziker, Johanna, and Leach, Jeff 1997 Fire-Cracked Rock Use and Reuse in the Hueco Bolson, Fort Bliss, Texas. Archaeological Survey Report No. 257. Center for Archaeological Research, University of Texas, San Antonio.Google Scholar
Thoms, Alston 1986 Hot Rocks: The Short-Term Storage of Energy in the Calispell Valley. In Calispell Valley Archaeological Project: Interim Report for 1984 and 1985 Field Seasons, edited by Thoms, Alston and Burtchard, Greg, pp. 447477. Contributions in Cultural Resource Management, No. 10. Center for Northwest Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman.Google Scholar
Thoms, Alston 1989 The Northern Roots of Hunter-Gatherer Intensification: Camas and the Pacific Northwest. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman.Google Scholar
Thoms, Alston 2003 Cook-Stone Technology in North America: Evolutionary Changes in Domestic Fire Structures during the Holocene. In Le feu Domestique et ses Structures au Néolithique et aux Âges des Métaux: Actes du Colloque de Bourg-en-Bresse et Beaune, 7 et 8 Octobre 2000, edited by Frère-Sautot, Marie-Chantal, Vicherd, Georges, Villes, Alain, Bontemps, Christophe, and Chastel, Jacqueline, pp. 8796. Monique Mergoil, Montagnac, Hérault, France.Google Scholar
Thoms, Alston 2007 Fire-Cracked Rock Features on Sandy Landforms in the Northern Rocky Mountains: Toward Establishing Reliable Frames of Reference for Assessing Site Integrity. Geoarchaeology 22:477510.Google Scholar
Thoms, Alston 2008 The Fire Stones Carry: Ethnographic Records and Archaeological Expectations for Hot-Rock Cookery in Western North America. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 27:443460.Google Scholar
Thoms, Alston 2009 Rocks of Ages: Propagation of Hot-Rock Cookery in Western North America. Journal of Archaeological Science 36:573591.Google Scholar
Thoms, Alston, Laurence, Andrew, Short, Laura, and Kamiya, Masahiro 2015 Earth-Ovens at Fort Hood: Variation in Form and Function. In Earth Ovens, Geophytes, and Microfossils: Investigating Burned Rock Features and Archeobotanical Remains at Fort Hood, Central Texas, edited by Thoms, Alston, Boyd, Douglas, and Kibler, Karl, pp. 159198. Archeological Resource Management Series Research Report No. 65. US Army, Fort Hood, Killeen, Texas.Google Scholar
Vieugué, Julien 2014 Use-Wear Analysis of Prehistoric Pottery: Methodological Contributions from the Study of the Earliest Ceramic Vessels in Bulgaria (6100–5500 BC). Journal of Archaeological Science 41:622630.Google Scholar
Whittaker, John C. 1994 Flintknapping: Making and Understanding Stone Tools. University of Texas Press, Austin.Google Scholar
Wilson, Douglas, and DeLyria, David 1999 The Experimental Reduction of Rock in a Camas Oven: Towards an Understanding of the Behavioral Significance of Fire-Cracked Rock. Archaeology in Washington 7:8189.Google Scholar
Wilson, Douglas, and VanDerwarker, Amber 2015 The Functional Dimensions of Earth Oven Cooking: An Analysis of an Accidently Burned Maize Roast at the C. W. Cooper Site in West-Central Illinois. Journal of Field Archaeology 40:166175.Google Scholar
Wilson, Gregory, and Rodning, Christopher 2002 Boiling, Baking, and Pottery Breaking: A Functional Analysis of Ceramic Vessels from Coweeta Creek. Southeastern Archaeology 21:2935.Google Scholar
Witkind, W. Max 1977 An Experiment in Stone Boiling. In Hop Hill: Culture and Climatic Change in Central Texas, edited by Gunn, Joel and Mahula, Royce, pp. 205208. Special Report No. 5. Center for Archaeological Research, University of Texas, San Antonio.Google Scholar
Zurel, Richard 1979 Brief Comments Regarding the Nature of Fire Cracked Rock on Aboriginal Sites in the Great Lakes Area. Laboratory of Archaeology Working Papers in Archaeology No. 3. Oakland University, Rochester, Michigan.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Neubauer supplementary material

Neubauer supplementary material 1

Download Neubauer supplementary material(File)
File 9.9 MB