Petrified Life or Living Stone? The Problems of Categorisation
Exemplified by Fossils Found at Stone Age Sites in Rogaland, Norway
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58323/insi.v14.9520Abstract
During archaeological excavations, artefacts are collected, tagged and stored. Based on these, archaeologists interpret peoples’ social identity, relations and even world view. However, a narrow range of ‘natural objects’ are also collected, often if perceived as essentially different from the surrounding gravel or debris ; that is, if odd or beautiful enough to the excavator. Fossilised Sea-urchins ( Echinoidea ) are such objects and have been recovered from hunter-gatherer-fisher coastal sites dated to Mesolithic and Neolithic. They are predominantly found in refuse layers and floor contexts. In this brief article, based on finds of fossils at recent excavations in Rogaland county, Norway, the fossils are considered as illustrative of the fluidity and transformability of life in a Mesolithic ontology that avoids the separation of nature and culture. Hence, life is stone, and stone is life. Contrasting this is the archaeological practice of separating ‘cultural’ from ‘natural’. Does this limit our understanding of life in the Stone Age ?
Nedladdningar
Downloads
Publicerad
Referera så här
Nummer
Sektion
Licens
Copyright (c) 2020 Astrid J. Nyland
Det här verket är licensierad under en Creative Commons Erkännande 3.0 Internationell licens.
Författare som bidrar till In Situ Archaeologica har givit sitt medgivande att publicera sina artiklar under en Creative Commons-licens. Den ger tredje part vissa rättigheter till att nyttja materialet. Rättigheterna styrs av vilken licens verket är publierad under. Det åligger tredje part att sätta sig in i verkets creative common licens innan materialet används i eget syfte. Det är alltid författaren som har copyright till verket och allt nyttjande av tredje part förutsätter att ett tydligt erkännande ges till verkets upphovsperson, att en länk till licensen tillhandahålls.