Geoarchaeology of burnt mounds: site formation processes, use patterns, and duration
dc.contributor.advisor
Pickard, Catriona
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Robin, Guillaume
en
dc.contributor.author
Gardner, Tom
en
dc.date.accessioned
2019-08-05T10:45:23Z
dc.date.available
2019-08-05T10:45:23Z
dc.date.issued
2019-07-02
dc.description.abstract
Burnt mounds, accumulations of fire-cracked stone and fuel residues dating largely
from the Bronze Age, are a widespread and numerous site type across Britain and
Ireland. However, the function, duration, and depositional history of this site type
remains unknown. This study examines the formation processes and duration of burnt
mounds using a new multi-proxy geoarchaeological methodology comprising
micromorphology, x-ray fluorescence, loss on ignition, and soil pH assessment
alongside radiocarbon dating and statistical exploration. The sampled material covers
nine sites across northern Britain, spanning Northumberland, Wester Ross, and
Orkney.
This work shows that the burnt mounds assessed are complex and multi-faceted,
consisting primarily of fuel residues; wood and grasses in Northumberland and
Wester Ross, and peat, turf, and seaweed in Orkney. Many sites contain discrete
deposits of bone, unburnt plant tissues, and rubified sediments, and the use of earth-ovens
is suggested at one site by repeated layers of charred grasses and massive
rubified peds. Mounds were deposited in small increments, each representing either
one discrete firing event or the admixing of several firing events. Principal component
analysis of quantitative multi-element and sedimentological data was able to group
burnt mound deposits by fuel type, which was verified by micromorphology.
Micromorphological and sedimentological analyses identified widespread natural
sediment incursion and taphonomic processes across all mounds. These incursions
often represent hiatuses in deposition and indicate the recurrent, cyclical, or even
seasonal use of these sites. Although manifested differently due to local
environmental conditions, natural formation processes show recurrent abandonment
and cyclical patterns of use at sites through the deposition of material of similar types.
Limited seasonal indicators such as desiccation features, soil formation, and rain-splash
crust formation suggest hiatuses in wetter seasons and activity in drier
seasons. Available radiocarbon dates suggest that the depositional duration of most
mounds was around 100 years, although outliers exist.
Together, these data indicate for the first time that burnt mounds were not the product
of single large events such as monumental feasting, but rather represent a more
gradual accumulation of small-scale activities by small communities or groups that
were cyclical in nature. This has implications for wider interpretation, both of burnt
mounds and the socioeconomic systems that they represent, which is discussed.
Equally, this study argues that burnt mounds warrant more direct archaeological
attention as they contain well-stratified deposits that hold palaeoenvironmental and
geoarchaeological records of human-environment interactions over the short to
medium term. Consequently, this study puts forward a best practice excavation and
sampling guide to inform on future work, angled towards the policy and developer-funded
sectors.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/35964
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Dixon, G., Gardner, T., Gething, P., Tipping, R. & Young, G., 2015, Bradford Kaims Wetland Heritage Project: Interim Archaeological Report No.3, Bamburgh Research Project, (Available at: http://bamburghresearchproject.co.uk/wpcontent/ uploads/2013/07/Bradford-Kaims-Archaeological-Final-Report-2014.pdf).
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Gardner, T., 2018, Assessing the contribution of integrated geoarchaeological approaches to understand the formation and function of burnt mounds: the example of Hoppenwood Bank, North Northumberland, The Archaeological Journal, 176, pp. 1-33.
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Gardner, T., Gething, P., Lally, T., R., Rutheford, R. and Black, S., 2016, Bradford Kaims Wetland Heritage Project: Interim Report No.4, Bamburgh Research Project, available online at; http://bamburghresearchproject.co.uk/wpcontent/ uploads/2013/07/Bradford-Kaims-2015-Interim-Report-TG-Draft.pdf
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Young, G., Dixon, G., Gardner, T., Gething, P., Paterson, D., Pedersen, K. & Tipping, R., 2014, Bradford Kaims Wetland Heritage Project: Interim Archaeological Report No.2, Bamburgh Research Project, available at; http://bamburghresearchproject.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Bradford-Kaims- Archaeological-Final-Report-2014.pdf
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Young, G., Dixon, G., Gardner, T., Gething, P., 2015, Bradford Kaims Wetland Heritage Project: Interim Archaeological Report No.3, Bamburgh Research Project, available at; http://bamburghresearchproject.co.uk/wpcontent/ uploads/2013/07/Bradford-Kaims-Archaeological-Final-Report-2015.pdf
en
dc.subject
geoarchaeology
en
dc.subject
prehistory
en
dc.subject
micromorphology
en
dc.subject
taphonomy
en
dc.subject
site formation processes
en
dc.subject
geochemistry
en
dc.subject
burnt mound
en
dc.subject
Bronze Age
en
dc.title
Geoarchaeology of burnt mounds: site formation processes, use patterns, and duration
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
Files
Original bundle
1 - 1 of 1
- Name:
- Gardner2019.pdf
- Size:
- 153.86 MB
- Format:
- Adobe Portable Document Format
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

