期刊名称:JPUR : Journal of Purdue Undergraduate Research
印刷版ISSN:2158-4044
电子版ISSN:2158-4052
出版年度:2012
卷号:2
出版社:Purdue University
摘要:At the beginning of the Late Bronze Age (1500¨C1150 BC), human society in the fertile Tsaghkahovit Plain in the mountains of present day Armenia transitioned from groups of nomadic pastoralists centered around large burial mounds to a mixed agro-pastoral existence overseen by stone hilltop fortresses. This settlement change and resulting political arrangements is the focus of Professor Ian Lindsay's work on Project ArAGATS (Archaeology and Geography of Ancient Transcaucasian Societies). Of the data collected by ArAGATS, some of the most useful archaeological data comes from excavated pottery fragments, through which numerous research questions spanning social structure to diet can be addressed. I am assisting in the investigation of Late Bronze Age pottery from the Tsaghkahovit Plain to discover why fragments that have been chemically sourced to sites on the south side of the Plain include a shiny mineral called mica; this trait is unusual since micaceous clay is only found in clay sources located near an important religious site on the opposite side of the Plain. Finding out why this special clay made it across the Plain is the focus of my Margo Katherine Wilke Undergraduate Research Internship under Professor Lindsay, in which I am quantifying the relative frequencies of mica content among fragments from Late Bronze Age fortresses. Did the non-local mica inclusions represent ritual, technical, or economic advantages to people making and using these pots. Answering questions like this will reveal nuanced social information about ancient people occupying Armenia over 3,000 years ago