The use of screens and meshes to improve the recovery rate of artifacts from excavated sediments.
To re-fill a trench once an excavation has been completed.
Artificial changes in land level, typically made from piles of artificially placed or sculpted rocks and soil.
Loose sediment excavated from a trench.
A description of an object which has been deliberately broken or damaged in such a way as to make it unusable.
A rapid and relatively inexpensive method of archaeological evaluation used to estimate the archaeological potential of a site.
A site that is anomalously large in comparison to others from the same period and region.
Soil deposited by running water, such as streams, rivers, and flood waters.
A heap of earth placed over one or more prehistoric tombs, often surrounded by ditches.
Information relating to where an artifact or feature was found and what it was found in association with.
A fragment removed by chipping or hammering from a larger stone used as a tool or weapon.
A stone or metal axelike instrument with a bevelled edge.
Detailed, written accounts of archaeological research, excavation, and interpretation made during an ongoing project.
Any change to an archaeological site due to events which occurred after the site was laid down.
A description of stone tools that have been worked on both sides or faces, meaning that flakes have been intentionally (not naturally) chipped off from both sides of the stone
The preparation of finds from an excavation for storage or further specialist analysis, typically including washing, labelling, sorting and listing in an inventory.
A mound of stones erected as a memorial or marker.
The science of reconstructing the relationships between past societies and the environments they lived in.
The exposure, processing, and recording of archaeological sites, including uncovering and recording the provenience, context, and three-dimensional location of archaeological finds.
The classification of objects according to their physical characteristics.
An absolute dating technique used to determine the age of organic materials less than 50,000 years old by examining the loss of the unstable carbon-14 isotope, which is absorbed by all living organisms during their lifespan.
The application of archaeological techniques and theory in a legal context.
The physical material in which finds and other cultural remains are found, e.g. soil or rock.
Material that has accumulated, or been deposited, within a negative feature such as a cut, ditch, or a hollow in a building.
Ascertaining the age of an object with reference to a fixed and specific time scale (as opposed to ascertaining its age relative to the age of other objects in the same or a related context).
absolute dating
alluvial deposits
backfill
barrow
biface
cairn
celt
context
disturbance
earthworks
environmental archaeology
excavation
field notes
fill
finds processing
flake
forensic archaeology
killed
matrix
mega-site
radiocarbon dating
sieving
spoil
trial trenching
typology
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