Mixture model of pottery decorations from Lake Chad Basin archaeological sites reveals ancient segregation patterns

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2016-03-30

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Abstract

We present a new statistical approach to analysing an extremely common archaeological data typeâ potsherdsâ that infers the structure of cultural relationships across a set of excavation units (EUs). This method, applied to data from a set of complex, culturally heterogeneous sites around the Mandara mountains in the Lake Chad Basin, helps elucidate cultural succession through the Neolithic and Iron Age. We show how the approach can be integrated with radiocarbon dates to provide detailed portraits of cultural dynamics and deposition patterns within single EUs. In this context, the analysis supports ancient cultural segregation analogous to historical ethnolinguistic patterning in the region. We conclude with a discussion of the many possible model extensions using other archaeological data types.

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10.1098/rspb.2015.2824

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O'Brien, JD, K Lin and S MacEachern (2016). Mixture model of pottery decorations from Lake Chad Basin archaeological sites reveals ancient segregation patterns. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 283(1827). pp. 20152824–20152824. 10.1098/rspb.2015.2824 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/17586.

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MacEachern

Scott MacEachern

Vice Chancellor of Academic Affairs at Duke Kunshan University

Africanist archaeologist, with research interests in Central/West African archaeology, state formation and archaeogenetics.


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