Forensic Approach to Artifact/Sample Documentation and Recovery Sample Clauses

Forensic Approach to Artifact/Sample Documentation and Recovery. With the importance of the sites being excavated recognized early in the planning process, it was decided that every effort would be taken to ensure that little to no modern contaminants would be brought onto the site by establishing a 30m buffer around the site where no food or drink were permitted. Smoking was moved some 150 m further still to ensure no possible contamination of samples or artifacts. Excavation of cultural-bearing sediments was conducted through 1/8” screens to maximize the data recovered; all artifacts identified in excavation units were handled with sterile gloves and documented/collected by experienced field lab personnel. This approach ensured custody of the excavated material was documented from discovery through mapping/photography and collection/cataloging. The efficiency of this approach cannot be over-emphasized, as all artifacts and samples are cross-referenced in photos, video, catalogue and field notes to ensure provenance is duplicated. This approach also allowed investigators to focus on careful excavation and did not require down-time while they documented the artifacts, as they would generally move to an adjacent excavation unit and begin work while the find was documented. This approach has made post-excavation analysis much quicker as any provenance was duplicated in at least three times. However, the biggest contribution to this approach has been to recover the entire assemblage from the site in such a way as to enable new developments in archaeological analysis to be conducted and interpreted – some techniques (protein residue extraction, pollen/phytolith analysis) have not previously been on any project in Eastern Canada to the authors’ knowledge.
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