Artifact (archaeology)
In
archaeology, an
artifact or
artefact is any object made or modified by a human
culture, and often one later recovered by some archaeological endeavor. Examples include
stone tools such as
projectile points,
pottery vessels such as
amphorae, metal objects such as buttons or guns and items of personal adornment such as
jewellery and clothing. Other examples include
bone that shows signs of
human modification, fire cracked rocks from a
hearth or plant material used for food.
The study of these objects is an important part of the field of archaeology, although the degree to which they represent the social groupings that created them is a subject over which archaeological theoreticians argue. Focusing on the artifact alone can produce very intensive and enlightening work on the object itself but can ignore surrounding factors which may shed further light on the manufacturing society. Traditional
museums are often criticised for being too artifact-led, that is by displaying items without any contextual information about their purpose or the people who made them.
Artifacts can come from a number of sources:
*
Buried along with a
body. (see:
grave goods)
*From a
midden or other domestic setting
*
Hoards
*
Votive offerings
Artifacts are distinguished from
features, which are nonportable remains of human activity, such as
hearths,
roads, or
house remains, and from
biofacts (also called
ecofacts), which are objects of archaeological interest made by other organisms, such as
seeds or
animal bone.
Natural objects which have been moved but not changed by humans are called
manuports. Examples would include seashells moved inland or rounded pebbles placed away from the water action that would have fashioned them.
These distinctions are often blurred; for instance, a bone removed from an animal carcass is a biofact, but a bone carved into a useful implement is an artifact. Similarly there can be debate over early stone objects which may be crude artifacts or which may be naturally occurring phenomena that only appear to have been used by humans.
*
cultural artifact