FEATURE (ARCHAEOLOGY)

'Feature' in archaeology and especially excavation has several different but allied meanings. A feature is a collection of one or more contexts representing some human non-portable activity that generally has a vertical characteristic to it in relation to site stratigraphy. Examples of features are pits, walls, and ditches. General horizontal elements in the stratigraphic sequence, such as layers, dumps, or surfaces are 'not' referred to as features. Examples of surfaces include yards, roads, and floors.
Features 'tend' to have an intrusive characteristic or associated cuts. This is not definitive as surfaces can be referred to as features of a building and free standing structures with no construction cut can still be features. Middens (dump deposits) are also referred to as features due to their discrete boundaries. This is seen in comparison to leveling dumps, which stretch out over a substantial portion of a site. The concept of a feature is, to a certain degree, fuzzy, as it will change depending on the scale of excavation.

Contents
Generic feature types
See also
References

Generic feature types


Features specific to certain architecture types or eras such as trilithon for the purposes of this article are not considered generic. Generic features are feature types that can come from a broad section in time of the archaeological record if not all of it. Generic types can include:
#Cuts
#Re-cuts
#Pits
#Post holes
#Stake holes
#Construction cuts
#Robber trenches
#Walls
#Foundations
#Ditches
#Drains
#Wells
#Cisterns
#Hearths
#Stairs and steps
#Enclosures
#Lynchets
#Graves
#Burials
#Middens
#Pit-houses

See also



Archaeological context

Excavation

Archaeological field survey

Single context recording

Harris matrix

Archaeological plan

Archaeological association

Relationship (archaeology)

Cut (archaeology)

Archaeological section

Fill (archaeology)

References



★ The MoLAS archaeological site manual MoLAS, London 1994. ISBN 0-904818-40-3. Rb 128pp. bl/w

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