Real archaeological fieldwork is seldom as exciting as it looks in the movies. You tend to get fewer reanimated mummies, deadly booby traps, and drama

Archaeologists train a neural network to sort pottery fragments for them

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2021-05-23 07:30:09

Real archaeological fieldwork is seldom as exciting as it looks in the movies. You tend to get fewer reanimated mummies, deadly booby traps, and dramatic shootouts with Nazis. Instead, you'll see pieces of broken pottery—a lot of them. Potsherds are ubiquitous at archaeological sites, and that's true for pretty much every culture since people invented pottery. In the US Southwest in particular, museums have collected sherds by the tens of thousands.

“[Potsherds] provide archaeologists with critical information about the time a site was occupied, the cultural group with which it was associated, and other groups with whom they interacted,” said Northern Arizona University archaeologist Chris Downum, who co-authored a new study with Leszek Pawlowicz.

Members of different cultures have always made their own container types, using their own techniques and decorating in their own ways. And within each culture, those styles and techniques have changed over time. That’s why archaeologists can often look at a site’s potsherds to tell who lived there and how long ago. They’re what archaeologists call diagnostic artifacts.

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