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Sieving experiment: the controlled recovery of charred plant remains from modern and archaeological samples

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Abstract

Results of experimental retrieval of plant remains (both charred modern and fossil) from three sediment types (clay, gravel and sandy loam) carried out by environmental archaeologists from the Ancient Monuments Laboratory and the Central Archaeology Service, English Heritage, are reported. For each sediment type, six different treatments were carried out using three flotation machines of the Siraf type, two other machines in use in two archaeological units and one experimental machine. The results show that there is invariably considerable discrepancy between the amount of plant material present and that recovered, that the Serif-type machine is among the best currently available and that pretreatment of particular mineral soils may improve recovery of plant macrofossil material.

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de Moulins, D. Sieving experiment: the controlled recovery of charred plant remains from modern and archaeological samples. Veget Hist Archaebot 5, 153–156 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00189446

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00189446

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