Geo-ethnoarchaeology study of the traditional Tswana dung floor from the Moffat Mission Church, Kuruman, North Cape Province, South Africa

Dung has been a very important material in human history. To date, large portions of the world rural population continue using it as construction material, fuel, and fertilizer. A few ethnographic and archeological studies show that dung has also been used for ritual practices in domestic and sacred...

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Published in:Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences
Main Author: F. Berna
Language:unknown
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://architexturez.net//doc/10-1007/s12520-017-0470-0
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-017-0470-0
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spelling ftatsouthasia:oai:architexturez.net:220898 2023-05-15T17:38:00+02:00 Geo-ethnoarchaeology study of the traditional Tswana dung floor from the Moffat Mission Church, Kuruman, North Cape Province, South Africa F. Berna 2017 https://architexturez.net//doc/10-1007/s12520-017-0470-0 https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-017-0470-0 unknown https://architexturez.net//doc/10-1007/s12520-017-0470-0 doi:10.1007/s12520-017-0470-0 Dung Floors Geo-ethnoarchaeology Ritual space Soil micromorphology 2017 ftatsouthasia https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-017-0470-0 2021-08-24T09:06:27Z Dung has been a very important material in human history. To date, large portions of the world rural population continue using it as construction material, fuel, and fertilizer. A few ethnographic and archeological studies show that dung has also been used for ritual practices in domestic and sacred places. Nevertheless, finding unambiguous evidence of ceremonial use of dung in the archeological record is a major methodological challenge. In fact, the use of dung for domestic purposes such as flooring, plastering, and fueling may produce evidence similar to ritual practices. Correct contextualization of the evidence is thus paramount for the identification of the use of dung in ritual practice and resolve any equifinality derived from other activities. Ethnographic studies of domestic and ritual use of dung may provide the isolation of contextual and analytical parameters useful for the identification of ceremonial use of dung in antiquity. The aim of this paper is hence the geo-ethnoarchaeological characterization of the dung floor built according to the Tswana people tradition in the Moffat Mission Church in Kuruman, South Africa. Macroscopic and microscopic geo-archeological parameters such as erosion features, slope angle, microfabric organization, mineral and organic composition, and relative sorting and orientation of plant fragments are described. The significance of these parameters for the identification of archeological dung floors in domestic and sacred space is discussed. Particularly significant appears to be the particle size distribution and orientation of the dung fibers. In the Tswana floor, these fabric characteristics are very distinct when compared to the one described for livestock enclosure in other ethnographic and archeological contexts. Nevertheless, no clear-cut distinction between the use of dung in domestic and ritual spaces can be achieved solely through the compositional analysis. On the other hand, to be noted is the peculiar shallow-channeled topography of the church floor originated from foot traffic “channeled” along constrained pathways delineated by the immovable disposition of the church’s furniture and ceremonial routines. It thus appears that the possibility of mapping erosional patterns of archeological floors (in addition to their compositional analysis) may offer archeologists an extra tool to distinguish between (dung) floors of ceremonials contexts and of domestic environments. Other/Unknown Material North Cape Architexturez South Asia North Cape ENVELOPE(165.700,165.700,-70.650,-70.650) Moffat ENVELOPE(-55.283,-55.283,-83.533,-83.533) Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 9 6 1115 1123
institution Open Polar
collection Architexturez South Asia
op_collection_id ftatsouthasia
language unknown
topic Dung
Floors
Geo-ethnoarchaeology
Ritual space
Soil micromorphology
spellingShingle Dung
Floors
Geo-ethnoarchaeology
Ritual space
Soil micromorphology
F. Berna
Geo-ethnoarchaeology study of the traditional Tswana dung floor from the Moffat Mission Church, Kuruman, North Cape Province, South Africa
topic_facet Dung
Floors
Geo-ethnoarchaeology
Ritual space
Soil micromorphology
description Dung has been a very important material in human history. To date, large portions of the world rural population continue using it as construction material, fuel, and fertilizer. A few ethnographic and archeological studies show that dung has also been used for ritual practices in domestic and sacred places. Nevertheless, finding unambiguous evidence of ceremonial use of dung in the archeological record is a major methodological challenge. In fact, the use of dung for domestic purposes such as flooring, plastering, and fueling may produce evidence similar to ritual practices. Correct contextualization of the evidence is thus paramount for the identification of the use of dung in ritual practice and resolve any equifinality derived from other activities. Ethnographic studies of domestic and ritual use of dung may provide the isolation of contextual and analytical parameters useful for the identification of ceremonial use of dung in antiquity. The aim of this paper is hence the geo-ethnoarchaeological characterization of the dung floor built according to the Tswana people tradition in the Moffat Mission Church in Kuruman, South Africa. Macroscopic and microscopic geo-archeological parameters such as erosion features, slope angle, microfabric organization, mineral and organic composition, and relative sorting and orientation of plant fragments are described. The significance of these parameters for the identification of archeological dung floors in domestic and sacred space is discussed. Particularly significant appears to be the particle size distribution and orientation of the dung fibers. In the Tswana floor, these fabric characteristics are very distinct when compared to the one described for livestock enclosure in other ethnographic and archeological contexts. Nevertheless, no clear-cut distinction between the use of dung in domestic and ritual spaces can be achieved solely through the compositional analysis. On the other hand, to be noted is the peculiar shallow-channeled topography of the church floor originated from foot traffic “channeled” along constrained pathways delineated by the immovable disposition of the church’s furniture and ceremonial routines. It thus appears that the possibility of mapping erosional patterns of archeological floors (in addition to their compositional analysis) may offer archeologists an extra tool to distinguish between (dung) floors of ceremonials contexts and of domestic environments.
author F. Berna
author_facet F. Berna
author_sort F. Berna
title Geo-ethnoarchaeology study of the traditional Tswana dung floor from the Moffat Mission Church, Kuruman, North Cape Province, South Africa
title_short Geo-ethnoarchaeology study of the traditional Tswana dung floor from the Moffat Mission Church, Kuruman, North Cape Province, South Africa
title_full Geo-ethnoarchaeology study of the traditional Tswana dung floor from the Moffat Mission Church, Kuruman, North Cape Province, South Africa
title_fullStr Geo-ethnoarchaeology study of the traditional Tswana dung floor from the Moffat Mission Church, Kuruman, North Cape Province, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Geo-ethnoarchaeology study of the traditional Tswana dung floor from the Moffat Mission Church, Kuruman, North Cape Province, South Africa
title_sort geo-ethnoarchaeology study of the traditional tswana dung floor from the moffat mission church, kuruman, north cape province, south africa
publishDate 2017
url https://architexturez.net//doc/10-1007/s12520-017-0470-0
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-017-0470-0
long_lat ENVELOPE(165.700,165.700,-70.650,-70.650)
ENVELOPE(-55.283,-55.283,-83.533,-83.533)
geographic North Cape
Moffat
geographic_facet North Cape
Moffat
genre North Cape
genre_facet North Cape
op_relation https://architexturez.net//doc/10-1007/s12520-017-0470-0
doi:10.1007/s12520-017-0470-0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-017-0470-0
container_title Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences
container_volume 9
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1115
op_container_end_page 1123
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