Skip to main content Skip to Search Box

Definition: excavation from Merriam-Webster's Collegiate(R) Dictionary

(ca. 1611) 1 : the action or process of excavating 2 : a cavity formed by cutting, digging, or scooping

ex•ca•va•tion•al \-shnəl, -shə-nəl\ adj


excavation

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
In archaeology, the systematic recovery of data through the exposure of buried sites and artefacts. Excavation is destructive, and is therefore accompanied by a comprehensive recording of all material found and its three-dimensional locations (its context). As much material and information as possible must be recovered from any dig. A full record of all the techniques employed in the excavation itself must also be made, so that future archaeologists will be able to evaluate the results of the work accurately. Besides being destructive, excavation is also costly. For both these reasons, it should be used only as a last resort. It can be partial, with only a sample of the site investigated, or total. Samples are chosen either intuitively, in which case excavators investigate those areas they feel will be most productive, or statistically, in which case the sample is drawn using various statistical techniques, so as to ensure that it is representative. An important goal of excavation is a…
2,630 results

Full text Article excavation

From Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
In archaeology, the exposure, recording, and recovery of buried material remains. The techniques employed vary by the type of site, but all forms of archaeological excavation require great skill and careful preparation. The process begins with site location, by means of aerial photography, remote…
| 156 words
Key concepts:

Full text Article excavation

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
In archaeology, the systematic recovery of data through the exposure of buried sites and artefacts. Excavation is destructive, and is therefore accompanied by a comprehensive recording of all material found and its three-dimensional locations (its context). As much material and information as…
| 301 words
Key concepts:

Full text Article ARCHAEOLOGICAL EXCAVATION

From Gaither's Dictionary of Scientific Quotations
Archaeologist …I may perhaps venture a short word on the question much discussed in certain quarters, whether in the work of excavation it is a good thing to have cooperation between men and women…. Of a mixed dig…have seen something, and it is an experiment that I would be reluctant to try again. I…
| 213 words
Key concepts:
Cremation burial showing evidence of...
The bioarchaeological analysis of burials and cemeteries provides us with a wealth of information about life and death in the past. Systematic excavation, documentation, and analysis of human skeletal remians are essential for extracting the maximum amount of information from the archaeological…
| 2,343 words , 4 images
Key concepts:

Full text Article EXCAVATION

From Gaither's Dictionary of Scientific Quotations
English author and physician The treasures of time lie high, in Urnes, Coynes, and Monuments, scarce below the roots of some vegetables. Hydriotophia Chapter I (p. 2 ) Printed for Hen. Brome. London England . 1658. Greek archaeologist To excavate is to open a book written in the language that the…
| 122 words
Key concepts:

Full text Article excavation

From The Macquarie Dictionary
| 33 words
Key concepts:

Full text Article excavation

From The American Heritage(R) Dictionary of the English Language
| 20 words

Full text Article excavation

From Dictionary of Architecture and Construction
excavation
| 20 words , 1 image
Key concepts:

Full text Article excavation

From Cambridge Dictionary of Human Biology and Evolution
| 66 words
Key concepts:

Full text Article classified excavation

From Dictionary of Architecture and Construction
| 21 words
Mind Map

Stack overflow
More Library Resources