History

A concise, stone-focused timeline of archaeology: how the discipline formed, how methods changed, and how ideas about the past evolved.

Why “history” matters

Archaeology has its own history—shaped by museums, empires, laws, scientific tools, and changing ethics. Understanding that story helps you read excavation reports critically, recognize older biases, and see why stone artifacts are interpreted differently today than they were a century ago.

Key phases in archaeology

Short sections you can skim in order, or jump around—each highlights what changed, what evidence was prioritized, and how stone materials were studied.

Hands shaping stone with hammer and chisel
Early

Antiquarians and collections

Before archaeology was a science, it was often a pursuit of collectors. Stone axes, carved marbles, and inscribed stelae were gathered into cabinets of curiosities, with limited context recorded.

Objects over context

Early typologies emerge

Museums shape narratives

19th century

Stratigraphy and deep time

Geology transformed archaeology. Layering (stratigraphy) and the idea of deep time made it possible to order stone tools and sites chronologically, not just stylistically.

Stratigraphic excavation

Three-age system spreads

Regional sequences

Close-up of stoneworking tools and stone surface
Detail of stone being worked with a chisel
20th century

From culture history to science

Archaeology moved toward explicit questions and testable models. Stone analysis expanded from “what is it?” to “how was it made, used, moved, and discarded?”

Processual methods

Use-wear and residue

Sourcing and exchange

Methods that changed the story

A few turning points that reshaped how archaeologists date, identify, and interpret stone materials.

Relative dating

Stratigraphy, seriation, and cross-dating help place stone artifacts in sequence even when absolute dates are unavailable.

Absolute dating

Radiocarbon (for associated organics), luminescence (for sediments), and other methods can anchor stone-rich contexts to calendar time.

Petrography and thin section

Microscopic study of stone fabrics supports identification of raw materials and manufacturing choices.

Geochemical sourcing

Elemental and isotopic signatures can link obsidian, chert, and other materials to specific sources, revealing exchange networks.

Digital documentation

3D scanning, photogrammetry, and GIS make it easier to compare stone artifacts and map distributions at multiple scales.

Ethics and stewardship

Laws, repatriation, and community collaboration changed what gets excavated, how collections are managed, and who benefits from research.

Continue in Archaeology

Return to the Archaeology overview for chapters, key takeaways, and selected reading.

Explore stones in the shop

Browse real specimens and materials referenced across our archaeology and geology guides.