Archaeology

Identification Methods

A practical guide to the most common ways archaeologists identify stone artifacts and the materials theyโ€™re made fromโ€”what each method can (and canโ€™t) tell you.

From field to lab

Identification is strongest when multiple lines of evidence agree. These steps outline a typical workflow for stone artifacts and raw materials.

01

Document context

Record provenience, stratigraphy, associations, and photographs. Context often narrows identification more than the object alone.

02

Describe the object

Measure, weigh, and note color, luster, grain size, fractures, and surface modifications (polish, striations, battering).

โ€œA careful description is a method. It turns a โ€˜nice stoneโ€™ into a testable observation.โ€

03

Compare and test

Use reference collections, controlled experiments, and targeted lab methods (microscopy, geochemistry) to check hypotheses.

04

Report uncertainty

State confidence levels and alternatives. Identification is rarely absoluteโ€”especially for weathered or heat-altered materials.

Core methods

What to look for

These approaches are commonly used to identify stone materials and to distinguish natural pieces from artifacts. In practice, theyโ€™re combined.

Macroscopic description

Start with what you can see: color, translucency, grain size, bedding, vesicles, fossils, and fracture style. Use consistent terms and note weathering.


Technological traits

For stone tools, look for platforms, bulbs of percussion, eraillure scars, dorsal scar patterns, retouch, and edge damage consistent with knapping.


Use-wear and residues

Microscopic polish, striations, and edge rounding can indicate worked materials (hide, wood, plant fibers). Residues may preserve starches, blood proteins, or plant silica (phytoliths).


Raw material sourcing

Compare to local geology and known quarry/outcrop sources. Petrography and geochemistry can link artifacts to specific formations or regions.

Field checklist

Light, hand lens, scale, magnet, hardness pick set (optional), and a camera. Photograph dry and wet surfaces; include scale and multiple angles.

Read the checklist

Common pitfalls

Heat spalls, frost fractures, plow damage, and river tumbling can mimic flake scars. Always test โ€œartifactโ€ interpretations against natural processes.

See common pitfalls

Confidence language

Use terms like โ€œconsistent with,โ€ โ€œprobable,โ€ and โ€œpossible.โ€ Note what evidence is missing (e.g., no platform, no bulb, heavy abrasion).

Learn reporting terms