This book explains the deep influence of biological methods and
theories on the practice of Americanist archaeology by exploring W.
C. McKern's use of Linnaean taxonomy as the model for development
of a pottery classification system.
By the early 20th century, North American archaeologists had
found evidence of a plethora of prehistoric cultures displaying
disparate geographic and chronological distributions. But there
were no standards or algorithms for specifying when a culture was
distinct or identical to another in a nearby or distant
region.
Will Carleton McKern of the Milwaukee Public Museum addressed
this fundamental problem of cultural classification beginning in
1929. He modeled his solution--known as the Midwestern Taxonomic
Method--on the Linnaean biological taxonomy because he wanted the
ability to draw historical and cultural "relationships" among
cultures. McKern was assisted during development of the method by
Carl E. Guthe, Thorne Deuel, James B. Griffin, and William
Ritchie.
This book studies the 1930s correspondence between McKern and
his contemporaries as they hashed out the method's nuances. It
compares the several different versions of the method and examines
the Linnaean biological taxonomy as it was understood and used at
the time McKern adapted it to archaeological problems. Finally,
this volume reveals how and why the method failed to provide the
analytical solution envisioned by McKern and his colleagues and how
it influenced the later development of Americanist
archaeology.
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