Observations vs. Inference
Vocabulary
Artifacts Analysis
Context Clues
Real-World Archaeology
100

This is a statement about what you directly see, hear, or measure.

What is an observation?

100

An object made or used by humans.

What is an artifact?

100

You find a fork, spoon, and plate together . What area might you be excavating?

What is a kitchen or dining area?

100

If you find coins under a floorboard, what might that suggest? 

Someone hid or stored them there.

100

This famous tomb discovery in Egypt was filled with artifacts that helped archaeologists understand ancient royalty.

What is Tutankhamun's tomb?

200

"You see a cracked bowl." Saying "It was dropped" is this type of statement.

What is an inference?

200

The study of past human societies through materials and remains.

What is archaeology?

200

Why might a broken toy be important to archaeologists?

It tells us about children, play, daily life, or family structure.

200

Why is a context just as important as the artifact itself? 

Because where it's found helps explain how it was used.

200

This buried Roman city helps archaeologists study daily life because it was preserved by volcanic ash.

What is Pompeii?

300

Why is it important to separate observation from inference in archaeology?

Because observations are facts, while inferences are interpretations that may be wrong.




300

The location and position where an artifact is found.

What is context?

300

If you find sports trophies and cleats together, what can you infer? 

The person may have been an athlete or involved in sports. 

300

If an artifact is removed without recording its location, what is lost?

Important contextual information


300

This Inca site in Peru helps archaeologists study architecture and daily life in the mountains.

What is Machu Picchu?

400

You find a shoe that is very small. Saying "it belonged to a child " is an example of what?

What is an inference?

400

A testable explanation based on evidence.

What is a hypothesis?

400

Why shouldn't archaeologist immediately decide what an artifact means?

Because new evidence could change the interpretation. 

400

At sites like Pompeii, why is context especially valuable?

Because objects were preserved exactly where people left them, showing daily life.

400

Why can two archaeologists disagree about the same site?

Because interpretation is based on evidence, and evidence can be understood in different ways.

500

Give an example of an observation and one inference about a rusty key.

Answers will vary. Example Observation - The key is metal and rusted. Inference - It is very old"

500

Physical objects created or used by a society.

What is a material culture?

500

How can modern bias affect artifact interpretation?

We might interpret objects using our own culture assumptions instead of understanding the past culture. 

500

How can artifacts found together change their meaning?

They may show how items were used together or part of a specific activity.

500

Why is archaeology sometimes compared to detective work?

Because archaeologists use clues and evidence to reconstruct what happened in the past.

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