| Descriptive Attribute | Value(s) |
|---|---|
| Designator | Pit |
| Context rating | Secondary |
| General remarks | This is a fire installation. Floatation sample taken. Location is just in front of the two possible entrance stones of locus 1075. A second surface appeared directly in front of the stones, between the stones and the fire installation. This area will be a separate locus. Excavation has been postponed until the wall loci (1075, 1077, and 1069) have been removed and a greater area at that level can be investigated. Cut into 1075, possibly or built over. |
| Strat below | 1075 |
| Strat above | 1085, 1097, 1098 |
| Strat abuts | 1075, 1076 |
| Strat cuts | 1075 |
| Strat remarks | 1075 possibly built over |
| Top depth center | 595.14 |
| Bottom depth center | 595.1 |
| Dimension length | 1.0 |
| Dimension width | 1.0 |
| Start date | 2002-07-14 |
| End date | 2002-07-25 |
| Color | 10 YR 3/3 Dark brown |
| Texture | Loose silt |
| Composition | burnt earth, pottery, carbon |
| Description remarks | burnt |
| Tentative Date | Middle Bronze Age |
| Has note | Contexts excavated in trenches were recorded using the "locus system." A locus is any discrete three-dimensional entity excavated in a trench. The key to the locus system is the recognition that a locus is any one thing. Differences in soil composition or texture are therefore as important as, for example, the difference between a pit and a wall. If two entities were distinct, they were considered separate loci and were therefore assigned separate locus numbers. It should also be noted that every context excavated in a trench was given a locus number and thus the trench itself is made up completely of excavated loci. |
| Descriptive Attribute | Value(s) |
|---|---|
| Material | burnt earth, clay, broken pottery, carbon |
| Associated surfaces | 1075 |
| Remarks | Small pit lined with broken pottery including an early bronze age pedestal base |
Suggested Citation
Marie Hopwood. (2012) "Locus 1074 from Asia/Turkey/Kenan Tepe/Area C/Trench 1". In Kenan Tepe. Bradley Parker, Peter Cobb (Ed). Released: 2012-03-28. Open Context. <https://opencontext.org/subjects/859cd8e9-b4f6-49c1-060f-e46489daf88c> ARK (Archive): https://n2t.net/ark:/28722/k2251mm2t
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