Descriptive Attribute | Value(s) |
---|---|
Designator | Wall |
Context rating | Primary |
General remarks | E wall of the room L.7. This is the best preserved wall when compared with the other ones of the same room. However, it is damaged significantly due to its proximity to the surface. It has only one row of mud-bricks survived and the white plaster on the W side of it indicates the interior of the room L.7. |
Strat below | 2 |
Strat equals | 7, 10 |
Top depth north | 587.64 |
Top depth south | 587.45 |
Dimension length | 2.9 |
Dimension width | 0.8 |
Start date | 2005-06-08 |
End date | 2005-06-19 |
Tentative Date | Ubaid |
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. |
Suggested Citation
Bradley Parker, Peter Cobb. (2012) "Locus 9 from Asia/Turkey/Kenan Tepe/Area D/Trench 10". In Kenan Tepe. Bradley Parker, Peter Cobb (Ed). Released: 2012-03-28. Open Context. <https://opencontext.org/subjects/50948ecf-383f-460a-ce9f-ea7177295162> ARK (Archive): https://n2t.net/ark:/28722/k2tb13f99
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