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Soil Micromorphology×Munsell Soil Color×
FieldArchaeologyArchaeology
FamilyProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Year of origin19381905
OriginatorWalter L. Kubiëna (soil micromorphology); applied to archaeology by Goldberg, Macphail, Courty and othersAlbert H. Munsell (color system); standardized for soils by the USDA and soil-science community
TypeMicroscopic thin-section analysis pipeline for site formationStandardized perceptual color description pipeline
Seminal sourceGoldberg, P., & Macphail, R. I. (2006). Practical and Theoretical Geoarchaeology. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN: 9780632060443Goldberg, P., & Macphail, R. I. (2006). Practical and Theoretical Geoarchaeology. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN: 9780632060443
AliasesArchaeological Micromorphology, Thin-Section Micromorphology, Sediment Thin-Section Analysis, Micromorphological AnalysisMunsell Color Notation, Munsell Soil Color Charts, Soil Color Description, HVC Color Recording
Related22
SummarySoil micromorphology is the microscopic study of undisturbed soils and sediments in thin section to reconstruct how archaeological deposits formed and were altered. An oriented block is cut from a deposit without disturbing its internal structure, hardened with resin, and ground into a slice about thirty micrometers thick that can be examined under a petrographic microscope. At that scale the analyst can read features invisible in the field — the arrangement of mineral grains, microscopic charcoal and bone, plastered surfaces, dung, trampling fabrics, and the pedofeatures left by water, roots, and burrowing organisms. Developed for soil science by Walter Kubiëna and adapted for archaeology by geoarchaeologists such as Goldberg, Macphail, and Courty, micromorphology is the highest-resolution tool for interpreting site formation, occupation surfaces, and anthropogenic deposits in their original spatial context.Munsell soil color recording is the standard method for describing the color of soils, sediments, and artifacts in archaeology and geoarchaeology using Albert Munsell's perceptually ordered color system. Rather than relying on subjective names like 'brown' or 'tan,' the analyst matches a sample to printed color chips and records a three-part notation — hue, value, and chroma — that fixes the color as a point in a standardized three-dimensional space. This makes color a reproducible, communicable observation that different excavators, sites, and decades can compare directly. Color in turn carries information about organic content, oxidation and reduction, burning, and parent material, so disciplined Munsell recording is a routine first step in distinguishing deposits, defining horizons, and reading site formation.
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ScholarGateCompare methods: Soil Micromorphology · Munsell Soil Color. Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/compare