heatingremains
Heatingremains is a term used in archaeology and related fields to describe the physical remnants of past heating practices found at archaeological sites. It encompasses features and materials that indicate how people generated and used heat, including domestic hearths, ovens and kilns, furnaces, and residues left by combustion such as charcoal, ash, and slag. The study of heatingremains helps reconstruct daily life, technology, and energy sources in past societies.
Common components include hearth features (stone or brick-lined receptacles, pits, or simple fire pits), ovens and
Methods involve excavation with careful stratigraphic recording, micromorphological analysis of soils, charcoal identification and dendrochronology, residue
Interpretation of heatingremains yields information on fuel economy, technology choices, labor organization, trade, and energy access.
Challenges include differential preservation of organic residues, post-depositional disturbance, and misinterpreting natural fires as intentional heating.