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Courtney and Maddie next to their unit, S7E20 |
Hello
everyone!
It’s
Courtney and Mady back to tell you about our unit. On the first day of
orientation, we were thinking we may have been in over our heads, especially
when we started the field exercises. Thankfully, we quickly realized once we
started stringing up and excavating our unit that we love getting down in the
dirt. There have been challenges, such as torrential downpour, scorching days,
and bugs upon bugs, but we wouldn’t have it any other way!We
started our excavations in Trench 1 as the furthest unit to the east, behind a
bone midden, known as Feature 29, where the people living at the Fort would
have dumped their leftover animal bones in a sort of trash heap. We were hoping that
our unit may have been part of the bone midden, but upon further investigation
(deep in the notes of the field school's past), we realized that the bone
midden extended to the west, in the opposite direction of our unit, and so we
pondered about what else we could find. We had to get through a lot of
20th-century landfill, so broken glass, glass bottles, plastic, and rocks were
abundant at first. Shortly after we really got digging in the first week, we
noticed an orangey soil coming up in little patches here-and-there. We thought
that it could be transition soil from the 20th-century landfill to the plowzone, so we kept going, hoping to find 18th-century artifacts. We started to
find seed beads, a few pieces of lead shot, a lot of bone fragments, and we
even found a straight pin which was used for pinning garments! The excitement
was invigorating! |
We recovered this straight pin in our unit! |
After
about two weeks, we noticed that the orangey soil change had overtaken most of
our unit. We were then told that we had probably hit the B horizon, the level
beneath the occupation zone, without actually hitting the occupation zone. At
that point, we were stumped before Dr. Nassaney gave us some insight. He
hypothesized that when the trenches were being dug with the backhoe, the
elevation couldn’t be seen properly, so they may have dug a
little too deep, taking off some of the plowzone. There were
18th-century artifacts found in the soil, so it all started to make sense.
We were kind of disappointed, but, as students of archaeology, understood that
this was still a great opportunity for learning.At
the moment, we are in the middle of mapping out our first level. We are still
finding bone fragments and we even found more lead shot in our wet screening,
so we are planning on digging a little deeper to make sure we are in the true B
horizon. If we do find that we have no artifacts in the soil, we will close out
our current unit and start a new one. The new one will be further down the
trench, to the east. We think we might run into the same problem, but with how
unpredictable archaeology can be, who knows what else we might find!
1 comment:
It is amazing that you get to do this kind of work. I like history, especially local history and am looking forward to seeing all you have discovered in August when you have your open house.
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