Thursday, June 28, 2012
NC: Museum of the Albemarle fills up your summer calendar
While Museum of the Albemarle’s specialists are working in the field, unearthing history, they’re also inside putting together a number of exhibits and opportunities for the public.
Today from noon until 2 p.m. kids can learn a little something about being an archeologist.
They’ll visit with a real archeologist, watch a demonstration on state-of-the-art ground penetrating radar equipment and participate in several hands-on activities. This is a free program and the public is invited to participate and learn about archeology and the history of the region.
Next Friday is First Friday and MOA has something to offer. They will be hosting the unveiling of the ninth in a series of historical murals on loan from Chapel Hill. This mural, “Gettysburg,” by painter Francis Vandeveer Kughler was part of a series created for the University of North Carolina Institute of Government.
The Following week will be the museum’s Second Saturday event, celebrating the 200th anniversary of the War of 1812, and the 100th anniversary of the creation of the Girl Scouts.
At 11 a.m. on Saturday, July 14, Wade Dudley Ph.D., from East Carolina University will present “North Carolina and the War of 1812.” A specialist in naval history, Dudley will discuss the war from the water.
Also that day, MOA’s junior docents will lead kids in “patriotic inspired” hands-on activities.
You can also revel in 100 years of Girl Scouts by viewing the new exhibit, “Girl Scouts: A Hundred Years of Cookies, Brownies … and Much More!”
And throughout the summer there are a number of programs:
• Summer Fun: Pamlico Joe and Clean Water Flow
Wednesday, July 18, 10 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Celebrate the regions environment and explore the natural world through interactive songs with Pamlico Joe and Clean Water Flow that will have you singing along and dancing. Visit with Port Discover Science Center, North Carolina Inland Fisheries, Edenton National Fish Hatchery and USCG “Coastie” while participating in hands-on activities.
• History for Lunch
Wednesday, July 18, 12:15 p.m.—12:45 p.m.
Bring your lunch, we provide the tea, and enjoy a curator’s talk on special topics of area interest. Melissa Kobiela will present “Architectural Styles of Downtown Elizabeth City.”
• Kindermusik with Mrs. Marsha Neal
Wednesday, Aug. 1, 10 a.m. – 10:45 a.m.
Families will actively explore the many rhythms and sounds of Celtic/Irish themed music. The educational program is geared toward pre-school and elementary age children.
• History for Lunch
Wednesday, Aug. 1, 12:15 p.m.—12:45 p.m.
Bring your lunch, we provide the tea, and enjoy a curator’s talk on special topics of area interest. Clay Swindell will present “Native Americans in the Albemarle Region”.
• First Friday: Book signing
Friday, Aug. 3, 5:30 p.m.—7 p.m.
Book signing: Samuel Dixon of Edenton, “Stayin’ Put: Short Stories from Edenton.” Mr. Dixon shares his personal experiences as a friend, son, father and husband growing up in this small town in the remote Albemarle region of northeastern North Carolina.
• National Night Out: U.S. Coast Guard
Tuesday, August 7, 3 p.m. - 7 p.m.
In support of the National Night Out, the museum will be open with special activities with a U.S. Coast Guard inspired theme presented by MOA’s Junior Docents. All of the galleries will be open with guided tours available.
• Summer Fun: School Days
Wednesday, Aug. 8
Groups: 10 a.m. – Noon
General Public: Noon – 2 p.m.
Get ready to go back to school by taking a trip to schoolrooms from the 18th and 19th century, led by Junior Docents. Try your hand at writing with a quill pen and learn your lessons on a hornbook. “Make your manners” to the schoolmarm or schoolmaster. Watch out, though! You might be crowned with the “dunce cap” if you’re not careful.
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Israel Demolishes Historic Islamic Sites In Jerusalem
It might be true, I'm not saying it isn't. Unfortunately, these are the perils of trying to do archaeolgoy in an area where different cultures have different values of what archeology is important.
From ABNA.co: Israel Demolishes Historic Islamic Sites In Jerusalem

The area is part of the Al-Magharba neighborhood that was demolished by Israel on June 11, 1967, after Israeli occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
The Al-Aqsa Foundation reported that its teams repeatedly visited the site and examined documents and pictures documenting the Israeli violations.
It said that “the occupation is demolishing ancient sites, Islamic historic sites and structures, and claiming that it found Archeological Jewish sites underneath”, and added that “Israel is planning to build a huge Jewish Center, including five underground floors”.
The foundation further stated that the Israeli Archeological Authority conducted, in the period between 2005 and 2009, excavations on 1500 square/meters in an area west of the Al-Buraq Wall.
“The excavations were conducted in Ash-Sharaf neighborhood, that was taken over in 1967, and most of its ancient Arabic and Islamic buildings were demolished before Islamic constructed the Jewish Neighborhood”, the Foundation said, “Israel also demolished ancient Islamic archeological sites, residencies and public structures, including a mosque and the Al-Afdaliyya School”.
The demolished structures were built in the later stages of the Omayyad era, and during the Abbasid era, the Mamlooky era, the Ayyoubi era, and the Ottoman era.
“Israel is trying to void the Islamic culture, history and archeology, that extended for 1400 year”, the Foundation said, “Israel is trying to void an Arabic history that dates back to thousands of years, during the Canaanite and Yabousy eras”.
The Foundation stated that what Israel is doing is a “massacre targeting the Arab and Islamic history and culture in occupied Jerusalem, especially in the area adjacent to the Al-Aqsa Mosque”, and strongly denounced the silence of Arab and International institutions that are failing to intervene in stopping the Israeli violations against the Arab and Islamic archeological sites in Jerusalem.
It is worth mentioning that Israel’s leading paper, Haaretz, published on June 15 a picture taken by a German war plane flying over the Al-Aqsa mosque in 1931, clearly showing a mosque and the Afdaliyya School in Al-Boraq Wall area that were completely destroyed and removed by Israel in 1967.
The Afdaliyya School was built by King Al-Afdal Nour Ed-Deen Ali, the son of Salah Ed-Deen Al-Ayyoubi, more than 800 years ago in the Al-Magharba neighborhood in Jerusalem that was completely destroyed by Israel after it occupied East Jerusalem in June 1967.
In 2007, the Al-Aqsa Foundation published an ancient picture of the Al-Magharba neighborhood clearly showing the dome of the mosque in Al-Afdaliyya school.

Sunday, June 24, 2012
Digging for treasures at Maya tomb, ruins
Leading the group of 22 students is archaeologist Mat Saunders, 34, who has dug at the Cahal Pech Maya ruins site in western Belize since 2006. Saunders teaches anthropology, world religions, history and mythology at Davidson Day, a private college preparatory school.
His American Foreign Academic Research nonprofit is based at the school and raised at least $80,000 during the past year for student scholarships and preservation of the archaeological sites they discover.
Saunders also brings 20 of the world’s foremost experts on Maya archaeology and culture to Davidson Day each spring to share their latest research with the public at a Maya conference. He hosts a similar conference each year in Palm Coast, Fla., where he previously taught.
His trips to Belize have become so popular that Saunders added a second two-week session this summer, with some students planning to stay the entire four weeks, from June 22 to July 23.
In 2010, Saunders and his students found ancient jade beads, a staircase leading to a plaza and a circular building dating to about 500 B.C. Last summer, they discovered the Late Classic Period royal tomb with three kings in it.
They found what Saunders said were never-before-seen artifacts, including hieroglyphic inscriptions, artists’ tools and ornaments, a cache of jade jewelry and a carved, jaguar-tooth necklace.
“Other people have to look at it through glass,” rising 11th-grader George James, 16, of Huntersville said of the artifacts he and other students found. “We get to touch it. Gently.”
All of the artifacts will be on a museum tour beginning this fall out West, in Canada and possibly as far south as Washington, D.C., Saunders said at his home in Huntersville on June 20. Students and parents filed into their house throughout the afternoon for a pre-dig party, where the students received digging tools for the backpacks they’ll carry each day to the site.
Also on the dig are Davidson Day instructors Mike and Tiffani Thomas and noted archaeologists Marc Zender of Tulane University and Jaime Awe of the Belize Institute of Archaeology.
“It’s a full-scale archaeological project,” Saunders said – one that gives students hands-on learning.
George said he discovered an obsidian blade at the site last summer.
“We also found all sorts of pottery,” said rising 10th-grader Howard Strachan, 15, of Mooresville.
The pair is back in Belize again this summer, as are Sierra Thorson, 16, a rising senior from Davidson, and Jason Chinuntdet, 17, a rising senior from Mooresville. Sierra and Jason intend to make archaeology a career – Sierra wants to be a faunal archaeologist, one who studies ancient animal bones and skeletons.
When Sierra told a reporter of her career ambitions after she and other students gathered at their teacher’s home June 20, George interjected: “We already are archaeologists.”
“Just minus degrees,” Jason said.
“They definitely will have a leg up,” Saunders said of the experience the students gain in Belize.
When Jason went for a college interview at Northwestern University, a professor asked if he’d ever met the famous archaeologist Jaime Awe.
He’d even sat and chatted with him, Jason replied.
Friday, June 22, 2012
150 years later, sunken ship still fascinates
Mike Spencer
Facts
GOWhat: Open house at the Underwater Archaeology Center
When: 10 a.m.-noon and 1-4 p.m. June 27
Where: 1528 Fort Fisher Blvd., next to the Fort Fisher State Historic Site Visitors' Center
Tikcets: Free
Details: 458-9042
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
2012 Road Trip, Day 18: Among the Academics
I had a really interesting lunch today with a group of geography professors on the faculty of Michigan State University. These were very smart people and they had a lot of interesting things to say about life, geography and politics–but I’d like to focus on just one topic: why Americans don’t seem to respect the “intellectual elites” very much anymore.
“How can we solve our problems as a society when you have so many people who seem to disdain what we say because we’re academics?” said Alan Arbogast, who put together the group. He was an environmental specialist and he was talking about climate change. “The methods I use–that most of us use–are extremely conservative and strict. Our results are reviewed by our peers. We’re not proposing things that aren’t supported by the scientific method.”
“I’m more of an independent Republican, libertarian type,” said Joe Messina, who spends a lot of time traversing the equator, studying the effects of geography and environment on disease. “But my fellow Republicans think of me as a RINO [Republican In Name Only] when I start talking about the work I do. Their position on science is indefensible.”
Julia Miller, a student majoring in plant biology made a very interesting point: that science had changed so much since many of the people deriding scientists had been in school, and those people had a tendency not to believe things they weren’t taught. “My parents didn’t learn what DNA was until they were adults,” she said (although it was clear that Julia’s parents had taken the time to learn about that paradigm-shattering discovery).
But Tom Bird, a retired member of the MSU Education faculty made the best point of all: “A lot of my colleagues were deeply angry about the anti-intellectual attitude in the society at large. But there was a lack of reciprocity. There were a lot of very smart people in the College of Education who thought about things in a certain way–many of them were very left. They were dismayed by the sort of people we had as students. We got a lot of kids from the suburbs, and many of them have a Republican sensibility. Some of the teachers actually had contempt for the people they taught–and the students, of course, sensed it.
“The students would hear a pretty strident left-Democratic message from their professors and they’d cover up. They’d give the teachers what they wanted to hear in order to survive,” he said, instead of challenging them, starting a real conversation and actually learning something. And then the students grew up, went out and became citizens. “I think,” said Bird, who was, by the way, a strong Obama supporter, “that a lot of Americans are showing the intellectuals the same contempt that they were shown as students.”
There was a moment of silent reflection around the table. These academics were, clearly, rigorous rather than reflexive–and they had just heard an argument that rang a little bit too true for comfort.
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Couple found historic cemetery near their home
STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) — When the real estate agent showed Dick and Sandy Birdsell the little blue house on Cedar Circle, she shrugged off their questions about the headstone on an adjacent lot steps from the driveway.
The Birdsells let the issue go. So they bought the house and in time started clearing the quarter acre, where the headstone serves as a buffer between their home and the street.
"It wasn't until I started cleaning it up that I realized it was a piece of history," Dick Birdsell said.
When the Birdsells bought the home to relax in their retirement 16 years ago, they became caretakers of a historic cemetery where members of two of Stamford's founding families were laid to rest as far back as the 1700s.
"When we got here this piece of land was a dump," Birdsell said. "All the people on the street, the contractors who were building here, any time they wanted to get rid of anything they tossed it in here."
It took a long time for Birdsell, 77, to remove piles of brush and leaves, and then scraps of metal and wood. But it was worth the effort. Beneath the junk he discovered gravestone after gravestone. Most featured the names Lockwood and Scofield, while others were etched with names such as Knapp, Buxton and Finch.
Through the Stamford Historical Society the Birdsells found that in the 1930s, the Works Progress Administration had indexed the stones in the city's more than 40 old cemeteries. They compiled a list of 35 people in "Lockwood Cemetery (hash)5," which is how they labeled the Birdsell's.
Though the Birdsells have not found all 35, they have devised a trick for reading the stones. Sweeping dirt over the inscriptions and then dusting off the excess, they are able to bring the text to life without damaging the fragile stones. This allows them to speculate about the various figures resting in front of their home. Maybe the smaller stones indicate infants, or perhaps they are foot stones marking the length of the graves.
The big mystery is Phebe Pender .
According to the WPA, she was born in 1820 and died in 1883. Most of the families in the cemetery are represented by multiple members, but Phebe is the only Pender.
"Nobody seems to know why Phebe ended up with all the Scofields and the Lockwoods," Sandy Birdsell said with a raised eyebrow.
"Somebody must have had a girlfriend," Dick Birdsell added wryly. "We got the best neighbors in the world here. I invite them for coffee and bacon and eggs all the time and they never show up."
Though they did not know what they were getting when they bought their house, the Birdsells are happy with their slice of Stamford history.
"I don't have a problem with it being here," Sandy said. "I know some people are hesitant about buying property next to a cemetery but that didn't bother us when we discovered it. But I could not understand how it was let go, how could people let it get like that?"
The Birdsells are committed to caring for the lot. "It is a family cemetery and we want to treat it with respect," Sandy said. "I don't care how old the cemetery is, it is sacred."
Easter Island archaeology project digs up island's secrets
New photographs reveal what lies beneath the surface of Easter Island, one of the most remote places in the world -- the carved bodies of the island's 887 famous guardians.Most people think of the 63-square-mile Pacific island’s silent stone sentinels as simple heads. But the heads all have bodies -- and a backstory that's only now being pieced together, explained Jo Anne Van Tilburg, director of the Easter Island Statue Project.
“Those statues which are the most photographed are standing in the quarry. They’re buried up to mid-torso level. So it’s understandable that the general public didn’t have a clue that those statues had bodies,” she told FoxNews.com.
Current belief is that the statues were carved between A.D.1100 up until the 1800s, when an influx of Westerners transformed the culture. Van Tilburg, a fellow with The Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at the University of California, Los Angeles, has only been coming to Easter Island (called Rapa Nui) to do research for twenty years, since 1992. But she first came more than thirty years ago -- and stayed for one clear reason.
“I fell in love with the statues,” she said simply.
“I came to Easter Island in 1981. I was impressed with the number of statues and that they seemed accessible to me, they were on the surface. I wanted to know what was below the surface.”
First Van Tilburg documented the island’s statues and those that have been removed to museums; there are 887 inventoried, though she says the number is closer to 1,000. Then she began the next phase of work to reveal what lay beneath the ground -- covered up not intentionally by men, but through centuries of exposure to the environment.
That process has taken 12 years so far, and may take a lifetime of work.
“It’s the first time that one has been excavated in such a way that the documentation was complete and scientific,” she told FoxNews.com. Other groups have dug in the past, and looters have found their way to the remote island as well.
“People have been treasure hunting there for a long time.”
Van Tilburg is conducting a far more thorough examination, however, working in collaboration with a staff of three in California and ten Rapa Nui natives who are doing all of the excavation work. She is currently gearing up for the sixth scheduled dig on the island, which should run from October through November 2012.
Work so far has revealed evidence of ceremonies and very large quantities of paint; the archaeologists believe the workers painted the statues as well as their own bodies.
She found evidence of human burials nearby as well.
And recent digs have revealed just how the massive heads were carved -- some of which tower more than 30 feet in height, from base to top, and weigh more than 80 tons.
“We found over 500 stone tools. The statues were carved with different types, big heavy picks and finer basalt and obsidian tools to finish details,” she explained. Other tools were used to rub surfaces and burnish the statues. Van Tilburg found evidence of post holes as well, big enough for a tree trunk, and rope guides carved in some statues to elevate them into standing position.
But the intent of the giant sculptures, their reason for being, is still not totally clear.
“Think of China where they buried an army of standing warriors. That group was intended to be together as part of a burial feature. Here, on Easter Island, each statue is individually constructed by groups.”
A signed stone recently discovered beneath one of the heads held a petroglyph of a Polynesian style canoe, and a clue: It was meant to signify identity, Van Tilburg said.
“It was meant to identify that statue either to a family group of people or a subgroup, either carvers or the family unit the carvers came from, or beyond that, to the chief,” she told FoxNews.com. The giant sculptures were most likely relatives and not guardians, in other words.
Later sculptures were far more realistic and individualistic, she noted, which also reveals something about the changing culture, as native peoples moved from highly controlled fiefdoms to a society allowing for more individual expression.
“It’s always important to get beneath the surface of things,” she said.
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Origins of man?
The Nihewan Museum, in Yangyuan county, Hebei Province, opened Saturday in time for China's 7th World Heritage Day. This is the first domestic museum to exhibit relics spanning from the Old Stone Age to the New Stone Age.
Starting construction in 2007, the museum draws on the resources of Nihewan Lake and displays drawings, sculptures and interactive technology.
Museum exhibitions show scenes of human beings dating back 2 million to 5,000 years. Over 50,000 relics unearthed from Nihewan sites are shown, including stone tools, fossils, skulls and teeth. There are interactive elements as well; visitors can practice building fires, making stone tools and more, using electronic touch screens.
"It is difficult to exhibit relics from the Paleolithic period in an [interesting] way. Nihewan Museum displays the relics accurately and interactively," said Shi Jinming, the director of Shanxi Museum and an archaeologist.
Nihewan Basin
A half hour drive from the museum is Nihewan Basin, where much of the museum collection was gathered. Two million years ago, Nihewan Basin, located along the Sanggan River in Yangyuan, was once a large lake of over 9,000 square kilometers.
The basin is internationally known for holding stone tools and ancient animals and plants fossils from the earth's Quaternary Period.
To this date, 156 relic sites, including Majuangou, Xiaochangliang, and Donggutuo, have been discovered at the Nihewan Basin, with over 100,000 relics unearthed.
Currently, there are 53 sites from primitive tribes across the world and 46 are in China.
Among them, 40 are in Nihewan's relic group. The high density of sites makes Nihewana an invaluable archeological and academic site.
An excavated scraper found in an elephant's rib on the Majuangou site pushed the estimated origin of Asia's civilization back about 2 million years.
This makes Nihewan the only relic site comparable to the Olduvai Gorge in eastern Africa, known as "the cradle of mankind." It challenges the theory that Africa is the sole origin of mankind.
Wei Qi, an archeologist at Chinese Academy of Sciences, dedicated to the excavation of Nihewan site for 41 years and a discoverer of Houjiayao site said that primitive humans living in Nihewan goes as far back as 1.77-1.95 million years.
"If we can discover a single stone tool 2.5 million years ago in Nihewan, it proves the existence of human beings at that time. Then Nihewan, instead of Africa, will be the origin of humankind. It is a matter of when, who and in which stratum the fossils of ape man will be found in Nihewan," he said.
The research and excavation of Nihewan site can be traced back to the early 20th century when several foreign missionaries and archeologists began collecting geological data and collected fossils in the area.
Chinese archeologists participated in the research of Nihewan's topography in the 1940s and research expanded with the government's support. The value of this basin is recognized by the archeological circle.
In 1998, Yujiagou site was named one of the 10 biggest discoveries in archeology in China. In 2000, the investigation of Nihewan's old stone tools was honored as one of the 100 significant archeological discoveries in the 20th century.
In 2002, the site was approved by the State Council as a national natural reserve. It plans to apply to be a world cultural heritage.
Tourism in Yangyuan
A poverty-stricken county, Yangyuan county government is working on developing itself as a resort and scenic spot for cultural relics.
Local officials said they hope the museum, which costs roughly 50 million yuan ($7.85 million), along with the Nihewan site will boost the tourism industry and local economy.
"The museum is the first step in developing tourism. A series of tourism projects, including Xiaochangliang scenic spot and the cultural relics park will open to the public in the upcoming years," Zhao Aimin, deputy magistrate of Yangyuan country, told the Global Times.
Zhao said the tourism industry in Yangyuan is very promising. He places importance on making the subject interesting and approachable. "If people don't understand it, you can't expect them to tour here," he said.
Xie Fei, deputy director of Hebei's heritage bureau, said in addition to spreading word about the museum, it's also about enhancing the local culture, society and economy development.
He said that they are considering inviting the public to join the process of archeological investigation to make it interactive.
A total of 6.64 billion yuan will be invested in building Yangyuan as a tourist site. Official statistics show that the area attracted 50,000 visitors during the three-day vacation on Labor Day. Zhao said the number of visitors is expected to increase greatly after the museum opens. A four-star hotel is set to open next year in the county.
"The discovery would attract more visitors. However, tourist facilities and service quality should be improved first," said Wang Qiyan, professor of leisure economy at Renmin University of China, adding that at the moment, basic things like infrastructure for tourists is lagging.
"Protecting the cultural relics is top priority. Without it, there can't be a healthy development of tourism," Li Mingde, a researcher in tourism at Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times.
Wei said that while relics are generally under good protection in China, it is important not to be complacent.
"We should protect relics preventively. We can't protect them from nature, so sometimes we need to intervene."
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Archeological excavations in West Kazakhstan region
Specialists of the West Kazakhstan Centre of History and Archeology have found the burial of a young lady dated back to the Bronze Age.
It is situated in the territory of the ancient city of Zhaiyk some 12 kilometres from Uralsk. Archeologists claim that their discovery is unique. The woman was buried in the fetal position and her body was directed to the west. It is believed that a person buried like that will receive the second birth. People buried their relatives and friends in such a manner in the Bronze Age, over 2 thousand years ago. It means that if earlier archeological information dated Uralsk back to the 14th century, today there is proof that this city is much older. The ancient skeleton was situated near the 800-year old brick furnace. The team accidentally found the landmark site during routine excavations. It means that the two discoveries located in close proximity were in fact two millennia apart.
Murat Kalmenov, SENIOR FELLOW, WEST KAZAKHSTAN REGION CENTRE FOR HISTORY AND ARCHEOLOGY:
-The burial was higher than the base of the furnace. Then we have found an inscription, which said that there was a burial mound here in the 14th century. I believe that people living here hadn’t recognised it and built a furnace near it.
There are a lot of such historical complex areas in the territory of this region. This year excavations in Akzhaiyk, Chingirlau and Kaztal regions are planned to be launched.
Serik Ramazanov, DEPUTY DIRECTOR, CENTRE FOR HISTORY AND ARCHEOLOGY:
-In 2009 we found a similar ancient city in the Kaztal region. It was bigger than Zhaiyk. The length of this city was 900 metres and the width was estimated at 300 metres. We also excavated one residential area within the city and we are going to continue working.
An open-air museum is going to be set up in the place of the ancient city of Zhaiyk, where archeologists would like to collect all historical and archeological monuments of the region.
Friday, June 8, 2012
Archeologists Dig Up Clues To Kansa Tribe
TOPEKA, Kan (WIBW)-- If you drive down Highway 24 towards Silver Lake you may see a cluster of tents and people at Menoken Road.
They are part of an archeology training program taking place this summer.
Over 150 years ago the Kansa tribe lived in the field being examined by archeologists new and old.
Shards of pottery, burnt earth and bones offer clues to what the field once was.
Mauren Edison and Rachel Redington drove two and a half hours with their grandfather from Towanda to be part of the Kansas Historical Society's archeology camp.
New historians of all ages attended--including John and Isaaac Fowler of Topeka. They read about digs likethese in "The Smithsonian" and decided to join in.
Bob Hoard has more experience than all of them combined--more than 30 years in different states and countries. He says camps like these are good for the community.
It's history that Hoard says would have otherwise been wiped out. A highway widening project near Menoken Road will soon disrupt the site.
The prospect of saving pieces of the past inspires young generations to learn about those who came before.
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Pair of Archeologists Win Chesterfield Award
The Fullers, who are Town and Country residents, began doing digs in the Chesterfield area in the early 1980s as graduate students University of Missouri St.Louis.
Neathery Batsell Fuller did a Masters Thesis (Washington University) in 1985 on Thornhill: An Emergent Mississippian Farmstead in St. Louis County. It's located in Faust Park.
The pair discovered evidence of civilization in the Chesterfield area dating back to at least the 10th century.
Both Fullers are professors of archeology at the Meramec campus of St. Louis Community College.
The pair was nominated for their 30 years of work in Chesterfield by Mark Leach, a member of the Chesterfield Historic and Landmark Preservation Committee.
The award is named after Leonard Blake, "an amateur archeologist" who uncovered Native American artifacts in Chesterfield earlier, according to a St. Louis Post-Dispatch article.
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Indiana: Archeological dig at Collier Lodge on hold
For almost a decade, the students and faculty from Notre Dame's Archaeology Field School have worked side by side with volunteers from the Kankakee Valley Historical Society to dig in the dirt.
Excavating a site rich with history at Collier Lodge, the group spent weeks each summer sifting through carefully extracted dirt and pebbles to find shards of pottery, bones and arrow heads, bringing samples back to the lab and classroom where they could be studied.
But now Notre Dame is moving on, said Mark Schurr, associate dean for the social sciences and research.
"We worked there for nine years and we got a really big sample of the kind of archeology that's available at the site, and as an archeologist we look to learn things. At this site, we are nearing the point of diminishing returns," Shurr said.
That doesn’t mean that there is no work left to be done at the site, but Schurr said it will not be conducted by their team.
"As a rule, you never excavate the entire site, because people will come along in the future with better technology. We got the site on the national register, got a lot of sample to study, so we accomplished what we wanted to find out there," he said.
John Hodson, president of the Kankakee Valley Historical Society, said his group plans to continue work at the site, but not this year.
“We’re planning on doing future digs, but we’re not sure who is going to head up our next one. We still have our memorandum of understanding with Notre Dame, and we are still working with them, but we’re just not doing the dig this year,” Hodson said.
“I’ve talked with the state archeology department and they agreed the digs should continue, it’s just a matter of finding the right person. It could be that another archeologist at Notre Dame continues with us, or an archeologist at Indiana University South Bend. ... We have a lot of feelers out,” Hodson said.
Schurr and his team will instead move to its next site, Bailly Homestead, in conjunction with teams from Indiana University South Bend and the National Park Service. He said some excavation was done at the site in the 1970s but not using modern standards.
"We’re going to get a sense of what the archeology is like at the site, especially from the Joseph Bailly era,” Schurr said.
Saturday, June 2, 2012
Archeology team searches for unmarked graves at cemetery
It's been a heated debate for months-whether or not a proposed new Wal-Mart would be built on top of possible unmarked graves in Florence.
A team of archeologists have spent the week in the Shoals digging around for proof.
The areas in question lie beyond the wall of the cemetery in a rectangular shape.
"In effort to be absolutely certain, the Alabama Historical Commission asked the engineers for the project to bring in archeologists to test the rectangular areas North of both cemeteries," said Robert Muse, the Florence Planning Commission's assistant director.
All week, the team from the University of Alabama has been looking for any evidence of human remains, but so far, they haven't found anything.
"They spent Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday in the servant cemetery area, nothing was found," said Muse. "Now they're about to wind up the dig North of General Coffee's cemetery. So far, nothing has been found in that area either."
The team has been scraping 6 to 10 inches at a time in trenches that go anywhere from a foot to 6 feet deep.
Muse said that whether the development proposal goes through or not, this process has been positive for the cemeteries which have been isolated for years.
"They will have delineated boundaries of both cemeteries adequately surveyed, graves located and ultimately the Florence Historical Board and the Florence Cemetery Committee will be involved with the Alabama Historical Commission to maintain these like they should be maintained," said Muse.
Muse said that the project has to go through two more phases before receiving final approval. If everything goes through, he expects clearing to begin sometime in September.