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August 7 August 9 August 14 August 21 September 9 October 7 Progress Intro |
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October 7, 2002The City Point archaeological project has been proceeding on three fronts over the last month. On September 21 we offered a public open house in conjunction with the Hooray for Hopwell event. Our exhibit was put up on the Prince Henry Avenue lot to showcase the results of recent work there. Storyboard panels were displayed describing the process and outcome of the work, with emphasis put on the exciting information in Feature 8, the Civil War pit. A selection of artifacts was provided as well. Turnout was light but those who did stop by were impressed and interested. It was also nice to see new neighborhood friends after some time away from the site. Throughout the project laboratory work has been quietly underway at the
College of William & Mary. The thousands of artifacts recovered already
must be carefully washed and catalogued before serious study gets underway.
Often it is only after the finds are cleaned that we can understand what
they are. The first major product is a complete inventory of all the material
excavated on the Prince Henry property. This catalog provides a basis
for determining when people were occupying the site and what they were
doing there at different times. Each item is coded according to several
attributesincluding location of discovery, type of item, method
of manufacture, and material it is made from, among others. Some of the
more exciting chores in the lab involve mending artifacts that are recovered
in pieces, and conserving items that are very fragile and
suffering from deterioration. From the large Civil War feature, for example,
we were able to reconstruct a large ceramic pitcher
found in many pieces. Soon we will begin cleaning the hundreds of iron
artifacts covered with corrosion. Details on buttons will be revealed
through this process, along with features of metal plates and tools. An
impressive quantity of animal bone was recovered from the pit feature,
too, and it was just submitted to a specialist who will determine which
animals are represented and how the Union army went about feeding its
masses of soldiers. Typically, archaeological lab work takes twice as
long to complete as the fieldwork if not more. But it is these
specialized studies that produce the most valuable information.
We expect the survey work at the fort park to be completed early next week. Afterward we hope to examine one more lot before launching into intensive report writing. |
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