![]() |
|
|
August 7 August 9 August 14 August 21 September 9 October 7 Progress Intro |
|
August 9, 2002Excitement has increased the last two days as our larger test units progress. On the whole the work is meeting expectations. Very dry conditions have been our greatest challenge as they make the soil extremely hard to move. The crew has resorted to using mattocks for what otherwise is delicate work. Four 1 x 1-meter test units were laid out on Tuesday this week in areas where shovel tests showed interesting potential. Excavation of the units started late Wednesday morning and by the end of the day Thursday two were completed. In the meantime, two others were started and should be finished by the end of today.
At the top of the next stratum our excavation stops. This deepest soil, 1824 inches below the surface, is what we refer to as subsoil. It is a yellowish red, stiff deposit that is very old, having been laid down by an ancient sea that once extended as far inland as Richmond and Petersburg. There are no artifacts (items made or used by people) in this soil other than those that may occur in features that intrude into it. In other words, former occupants of the site occasionally dug deeper holes that penetrated all three strata, and these were later filled in with mixed soil and artifacts to create features (things we archaeologists really get excited by!). As we excavate these larger units the quantity and range of artifacts naturally increases. Things we are seeing as all the soil from test units is sifted tell a story many millennia long. The oldest artifacts are among the most common pieces of debris left by Indians several thousand years ago as they made stone tools like spear points and knives. Later Indian artifacts are turning up, too, like small fragments of pottery bowls used for cooking food. The style of the pottery tells us that an Indian community resided in this part of City Point when English explorers first arrived and met the Appomatuck Indians in 1607. Maybe some of these belonged to the famous "Queen of the Appomatuck". Colonial artifacts are not abundant in our excavations so far. But we have found some pottery, pipes, and bottle glass that dates from the 1700s. The relative scarcity of this material might be due to the fact the project area was at the edge of the most active area of the old Eppes plantation. Our historical documents research is continuing to help us understand this relationship. Some of the artifacts from this period could also come from the tavern that was on the adjacent lot across Bank Street. Far and away the greater portion of artifacts from all units dates to the period 1800 1925. This reflects the time of intensive activity on the property connected to establishment of City Point village in the 1830s, the Civil War, and then development of 20th-century Hopewell. As noted in the last report, records indicate the first house on the property was erected about 1840.
|
Why Archaeology The Process Follow Our Progress Maps City Point History More... Home