Sunday, April 29, 2018

1,000+ years ago a craftsman sat in virtually the same spot I am

And, using the ancient art of flintknapping he created tools and weapons. We can note this due to not only the amount of debitage (material produced during the process of lithic reduction), the amount of different types of core material, and because of the differing sizes of the flakes. The larger ones are from the beginning process of lithic reduction (the careful process of turning big rocks into little ones) and the very small one’s are chipped off during the finishing process. The different types of material would indicate a different group of people and or different time frame the pieces were being worked. What I found was a workstation. A place ancient craftsmen regularly went to practice their art. And, probably as noted by the differing types of material over a long period of time. As the pieces were flaked off they lay their undisturbed and untouched for over a thousand years, until I found them. They literally went from the craftsman’s fingers to mine.  



Wednesday, April 25, 2018

SUPER FEATURE (cue Superman music).

Okay maybe not, but this tiny 20x20 centimeter around 6 centimeter deep feature produced 34 flakes (some beautiful heat treated pressure flakes), and a large piece of prehistoric pottery (which promptly broke into two). Everything was found within 2 centimeters of the surface and the remaining fill soil was sterile. Which would mean there had been a lot of artifacts in the soil that had been there. Unfortunately, the damn bulldozer which was to scrape the surface dirt away went way too deep and scraped away a lot of irreplaceable artifacts.  




Saturday, April 21, 2018

You’re Looking at an Approximately 9,000 Year Old Piece of Grass.

We found a sealed feature in the BE horizon 30 centimeters deep. As per “school energy&environment” it takes 200 to 400 years to create 1 centimeter of soil. If we take 300 years as a mean and times that by 30 centimeters deep in the soil we can estimate its age at 9,000 years. We found several pieces and each were as soft and pliable as if it were still alive. ARCHAEOLOGY FUCKING ROCKS!!



Wednesday, April 18, 2018

It's such a lovely winter we're having this spring

Rain and heavy winds once again turned our project area into a quagmire. Raining now and till midnight when it starts snowing.


Friday, April 13, 2018

Bisecting and Dissecting Features

In Archaeology features can tell us a lot, or in this case tell us this was probably a tree that was hit by lighting and burned to cinders. We can note this by the bisected shape and that is was a straight down excavation.