Friday, July 31, 2009

Magnetic Poetry

The last week of the project has been a great week.

Friday and Saturday part of the group journeyed to Yosemite Nation Park. We spent Friday night at Anna's house(Thanks Mr. and Mrs. Antoniou- we loved the fruit!) and then went to the park Saturday. Our first stop was at the Mariposa grove, The Giant Sequoia Trees




After seeing the trees, we headed down to the Yosemite Valley, ate lunch, went on a small hike, and played in a refreshing water fall. Then we went up to Glacier Point and enjoyed the spectacular views Yosemite had to offer.

Sunday was our last day on site. We finished up the units and back filled them. We worked on some auguring, which Anna really enjoyed. Some topography was also done. Finally, we packed up all of our gear and left site.


The rest of the week has been spent doing post-ex work. We have had several intersting lectures on different aspects of archaeology. We worked on a lot lithics analysis. We learned how to do flotation. We visited the Oil Museum and Lake View Gusher Num 1!

Thursday, the group returned once more, to Wind Wolves to say goodbye to everyone there and and visit a few sites . We saw several sites that had previously been excavated and also a site that will be excavated next year. We also returned to one of our sites where we picked up the last of our gear and discussed what we would like to have accomplished next year. Then we headed out of the preserve stopping by a cool historic house, Dorothy's house.

This week has also included a lot of fun recreational activities! Including: bowling, multiple trips to Jolly Cone (our favourite local ice cream shop!), a Bakersfield Blaze game, and of course, lots of board games!

During the project we did a lot of fun things that never got posted... SO! Here's some more stuff that we did!
Mt. Pinos- The Centre of the Chumash Universe. On a day off Greg, Dave, Jessica, and Fraser decided to make the journey to the centre of the universe. It was a beauitiful drive to the mountain. We stopped at Pine Mountain Club for some lunch at The Screaming Squriell which was intersting and satisfying. The actual hike was fun and easy and cool to see the area.
We made team t-shirts!!! Here's a picture of Dave modeling the shirt!!

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Fraser's Olde Towne British Trail Mix Shoppe

A belated update as we come to the end of fieldwork--

We finished at our first site on Wednesday. The last days included a lot of landscape work: mapping with the total station, augering, and just thinking about the areas we'd covered. All of us have learned how the total station operates and used it to survey in points from the excavation and of the topography. The augering (which has become a very popular activity) showed that the slope opposite to the excavation is made of a silty clay, whereas our test pits were in a sandy silt area. The augering has been helpful practice for distinguishing among sediment types.


We can also see, leaving the site, that there are probably a lot more traces of activity throughout the upper plateau at areas other than where we've excavated. We've come across a lot of surface finds, including a nice lithic by the flat, open, scenic place where we screened our sediment (of course). The finds from the site overall are looking like Late Period, which is some help to locating the rock art temporally--although the finds from the shelter on the lower plateau might also contribute to that.


On Tuesday we visited Carrizo Plain and the Painted Rock pictograph site. The site has been open to the public for a long time as evidenced by the names and dates engraved on the rock formation and in many cases over the pictographs; a lot of the images are also eroded from wear. It's a good site for thinking about reasons for protecting rock art sites. Even though it's disappointing to see the pictographs covered over and worn away like that, the range of modern graffiti over the formation attests to the connections that many other people have formed with the site. And of course it's more than just disappointing to a lot of contemporary Native Americans who value that place, but the BLM has to balance those concerns with the use and availability of public land.



Anyway, we also saw a rock with a lot of BRMs.

More recently, we have been working at a quarry site that might help to answer some other questions about the rock art sites--but more on that to come in a later post.

OTHER UPDATES


We still haven't found the Lakeview Gusher.


But we did do some haircuts!







GREG'S TIP OF THE DAY
You should never breathe dirt, no matter what kind of diseases are in it.
Bonus tip! Don't pile rocks next to your unit.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

A Touch of Class... Out of the Wilds and into Society

After a great week on site, we ended the week with a trip to The Getty Villa on Friday. It was very interesting and we were taken behind the scenes and shown two of the conservation labs located there. We were able to see several artifacts in the process of being restored. Our guide, also talked to us about many of the issues they come upon when trying to restore the objects. Even though the materials they were working on were different from the artifacts we excavate (bronze & ceramics vs. lithics) the issues about artifact conservation were the same. First about preserving artifacts and sites, while still making them accessible to the public. Also, whether more moderation restorations should be preserved or remove... which is similar to rock art sites and their modern additions.

(left to right) Wendy, Bryan, Jessica, Fraser, David, Greg
Jack, Gale, Dawn, Christina, Anna, Julie

After our tour of the labs, we spent several hours touring the Getty Villa itself. It had a lot to offer, including many cool exhibits including The Chimaera of Arezzo and Roman Ephebe from Naples. The Villa also offered beautiful gardens over looking the pacific ocean.

The Getty Villa Gardens


The trip ended with a 7 hour excursion home which included a planned tripped to the beach and and unplanned detour home through the Mojave.



Our Route Home!

Saturday, July 18, 2009

A Week of Research.

Unfortunatley I have been sick all week, but on the positive side I did research on the Yokuts. After discussing possible ideas for a master theisis with Dave he suggested that I investigate research done on the tribe in the southern valley. What I found, was most of the research was in linguistics and that there was a dearth of information conserning lithics, rock art, and trade practices with the inland and coastal Chumash. This has given me a motivation and focus on ideas for possible research as I approach my masters studies beginning in August 2009.

I am excited to get back out in the field and continue the archaeology that we have been preforming at Wind Wolves. I also look forward to excavating the pigment site!!

So far my favourite part of the excavation has been the discovery of lithics and manuports. The idea that peoples from hundreds to thousands of years ago manipulated and touched these objects constantly excites me. This is the main motivation and excitment that spurns me forward in my desire to broaden my education in archaeology of the southern portion of the San Jaoquin Valley.

Written By: Bryan

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Onwards and downwards

This week has seen a lot of activity on site. As the first units bottomed out and were recorded we began to discuss what we had learnt, and if we felt we had answered the questions we came to the site with. It became clear that we still had work to do in order to better resolve what the relationships between the upper and lower activity areas might have been, and what variety of actions which took place on site. As such, a new larger (2x2m) unit was opened on the upper area of the site. Within minutes of beginning to excavate Christina and Anna were finding high densities of materials; ranging from large cores through to small bits of stone working debitage and fish vertebrae.

Just as the finds began to increase, so did the temperature. The crew are all coping well and possibly find David and I constantly asking 'are you drinking enough water', 'do you need to sit in the shade' more difficult to deal with than the heat itself.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

I never saw Indiana Jones shake a screen


Dawn sorts through a screen


This week we got a lot of work done on site. Most of us have shifted to the upper plateau, and we're nearly finished with two test pits up there. Everyone has also had a turn at doing section drawings and plans of the units as we finish excavating them. Jack has been working on a pit inside of the upper cave and there's another farther up, near some bedrock mortars. (BRMs are ground-out areas of rock used to process acorns, a staple of the Chumash diet. The proximity of BRMs to rock art in the area suggests that these kind of activities were taking place quite close to the shelters, which has a few implications for our understanding of the role of the rock art and the shelters themselves.)

Well, yesterday we had a bone bead plus a Cottonwood point and a good deal of lithic debitage come out of the pit near the BRMs. So far the upper plateau has given a lot more evidence of activities like knapping and food processing (animal bones and charcoal) than the lower plateau. On Friday, though, Dave found some promising artifacts farther back in the lower plateau's cave (ahem, rock shelter) which might provide an opportunity to date the rock art. There is a black-stained slab, potentially painted with charcoal. It was found painted side down with a very reflective piece of mica stone on top of it. Looks like there's a good story in that cave.

Our next step at the site might be to open up some areas on either side of a long, low piece of sandstone that probably continues under the dirt built up around it. Dave says we'll be doing things British-style then.



GREG'S TIP OF THE DAY
In kickball, always ask for the baby bouncies.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

It's not hard to make an Englishman blush



Today our dream came true. After tennis Fraser conducted a workshop on lithic technologies. We practiced identifying some tools from a 2007 excavation at Wind Wolves (at Pinwheel). We're all hoping to resume the workshop soon so that we can discuss flake morphology in more depth and go over categorizing the artifacts.



Anna showing off the large stone disrupting TP-04 (TP-02 to the left)

At site today we walked off a bit to see it all from a distance and talk about where we might put further pits and otherwise how to proceed with the site. We haven't found a great deal of material at the cave on the lower terrace, but that might be a result of the wash of the slope--or it could be that a more residential area was located farther upslope. Anyway, we also noticed this shark-like feature, reminiscent of the Chumash's animals turned to stone (bone?).


GREG'S TIP OF THE DAY
-Vacuum seal your sandwich for freshness

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Between A Rock And A Side Wall

FUN FACTS OF THE DAY:
-First Bead Found!
-First Gatorade Experience (Christina)
-Flat Tire… bummer!
-Duct tape has latex! Uh oh.
-Test Pit 1… lives on!

Today Wendy, our finds officer, will be arriving. The whole crew is excited for her arrival.

Today was another great day on site. We had the company of Jack and Gale

to help us excavate. Jack even found half a bead in test pit 5 today!! The whole crew was very impressed.



Test Pit 1 is nearing its in end, as most of the pit is now covered in very large rocks. Brain and Dawn have not found too much lately in test pit 1, however Jessica is not giving up quite yet.



Test pit 2 has bottomed out at bedrock but Anna and Christina have started digging test pit 4 adjacent to test pit 2. So far, several flakes have been found!

Tomorrow Jack will continue the new test pit started on the upper terrace and a new test pit will likely be started! Everyone is looking forward to the new test pit, as it looks like a promising site for finds. Jessica also hopes to continue will test pit 1, but is not sure how that will turn out.



THINGS TO LOOK FORWARD TO THIS WEEK:
-In-depth tutorial on lithic morphology
-Fraser’s Lecture
-Greg’s Lecture
-Fort Tejon
-Board Game Challenge Night!

Monday, July 6, 2009

Allergic to Cowboys


Jessica, Anna, and Christina here reporting from Taft College dormitory.









We've just resumed work after the first weekend. The site has two test pits going right now, one in a cave with cupules and pictographs and the other on a slope to the side of it. We've had some interesting materials coming from both, including some curious bones (bear tarsals? or another mammal--deer?) and a fragmented point. Test pit 1 is going well but has a plethora of large rocks. Test pit 2 has proved to be quite difficult because the dirt in the cave is very loose and slopes in from the northern wall, plus it's quite rocky already.


At the local Foursquare Church



There are cowboys on the property, too, because they have cows grazing the European grasses. Sometimes we see them as a cloud of dust in the distant hills--other times they sneak up on us.


We also had an exciting weekend. First of all, the sport camp portion of field school began on Saturday with some casual tennis matches while Fraser and Greg took up the running side of things. (We cooled down later in the afternoon with some spontaneous indoor wiffle ball, eventually followed by frisbee at Jessica's house.) We followed through on that on Sunday morning by watching the epic final match of Wimbledon on tv.



The crew spent most of the fourth at Jessica's house in Bakersfield. The highlights of the evening were tri-tip steak and fireworks in the driveway. We put on a show that got across the jist of the revolution through small fireworks: a British tank fired on a peaceful American fort, which retaliated with a piercing whistler firework and a few spinning things.

On Sunday the team leaders headed to LA for a rental car exchange. Jessica and Christina drove to Pismo, where we could drive the Vue right onto the beach (!) and then bask in the biting wind and admire the near-freezing water.

This week we're looking forward to finishing up the first two units and drawing the sections. After that we should be moving up to the higher plateau where a midden is visible, so we should have more artifacts to look forward to.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Any fool can be uncomfortable


Today was our first day on site as a group. Before any excavation could begin there was a lot of work to do in order to make excavation safe and more enjoyable. The temperature out in the sun on site can often be very high, as such students learned how to construct their own mobile shade structures. With these in place we could move onto discussion of how we choose where to excavate and how we go about it in a controlled and scientific manner (following the British Cooper/Garrow method). Two test units were laid out, and tomorrow we begin to excavate!

T+ 48



After forty eight hours in Taft, preparing for their arrival Dave and I finally got to meet the rest of our intrepid team; Anna, Bryan, Christina, Dawn, Jessica and our highly valued survey specialist Greg. We all got to know a bit about each other over a leisurely BBQ before the following day's introductory lectures, the high point being a talk by Julie on her excavations at Tashlipun.

With their appetities whetted Tuesday morning saw us head off to the preserve for the first time. Here, we were met by the staff of the Wildlands Conservancy; Dan, DC and Sheryl who spoke about the wonderful work going on on the preserve. A little wide-eyed after a saftey briefing covering rattle snakes, mountain lions and the heat the students finally got to visit some world class archaeology (see photograph above, where students are learning proper rock art etiquette while visiting one of the sites on the preserve).