The Excavation Continues--Aaron and I Open a New Pit--Call Home--Caribou for Dinner--A Shower |
Tim's Journal: Aaron and I were assigned the opening of a new pit. Forman Kristen Wenzel
measured out where we were to dig and off we went. It turned out that
our site was a midden, or zone of accumulation animal bones. There were
bones of caribou, fox, squirrel, seal, and other animals. The bones were
badly broken because the Eskimos would extract the marrow. There were
so many bones that at the end of the day we had bushels. We also found
other interesting artifacts, including caribou antler tools, a tooth pendant,
a piece of an ivory bolo, pottery fragments and a projectile point. Aaron
and I made a nuisance of ourselves constantly asking questions, I called home and talked to my wife Roz and my daughters Sarah 10, Rebecca 7 and Abigail 5. The phone calls here are transmitted by satellite so there is a few second delay which is always confusing, but was crazy this time with three little girls. For dinner our new cook and village resident Calvin Moto cooked Caribou stew with fresh rolls and peach cobbler. After dinner I walked the quarter mile to the Village Safe Water office for my first shower in Deering.
Randy Peterson in the lab at Deering.
AARON'S ADDENDUM: Archaeology is fun. It was great to slowly unearth bone after bone, always hoping it would be an artifact. Tim is a joy to work with, and we spent the day swapping stories as we dug. The weather for the whole time in Alaska has been unbelievable. The mosquitoes haven't been bad either. I keep expecting to see NOVA or National Geographic to show up and interview.
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