A Day Digging Test Pits--Up at 7--Gasoline Barge Coming in--10 Hours of Test Pit Digging--The Town Showers and Laundry Reopens |
Tim's Journal: Today's arrival of the gasoline barge finishes the town's restocking
of fuel. I spent all day with the bulk of the crew digging test pits.
The pits are 1-meter square and anywhere from .5 to 1 meter deep.
Ryan Peterson, cultural resource specialist, sketching test pits.
AARON'S ADDENDUM: My wrist is starting to get sore. Tim and I were discussing it, and we reached the conclusion that we have moved three or more tons of dirt and gravel over the past four days, with a small trowel. After four days, ten hours a day, my wrist and elbow feel like I've just pitched 500 curve balls without warming up. It hurts, but not in a bad way. Today I was trying to expose a 500-year-old house that had been placed inside twelve hundred-year-old human graves. The graves had already been removed, but the house is still there. It's a real puzzle to picture what exactly happened and which artifacts belong to which people.
Stephanie Barr digging a test pit
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