ARCHAEOLOGY Subscribe! Special Introductory Offer
Renew Subscription
Buy Back Issues
Give a Gift Subscription
A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America
 
Email this article
interactive digs
Field Notes 1999 "Brooklyn's Eighteenth-Century Lott House"
July 9, 1999

Over the past week-and-a-half Maura, Alyssa, and Chris have been hard at work in the lab, finishing up the work of the first field session and preparing for the second.

We continued the tedious process of washing, drying, and recording artifacts. Once again, clam and oyster shells were the big winners in terms of sheer quantity. Ceramics, pipe fragments, and marbles also enter the mix.

[image][image]
Ceramics and shells dry on large screens after cleaning. We don't wash the shells--running water might make them fall apart. Instead we wipe them off, usually with a damp brush, to remove the dirt. We've counted almost 2500 shells from this unit alone with about 25 collection bags still to go. (Courtesy Brooklyn College)

There were no surprises. The hot, humid weather did nothing to help the process along. Artifacts that absorb water (bone, brick, shell, etc.) don't fully dry in this weather, so we did not accomplish as much as we'd hoped to; with limited drying space, we can't begin washing a new batch until the first batch dries. We only got through the objects from 15% of the units we excavated. And until we've had a look at the rest of our finds, we can't get to the exciting part of lab work: examining artifact densities, comparing types, looking for patterns, and so on.

[image][image]
Evidence of the Lott barnyard menagerie comes to the lab. Meanwhile, the faunal expert improvises a table amid a sea of artifact collection bags. (Courtesy Brooklyn College)

Laboratory work doesn't produce the quick and easy "wows" of fieldwork. It is said that for every four weeks of digging in the field you're going to spend at least 6 months in the lab decoding finds. The mood in the lab this week was one of disappointment. We'd hoped to accomplish so much more. Still, you haven't lived until you've watched clam shells dry. As of Wednesday, July 7, we're back in the field. After this mind-numbing week, we're eager to hit the trenches and will even be happy to face what the media is billing as "New York's Deadly Heat Wave."

Discussion Question:
Once the artifacts are cataloged, what issues can we begin to address?

previousnext

Lott House Main Page | Field Notes | Bulletin Board

-----
© 1999 by the Archaeological Institute of America
www.archaeology.org/online/features/lott/fieldnotes/3.html

Share this page:



del.icio.us  StumbleUpon

Share

E-Update

Stay up-to-date on news and
new features on our website.
Click here to sign up.

Buy current & back issues:

ARCHAEOLOGY back issues
See what's available!

current issue
Current Issue

online content

Exclusive Features
Dynasty of Priestesses; Tut: Disease and DNA News; Hoaxes, Fakes, and Strange Sites

Latest News
Daily archaeological headlines

Interactive Digs
El Carrizal, Mexico; Zominthos, Crete; Sagalassos, Turkey

On Site
Touring Provence , Voyage to Crete, Picturing the Holy Land

Reviews
"Becoming Human," "Discovering Ardi," "Magic in Ancient Egypt"

Interviews
Richard Leakey, Edward Bleiberg, Andrew Edwards

Privacy Policy - Contact Us - Advertise
© 2010 Archaeological Institute of America
Website by Castle Builder Design
Hosting donated by Hurricane Electric
he.net