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Special Award: Georgia Archaeology
Georgia Science and Engineering Fair
Sponsored by Society for Georgia Archaeology &
Georgia Council of Professional Archaeologists
Award: $50 cash in junior division and $50
cash in senior division
Background and Guidelines
Most
people think that archaeology is just digging up old things. While
archaeology involves excavation, it is a much more complex and
intriguing science! Because of its complexity, only archaeologists who
have a degree in Anthropology or related field and extensive field
training should conduct actual excavations. While you might assist a
trained archaeologist, we strongly encourage you NOT to excavate without
the direct and continual supervision of an archaeologist.
Archeology
is the science of recording, interpreting and recreating past life. The
position and relationship of material remains in the soil is of key
importance to archeologists. They carefully record contexts within
which artifacts are located prior to removing the artifacts. Then
artifacts are bagged, labeled, and identified. Finally, the story of
the site is told in a written report. Reporting is the way
archeological information is shared.
Nevertheless, digging and excavating a site is destructive. Once a site
is excavated it will not exist in the same way ever again. Even with
careful record keeping, some information may be missed because of human
error or shortcomings in current methods. Therefore, some sites and
portions of sites are left intact in order to preserve them for future
generations.
When
artifacts are collected without careful records, information of the past
is not shared, but lost forever. A part of the puzzle is removed and
the picture of that moment of history cannot be completed. This
collecting or "looting" robs present and future generations of an
understanding of our common history. Therefore, no excavation or
removal of artifacts should be done unless under the supervision of a
professionally trained archeologist.
Human
cultures have existed for tens of thousand of years. Our own culture is
only the most recent of the many cultures that have existed in the
past. Our lives in the present are greatly influenced by the cultures
of the past. Learning about lifeways of earlier people, including our
recent ancestors of the 18th and 19th century as well as those people
living thousands of years before us, teaches us about ourselves and how
we came to be the way we are. Studying the past teaches us about the
present.
Project Ideas:
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Compare clay sources with local pottery: locate present clay source
and compare to sherds found locally in pre-existing family
collections.
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Bioturbation: how are artifacts moved around in the soil by natural
causes? Do tunneling and digging activities by animals and insects
affect an artifact's location in the soil? (Also tree tips, natural
disasters, etc.).
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Study
pollen analysis as related to soil stratigraphy: (Done on a
"non-site" location.) Find a well-stratified area and determine what
climates of the past were like by what plant pollens are present in
the varying layers.
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Atlatl
re-creation: How does changing the variables of atlatl construction
(varying weights and varying shaft length) affect throwing distance
and accuracy?
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Pot
burst in the Southeast: How are pieces scattered (or not) if a pot
is broken in an open versus wooded area.
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What
effect does soil type and environment have on artifact
preservation? Does soil acidity affect bone preservation? What
does it do to historic metal (pewter, iron, silver, gold) artifacts?
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Research animal versus plant materials as bindings (for hafting
stone tools on to shafts, etc.). Read about what parts of animals
were used in the past. Collect and make plant materials (vines,
bark rope, etc.). Which plants work best? How might they compare
to animal materials?
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Research house design/materials during prehistoric periods and
historic periods. Study shape, size, configuration, architectural
materials, orientation, roof and wall styles, etc. What works best
for the southeast? How have these designs changed through time?
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Investigate natural food sources (plant, animal, water). What types
of resources are available in what physiographic regions? How many
miles would a family or group of 25 need to travel to meet their
needs throughout one year: in 8,000 B.C; in A.D. 1300; in A.D. 1700;
in A.D. 1840; in A.D. 2000?
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Study
the best containers prehistoric people would use when traveling
versus when living a sedentary life. What were they made of and
what shapes were they? Did these change through time? How do
containers differ in the colonial period and how are they different
now? Why?
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What
stone tool types (scrapers, drills, awls, etc.) or material types (chert,
quartz, metavolcanic, etc.) work best for varying tasks of
butchering/tanning? Visit a butcher shop and leather store to
obtain items to use in the analysis of tool performance based on
tool material; tool shape; and tool size.
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Zooarchaeologists study animal bone found on sites to learn about
the animal diet and environment of people in the past. Research and
study how the types of animal bone, the bones from various parts of
an animal, the gender of the animal, the type of animal (whether
domestic or wild), and the percentage of meat on each of various
parts of animals and various animals are studied and why this
information is important to archaeologists.
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Ethnobotanists study seeds and wood from sites to learn about the
plant diet and environment of people in the past. Discover how they
use the technique of flotation (both the physical process and the
addition of certain chemicals to process soil samples. Research
what types of seeds are likely to survive on archaeological sites in
the southeast. Discover the various environments indicated by
certain types of seeds.
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Archaeologists often excavate privies to find artifacts thrown away
in them. They also study the organic material in them. Research
the types of seeds and pollen that might survive in such an
environment. What would this tell about people living on the
site? Research the types of parasites often found in these
locations. Which parasites would indicate what types of diseases or
medical conditions suffered by people using the privy in the past?
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The
majority of archaeological sites are multi-component, that is
different people lived in the same area throughout prehistory and
history. Discover why this is so. Analyze what geographical,
environmental, topographical, geologic, and other factors determine
where people will settle.
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Archaeologists often uncover old medicine bottles from sites.
Research 5-10 types of 18th or 19th century medicines and discover
the percentages of alcohol, herbs, minerals, and other components in
each. What purposes did each component serve? What effect would
each have on the consumer?
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How
has advancing technology been used to date historic archaeological
sites? Consider the evolution of the method of bottle
manufacture; the changes in ceramics (both firing, pastes, glazes,
and decoration); changes in the way nails are manufactured; changes
in the way buttons are made, the materials they are made of, and the
styles, etc. Consider the availability of new materials such as
different kinds of metal, paper, or plastic.
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How
has advancing technology been used to date both prehistoric and/or
historic sites? Research, compare, and contrast different dating
techniques such as: C-14; amino acid dating, neutron activation;
dendrochronology; OCR; etc. Discover the differences in relative
and absolute dating.
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Why is
looting of archaeological sites so harmful? What does your
community or state do to protect archaeological sites? What about
the federal government and federal regulations? What can you do to
help protect sites?
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Discover documentary (historical accounts, diaries, photographs,
etc.) evidence about an old house site in your community and the
people who lived there in the past. Interview people in the
community who may know about the history of the house and families
associated with it. If you have permission from the land owner,
make a map (to scale) of the house (or house ruins), outbuildings,
yard, and associated plants. Try to use the documentary evidence,
oral history, and map to search for clues about life on that
archaeological site.
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If you
know of an archaeological site in the community, or know someone who
has a collection from a site, fill out a state site form for it. A
site form can be obtained from the University of Georgia Site Files
in Athens (part of the Anthropology Department). If you have
permission from the landowner who owns the site, visit the site and
make a map of it for the site form. (Don't collect any artifacts.
Just draw them on your map if you see any.) Make a copy of the form
to keep and send the original to the Site Files.
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If you
have the opportunity to work with a professional archaeologist help
him or her in the interpretation of a site. Study things such as
settlement patterns and inter and intra site patterning. Compare
the site to other sites on a local and regional level. Try to find
patterns of human behavior.
Web Resources:
Society
for Georgia website:
www.georgia-archaeology.org/sga
Native
Technology:
www.nativetech.org
Geology:
www.gly.uga.edu and
www.weinmanmuseum.org.
Georgia
history/prehistory:
www.cr.nps.gov/archeology.htm and
www.cr.nps.gov/seac/seac.htm
Radiocarbon dating:
www.c14dating.com
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