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Special Award: Georgia Archaeology
Social Studies Fair Guidelines
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
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 the culture 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. Archaeology is a way to study
this past by looking at artifacts, or things people left behind.
Archaeologists excavate, or scientifically dig up, these artifacts
and study the relationship of the artifacts to stains in the ground
and to various layers of soil. They analyze artifacts, study maps,
research other archaeological sites, and research old documents in
order to understand how people lived in the past.
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.
Project Ideas:
- Native American Indians have lived in what
is now Georgia long before tribes such as the Creek, Cherokee,
Yuchi and others. These Indians lived during times
archaeologists call the Paleo Indian, Archaic, Woodland, and
Mississippian periods. Discover the date ranges for each period
and how these periods differ by examining how house
construction, food, tool and pottery making, travel, trade,
religion, and government changed. Make models, drawings,
sketches, or diagrams to illustrate these changes.
- Research some of the Indian mounds in
Georgia, such as Etowah, Ocumulgee, and Kolomoki. Find out when
they were made and why. Discover why they were located where
they are. Did the environment (rivers, fertile flood plains,
hills, food resources) and political location (a certain
distance away from other mounds of the same period, from other
trading partners, from enemies) play a role in this location?
Make a model of two different types of mounds in Georgia. Make
maps to show the distance and relationship between mounds. Find
examples of raw materials that people during these periods of
time may have been trading. Locate areas where these materials
are found. Research trade, travel and marriage during this
period to study how such materials would get from one location
to another.
- Research the difference between historic
and prehistoric archaeology. Provide examples of prehistoric and
historic archaeological sites in Georgia. List, draw,
photograph, or make a model of at least five different resources
that a prehistoric archaeologist and a historic archaeologist
might use. Interview a prehistoric archaeologist and a historic
archaeologist, asking the same questions from a list you make up
beforehand concerning where they work, what kinds of sites they
study, how they do research, what types of things they try to
discover about a site, what they like and do not like about
their work, and other questions.
- Examine how marriage between different
groups of prehistoric Indians might affect pottery making. Make
accurate reproductions of different pottery styles from
different periods and try to discover where these types were
found throughout what is now the state of Georgia.
- Research the Mississippian period of
prehistory. How long did this period exist before Europeans
arrived in North America? How do archaeologists know that people
during this period participated in widespread warfare? Make a
model to illustrate some of your findings.
- Archaeologists like to examine dishes to
learn more about how people lived in the past. Broken pieces of
dishes (sherds) survive in the ground for thousands of years.
Often dishes can tell archaeologists if people were rich or poor
and what kinds of foods they ate. Research how historic
archaeologists use maker’s marks, vessel shape (bowl, plate,
cup,etc.), pottery type (based on decoration and paste), and
price inventory documents to discover this information. Study
your family’s ceramics like an archaeologist would do so. Count
the number of plates, bowls, cups, glasses, platters, serving
bowls, and other tableware in your kitchen. Make a note of the
number that match in each set. Note what they are made of
(ceramic, glass, plastic). Note any “maker’s marks”. Put your
data into a large table. Illustrate examples from the table.
Make interpretations from your data (ex.-hardly any dishes are
missing out of the set of fancy dishes, so you may deduce that
these dishes are rarely used and rarely broken; there are lots
of small plastic cups and bowls, so you may conclude that there
are young children in the household, etc.) Compare your data to
a friend’s data from his/her kitchen. What interpretations can
you make between the two households?
- Find a copy of an old Sears or J.C. Penny
catalog from the late 1800s or early 1900s. Find five items that
are no longer used today. Draw pictures of them and describe how
they were used. Find five items that we still use today. Draw
what they looked like in the past and describe what has changed
and what has stayed the same about them. Look at all ten items
and list what you would expect to find if you were an
archaeologist excavating an old old house site containing these
items. Remember, often only parts of things survive after being
buried in the ground. Make a list of what parts of each item
would not survive. Explain why.
- Archaeologists study people’s trash.
Usually this trash is anywhere from 50-10,000 years old. What
people throw away tells us about their life. Study your schools’
trash the way an archaeologist would. Choose three different
rooms in your school and ask permission of the teachers or
adults who supervise those rooms. Try to select rooms that
function in very different ways (music room, younger kids’
class, older kids’ class, etc.). Make a form that has a place to
record what the object is made of, what its function might have
been, and how many of that object you recorded. Every Friday,
for two weeks, go through the trash and record what you find.
Make sure you record the order you find it in also. For example
if there is a spelling list on top, candy paper in the middle,
and someone’s homework on the bottom, make sure you record that
on the form. Then you would know that whatever was at the bottom
of the can was thrown away first, and what’s on top was thrown
away last. That is “stratigraphy” and how archaeologists
discover more information. After two weeks look at the forms.
Analyze what you found in each trashcan, does it reflect an
entire week of trash? How do you know? Whose trash is it? How do
you know? What did they do during that period of time? How do
you know? Was there more, less, or the same amount of trash from
the second week? Why do you think that was the case? Compare the
forms from each room. How are they similar or different? Why?
Explain how you project reflects what archaeologists do at a
site.
- Archaeologists often uncover old medicine
bottles from sites. Research 5-10 types of 18th or 19th century
medicines and discover what ingredients were in them. Were there
ingredients in them that we no longer use? Are there some
ingredients that continue to be used in medicine? Why or why
not? Research the Pure Food and Drug Act and learn how it
affected the ways medicines were made. Go to the library or use
the internet to try to find examples of old advertisements for
medicines. Do these ads use the same types of marketing that ads
use today? Look at any ads that show pictures of the bottles.
Find out how archaeologists use the bottle’s color, shape, size,
and way it was made to determine how old the bottle is. Make a
display of your research including drawings of bottles,
descriptions of your research, and any advertisements you found.
Include modern day advertisements of medicines to compare and
contrast to your research.
- Archaeological sites exist almost
everywhere in Georgia. Name some places you might find sites.
Explain why. Research and make a list ways in which
archaeological sites can be harmed. Illustrate your list with
drawings, photographs, or models. Examine why looting of
archaeological sites is harmful. Find out what does your
community or state does to protect archaeological sites.
Discover what the federal government does and make a list (in
your own words) of federal regulations that protect sites. What
can you do to help protect sites?
- Research the area in which you live. If it
is a subdivision, does the name reflect the area’s history?
(Such as “Plantation Trace” or “Indian Trail Ridge”). Try to
find out who lived in the area in the past 5; 10; 50; 100;
5,000; and 10,000 years. To do some of this, talk to older
residents in the area and visit the local library and historical
society. Find a topographic map at the library or on the
internet and try to locate the area where your house stands. Is
it a good place for a house? Why or why not? Would it have been
a good place to live 100 years ago? Why or why not? How about
5,000 years ago? Explain. Make two clay models of a close-up of
part of the topographic map. On one model include your house,
roads, and other man-made features. On the second model include
only things you think may have been there 5,000 years ago, such
as rivers, springs, trails, and Native American homes or
villages.
- 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 landowner, 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.
- Find out what different ethnic groups of
people have immigrated to Georgia during the past 200 years.
Make a map that shows where different groups settled in the
state. Get a world map and show where each group came from.
Write a description of each group of people, including what
types of food, clothing, religion, and technology they had in
their native land. If possible, interview one or more person
from one or more groups of émigrés. Make a list beforehand of
the things you would ask, including questions about if and how
they have adapted to the place they now live and also what
customs or traditions they maintain from their native land. Draw
or photograph examples. Later, make a list of things
archaeologists 200 years from now might find on the house sites
of these people living in Georgia. Would they find any artifacts
relating to food, technology, religion, or clothing that might
be different from artifacts on other sites? Would archaeologists
be able to determine that the people living on these sites were
from another country? Why or why not?
- 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 File.
- 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.thesga.org
Native Technology:
www.PrimitiveWays.com
Geology: www.gly.uga.edu
and
www.chara.gsu.edu/~weinman
Georgia history/prehistory:
www.cr.nps.gov/archeology.htm and
www.cr.nps.gov/seac/seac.htm |
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