Autumn and winter are fast approaching, but the changing weather is giving us some spectacular vistas around the sites. This was our view from the total station earlier in the week. |
Friday, August 29, 2014
August on Baffin Island
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Changing Caribou Hunting Technology
Photo Credit:Tim Rast
Monday, August 25, 2014
Friday, August 22, 2014
Sandhill Crane
Wednesday, August 20, 2014
Its getting late in the season
Monday, August 18, 2014
Friday, August 15, 2014
Another Newfoundland Iceberg
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
Icebergs off Cape Spear
Monday, August 11, 2014
Friday, August 8, 2014
Harvesting Birch Bark
A sheet of bark is flexible |
You can harvest birch bark with a pocket knife. Just cut a ring around the tree at the top and bottom of the section that you want to peel and then cut a vertical slice to connect the two rings. |
When you peel the sheet off you get a square or rectangular sheet of bark. |
In the meantime, I've rolled the bark back into tubes, about the same diameter as the finished quiver so that as the bark dries it will take on the correct shape. |
Wednesday, August 6, 2014
Bones! A Guest Interview with Katy Meyers
This is a guest post submitted by Victor Archambault of US Radar, who is interviewing industry professionals who use Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR). In archaeology, GPR and other remote sensing technologies have been employed to create images of what lies beneath the ground ahead of (or instead of) excavation. Here is Victor's interview with Katy Meyers...
Dr. Temperance Brennan is a name that many TV show “Bones”
fans know by heart but that is all just fiction and no one actually looks that
closely to human remains. Right? Oh contraire, mon frere! There are real-life
people that are just as interesting and fascinated in the mysteries that only
human remains can tell.
I wanted to get some real world feedback on ground
penetrating radar and how it is used out in the real world in various
ways. I was able to interview Katy
Meyers who runs a thriving blog at BonesDontLie while traveling the world, both
learning the local culture and helping to unravel the secrecies of this thing
we call “the past”.
Katy, what is your title and expertise?
I am currently a PhD Candidate at Michigan State University
in the Anthropology Department. I also have an MSc in Human Osteoarchaeology
from University of Edinburgh. My specialties include mortuary archaeology,
digital archaeology, and geographic information systems.
** For those of you who don’t know what Osteoarchaeology is,
it’s a branch of archaeology that deals with the study and analysis of human
and animal anatomy, especially skeletal remains, in the context of
archaeological deposits.
How did you first get interested in your field? Why?
My first interest in archaeology was as a kid- I spent most
of my summers running up and down a gully near my house collecting historic
bottles and fossils.
Are you familiar with ground penetrating radar and if so
then how did you first learn of it?
I am familiar with GPR, and have seen it used for my work
primarily in identifying lost graves in historic cemeteries, or determining
where to excavate in a survey. I first learned about GPR while taking classes
in [college].
Do you have any hands on experience with GPR?
No, never had the opportunity, but I have seen people do it
first hand.
Is GPR worth using or are there other more effective methods
or techniques?
I think GPR is definitely worth using, although it should be
combined with other methods such as ground survey, shovel testing and aerial
photos.
Where do you see the future of GPR?
My hope would be that we would continue to create better
tools for more accurate understanding of the earth, more portable, easier to
use for those less experienced.
As a teacher, have you ever worked hands on with your
students involving GPR or used its techniques in a classroom environment?
I’ve used GPR imagery from others’ work in order to help
students understand survey techniques.
What do you like the most about your job?
I like solving puzzles using different lines of evidence.
There are so many parts to archaeological work- historical texts, paintings,
architecture, archaeology, human remains, rumors, stories, songs, environmental
history, etc.
If you could travel back to the day you graduated high
school and tell yourself one with about this field, what would it be and why?
Statistics is more important than you think- learn it early
on instead of waiting!
I have to ask you something just to keep you on your toes so
if you were a fruit, what would you be and why?
Black raspberry- ate them every summer when I was fossil
hunting, always reminds me of home even though they are hard to get in other
states.
It was a pleasure to get to know Katy and I hope you do
visit her blog and if you would like more information about ground penetrating
radar then please visit usradar.com
Follow Up Questions
You told me that you have seen GPR used first hand but did
not delve much into that. Can you tell
me what happened and what sorts of things you discovered through it?
We used it during a field school in Ohio to identify
locations of prehistoric houses. We were able to locate an entire building and
a garbage pit from the variations.
So I will admit I had no idea off hand what Osteoarchaeology
is and had to Google it. Are there 3 – 5
specific things you find absolutely fascinating in this field that you get to
do on a regular basis?
I really love learning who the average people were in the
past. We hear about the ‘big men’ of history, but often do not hear about the
rest of the people. My primary focus is burial practices, so how people chose
to bury their dead and what this means about their religious/spiritual beliefs
in afterlife and ancestors. I like studying that variation and interpreting
what that means about their beliefs. It is pretty amazing how much you can
learn from a single individual- age, sex, diseases, trauma, exercise or work
habits, etc.
You touched lightly on field work but what kind of exotic
places have you been able to visit and work in?
I have done work in Chillicothe, OH, East Lansing, MI, all
over New York (state not city), a number of places in England and Scotland,
Rome, Italy, and Giecz, Poland.
Have you ever had the opportunity to work on any “high
profile” digs?
Kind of- I worked on a Polish cemetery that was pretty cool,
and I did the cremation excavation for Isola Sacra in Rome.
I know many people out there have seen the TV show “Bones”
and would you say you roll your eyes at the show or geek out at watch every
episode? Also, how close are they to
reality or has it been done up just for a TV audience?
I actually helped with the osteoarchaeology for one of the
episodes! Yes, it is more fiction than fact- they really stretch how much you
can actually learn from the skeletons. I have a bad habit of yelling at the TV.
However, I did really like the first few seasons- it got too emotional dramatic
though and I gave up on it a few years ago.