Thursday, July 28, 2011

JULY 27 & 28, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY

Let me start off by saying the internet access has been the biggest challenge so far. It makes sleeping in the same room as 11 other women and sharing 3 showers among 20 women easy! It turns out that updating this blog everyday is going to be difficult because I can't always get access when I want it, but I'll do the best I can.

Yesterday was a quiet day. We finished scraping the dirt off the site so a photograph could be taken. Then we wrote our Strategraphic Context sheet, and then...it rained! So, plans changed. Instead of working outside, we went inside for lunch and then a lecture on GIS methods, followed by one on analyzing a human skeleton (for age, sex, stature, acenstry). The analysing human skeletons was basic, but I usually like that kind of stuff anyway. This time, I was so sleepy that I was dozing off in the lecture...in the front row! I finally realized that jet lag combined with only a few hours of interrupted sleep and then only 5 or 6 hours total had finally caught up with me. So I went to bed early, and actually slept through the bells until 5:00! Progress! Anyway, after the rain stopped, we went back outside and removed another layer.

Today the weather was better and we were able to work outside all day. Unfortunately, we had to scrape the site again because of the damage the rain caused. Then we had to measure, photograph, write-up, etc. That's a long process that usually results, it appears, in having people sit around while measurements are taken. We all participated, but still. Finally that was done and we started work again. The good news is that we found some bones! Not alot - a mastoid process, rib, cranial fragment, but it's something. These bones are disarticulated (randomly placed) but we're hoping that tomorrow we'll uncover some skeletons that we can actually analyze.

We've had some visitors, some people return day after day and have become regulars at the site. A professor from the University of Pisa came today and brought a write up that was in the Tusany newspaper. It was written in Italian, of course, so I couldn't read it. But we've heard that we've been written up in three other papers so far.

So - food. Dinner has been really good! We go to the same restaurant every night, and this place feeds 30+ people something different every night. Tonight's menu was salad, then two kinds of pasta, then rabbit (ick!) and pork scallopine and spinach, and finally dessert. Wine and water, both natural and frizzante, is served with every meal. The waitress and the person who runs the counter at the bar where we have breakfast every morning now know I like decaf coffee American-style (large). I'm a regular already!

Tonight, after work, we walked to downtown Altopascio, which is quite charming. Couldn't spend a lot of time there because we had to be back before dinner, but I did have time to carry on a conversation with the train-station attendant...in Italian!

That's all for tonight. I haven't been able to post pictures, but following is the link of the field school's blog. Pictures and more information about our progess are posted there, if you're interested. http://www.paleopatologia.it/Badiapozzeveri/BP11/giorno.php?recordID=1

More over the weekend,
MB

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

DAY 2 - JULY 26, 2011

We started the day with a lecture on archaeological stratigraphy. After that, we finished cleaning the top soil off of our site so that a picture could be taken of the surface layer. By the time that was finished, it was lunch time, followed by a lecture on osteology. It's a good thing we had that break, because our next activity was to begin removing the surface layer. We picked and shoveled, and shoveled and picked until every muscle in our bodies ached! Besides all that picking' and grinnin' (a reference that goes back to HeeHaw - that's really dating me!), I walked to the site, to the school and back at lunch, back to the school, then to the grocery store and back. And boy are my dogs tired! Anyway...in this surface layer, we found nails, plastic, pottery, tiles, metal, bricks, and some other things that lead us to believe that the layer was deposited as a result of construction work that was occurring nearby. We also found a human tooth - specifically an upper left molar.

I'm sitting here at midnight typing up this blog, when all of a sudden a loud banging noise starts. When you combine that with the church bell, it's quite a midnight cacophony. When we couldn't stand it any longer, we investigated. As it turns out, Altopascio was celebrating the birth(?) of the patron of Altopascio, Jacob somebody (sorry, the person that was telling us this story spoke very broken English) and so they were celebrating with fireworks...big fireworks. So there we stood, in our pajamas, on a street corner of Altopascio, watching fireworks. Only in Italy!

Italian phrase of the day: Ho grattato la superfiscie oggi. (I scraped the surface today).

By the way, Allen, one of the Italian archaeologists from Pisa has promised that if I help him with his English, he'll help me with my Italian. Italian group, watch out!

More tomorrow, at which point I hope I can tell you that we found some human remains!

Monday, July 25, 2011

DAY 1 - JULY 25, 2011

After more trouble than a person likes to have when trying to navigate airline check in and security, I finally boarded the plane and began to fly the friendly skies. As it turns out I was lucky, because I had a bulkhead, aisle seat, with no one sitting next to me. So, lots of room and no crying babies made it an almost perfect flight. Even the people from the field school that were supposed to pick me up at the airport in Florence were there waiting - it was a near perfect, but long, trip!

The question that was foremost on the minds of many people who were trying to understand why I would spend my time in Italy digging in the dirt was where would I be sleeping/ This mystery has been solved. There are 20 female students and three male, plus a staff of about 7 or so people. The gym is divided into two parts, with 5 girls sleeping in the smaller part and about 7 of us (note I said "us") sleeping in the larger part. The rest of the women are sleeping in a separate room. So, I'm not on the floor, but I am in a gym with many others, on a cot, with the school's steeple bell chiming every hour on the hour, the light in the hallway shining in my eyes (I'm right inside the door), and one of the men snoring so loudly that we can hear him all the way from upstairs! Needless to say, none of us got much sleep. Tonight we're so tired that I don't think anything can keep us awake!

Today was our first day on the site. The church is a beautiful medieval cathedral that is no longer in use except for special occasions. There was once a working cemetery around the cathedral, but in the 1800s a new cemetery was established in a lot next to the cathedral, and the old cathedral cemetery stopped being used. It's this old cemetery that is being excavated. Besides excavating these gravesites, it is believed that the front of the cathedral had extended past where it does today, so we're looking for evidence of that as well as for a medieval wall that might be evidence of another room attached to the cathedral at one time.

This morning was spent in orientation duties, followed by a sack lunch eaten under the tree. The weather was good today, not the brutal heat they had two weeks ago, thank goodness. After lunch we had a quiz on bones (thanks for your training Dr. B!) and then we began excavation. We've been divided into 4 groups. The group I'm working with began excavating a new site with potential graves. We spent the afternoon removing top soil and scraping the site. Tomorrow morning they'll take pictures (we'll have to rescrape the site first) and then we'll start the actual excavation.

Italian phrase of the day - Svuoto la carriola (I empty the wheelbarrow). Silvia will be proud!

'Til tomorrow,

Mary Beth
P.S. Please excuse any typos. I'm typing this in the dark on a keyboard on my lap while sitting on the front step of the school. This is definitely a different life style!