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!

3 comments:

  1. And I'm sure you passed the bone quiz with flying colors! Sounds like you are having the authentic field school experience -- now all you need are some bug bite and a hangover ;)

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  2. Grazie Maria Betta for the wonderful story. I so appreciate hearing about what you are doing. I am so proud of your sprit of adventure.....snoring, church bells and light in your eyes aside. I'm in a foreign country, too - Georgia!
    Con amore bella,
    Jim

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  3. "Svuoto la carriola" was never an expression I thought you'd need during your trip to Italy, Mary Beth!! See? We can't always program everything and that's the beauty of it!
    I am very proud of you not only for your dedication to the language and the hard work you've put into it during the past few months, but also, like Jim said, for your incredible spirit of adventure and fabulous sense of humor about it all!
    Brava Mary Beth! A presto,
    Silvia :)

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