This is a photo of a battlefield archaeologist from the South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology cataloging artifacts found in this ravine – the scene of the York fight.
To clear up something….. Archaeology is often thought of as guys with brushes and trowels carefully scrapping through layer of earth to recover artifacts. This is not possible on this type of battlefield where a battle was fought on open ground. Please look at what Dr. Scott did on Little Big Horn battlefield in Montana in the 1980’s. (Custer’s Last Stand)
To excavate any battlefield using traditional archaeological methods would take several thousand years to do an area of this size.
Dr. Scott set the standard for conducting such research on battlefields through his research at Little Big Horn (his book is available on Amazon). In short battlefield archaeology is a thorough search of an area where a battle was fought using experienced metal detector operators. Artifacts are identified; catalogued and spatial information is recorded for each artifact recovered. This data is processed in order to produce accurate artifact distribution maps which will be used in the interpretation process in order to come to the best possible interpretation of the events that occurred there.
Relic hunting is NOT archaeology and I know that first hand from having been one for many years.
Much more to come on Dr. Nolan’s methodology and the archaeology conducted at this site.
To clear up something….. Archaeology is often thought of as guys with brushes and trowels carefully scrapping through layer of earth to recover artifacts. This is not possible on this type of battlefield where a battle was fought on open ground. Please look at what Dr. Scott did on Little Big Horn battlefield in Montana in the 1980’s. (Custer’s Last Stand)
To excavate any battlefield using traditional archaeological methods would take several thousand years to do an area of this size.
Dr. Scott set the standard for conducting such research on battlefields through his research at Little Big Horn (his book is available on Amazon). In short battlefield archaeology is a thorough search of an area where a battle was fought using experienced metal detector operators. Artifacts are identified; catalogued and spatial information is recorded for each artifact recovered. This data is processed in order to produce accurate artifact distribution maps which will be used in the interpretation process in order to come to the best possible interpretation of the events that occurred there.
Relic hunting is NOT archaeology and I know that first hand from having been one for many years.
Much more to come on Dr. Nolan’s methodology and the archaeology conducted at this site.
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