Date: Fri 26-Jul-1996
Date: Fri 26-Jul-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDREA
Quick Words:
archaeology-Paugussett
Full Text:
Digging Into Prehistory A Centimeter At A Time
B Y A NDREA Z IMMERMANN
Armed with trowels, brushes, screens, and a hypothesis, Dr Laurie Weinstein
and her six students unearthed evidence of prehistoric culture centimeter by
centimeter this week in Upper Paugussett State Forest. This is the third
summer the WestConn professor has led archaeological investigation in the
forest, but it is the first year her class has excavated.
"This is a piece of an ulu - a slate knife. See the bevelled edges?" said Dr
Weinstein, holding up half of the semi-lunar knife that was found this week.
Although the native people who used this instrument were prehistoric, the
knife is almost identical to those used by Eskimo groups in historic times to
skin mammals, she said.
"We've also found two broken quartz projectile points, and quite a few
scrapers made out of clear and white quartz. And we've found some bi-faces and
utilized flakes," said the professor of anthropology. "We think this was a
quartz lithic workshop."
Two years ago, one of her classes explored the knoll and dug test pits which
indicated tool production at the site. At that time they believed it was a
lithic, or stone, quarry because of negative evidence - that is, the fact that
the area is lacking in hearths, stained and/or hard-packed floors, post molds,
and other features that would indicated a more general a varied use of the
site. Wood working tools, food processing tools, and farming tools are also
absent.
The forest would have been an "ideal location" for Native people, said Dr
Weinstein, because of the number of brooks in the forest that feed into the
Housatonic as well as the natural veins of quartz, a very good material for
making tools.
"Most of what we're finding is late Archaic period, which was about 3,500 to
6,000 years ago," said Marc Banks, a graduate student in anthropology at UConn
who has worked for Dr Weinstein on the project for the past three years.
Under the guidance of Dr Weinstein, the students are excavating five sections
that are one meter in width. The soil from each quadrant of the meter is
painstakingly removed and screened for minute fragments. Larger pieces, such
as 3 X 2 inch quartz blocks that have been fractured on all sides, are
carefully removed. The location and depth of any item that may indicate human
presence is recorded in notebooks and later studied by the group in the
laboratory.
Quartz is a local material, but the flint that has been found at the site
comes from outside of Connecticut, according to Mr Banks. "They may have
traveled [to the Hudson Valley] but more probably traded with neighboring
groups," he said.
Students and Rock Hounds
The class is a mix of people from different schools, and of varying ages and
interests.
Jim Morasco, a retired state employee who worked at Fairfield Hills Hospital,
is pursuing his bachelor's degree in anthropology and archaeology. "I really
enjoy it. I love it - find it very relaxing and rewarding," he said. "I've
worked on other digs. It's pretty exciting to find things. That's like playing
golf and acing a hole.
His interest in archaeology is so keen that Mr Morasco intends to pursue it
the rest of his life. "But I wanted to do it right," he said. "I know a lot of
`pot-diggers' and their pieces are not labelled and not organized. That
doesn't help science."
The area shows some evidence of prior disturbance - possibly by people hunting
for pots, bottles, or arrowheads, said Mr Banks. But this is the first
archaeological team to survey and excavate in the forest. "It is very
important that an area be excavated properly to find whatever association
there is between facts," he explained.
Two members of the team are pursuing an interest in archaeology, not a degree.
David Rappaport of Woodbridge works in retail at a car rental agency. "This is
my vacation. This is something I've wanted to do," he said. Before joining
this field project, he had just read magazines on archaeology. "Now I'm
working at the site, learning how to set up measurements, about the Indians in
general, and what specific [tools] were used."
He said he has also learned how to look up deeds and other land-transfer
information at Edmond Town Hall that relates to a historic site in the state
forest.
Jolie Salomone of West Haven, a jeweler and gemologist, read about the dig in
an archaeological bulletin and decided to spend her vacation with the group.
"I always was a rock hound as a kid. That's why I went in to gemology. But my
dream has always been to be an archaeologist," she said. "I love finding
things and digging in the soil."
Now that she has acquired some formal training, Ms Salomone said she will
spend future vacations as a volunteer on archaeological digs.
Mr Morasco summed up the experience of being on a dig. "Your heart beats a
little faster when you find a point that no one's touched for a couple of
thousand years, he said.
Dr Weinstein is interested in speaking with anyone who may have artifacts from
the Upper Paugussett State Forest or information on the Patrick Blake or
Mulliken families. Old maps of the area may also be helpful in the on-going
investigation of pre-historic and historic sites in the forest. The professor
can be reached by calling WestConn at 837-8453.
