Suzi Wilson will spend 3 weeks working at an Etruscan dig site on the Western coast of Tuscany.
Monday, June 25, 2012
Huh! Not sure what happened to that last post. Well, it takes about 45 minutes to an hour to get to Ostia so it will be another all day thing. I finally have fast internet service so I hope to work on the photos tonight and tomorrow when I get back from Ostia. I'm looking forward to posting an explanation of the site and its history, etc.
Carlo (one of Carolina's staff) decided to leave for Rome with me for the 11:54am train out of Campiglia and we almost missed it. As the train got closer and closer to Rome, the heat soared. Carlo (who lives in Rome) was getting phone calls from his friends saying "Stay there! Don't come home!" because of the heat. From Rome, I caught the Freccia Rossa express train to Naples and from there - Pompei. The hotel gave me a room with a bath tub and I almost fell asleep in it.
The next day, I went to Naples to the Archaeological museum then back to my hotel in Pompei. Just as I had gotten settled, there was a knock at the door which I assumed would be the maid. To my surprise, Ryan (from the dig) was there, and she & her boyfriend Matt had taken the room across the hall from me - a very pleasant surprise. This morning, I met my Italian professor from Columbia for coffee then joined Ryan and Matthew at the Pompei ruins. After several hours (and still without seeing everything), we caught the train together for Naples then went our separate ways. I arrived in Rome at 5pm and took a room at the same hotel as before - this time with a bath tub. After spending 3 weeks on a dig site, the bath tub thing is VERY important.
Tomorrow, I go to Ostia Antica which is just south of Fiumcino Airport. http://www.ostia-antica.org/
It takes about 45 minutes to an hour to get there so this will be another all day thing. Tomorrow night, I will finally get to grab a beer with Giulia Peresso who has been working on a few dig sites in Rome. Wednesday, it is back to New York.
I finally have internet fast enough to work on some of the photos although they probably won't get posted until I am back. Looking forward to explaining the history of the site.
The next day, I went to Naples to the Archaeological museum then back to my hotel in Pompei. Just as I had gotten settled, there was a knock at the door which I assumed would be the maid. To my surprise, Ryan (from the dig) was there, and she & her boyfriend Matt had taken the room across the hall from me - a very pleasant surprise. This morning, I met my Italian professor from Columbia for coffee then joined Ryan and Matthew at the Pompei ruins. After several hours (and still without seeing everything), we caught the train together for Naples then went our separate ways. I arrived in Rome at 5pm and took a room at the same hotel as before - this time with a bath tub. After spending 3 weeks on a dig site, the bath tub thing is VERY important.
Tomorrow, I go to Ostia Antica which is just south of Fiumcino Airport. http://www.ostia-antica.org/
It takes about 45 minutes to an hour to get there so this will be another all day thing. Tomorrow night, I will finally get to grab a beer with Giulia Peresso who has been working on a few dig sites in Rome. Wednesday, it is back to New York.
I finally have internet fast enough to work on some of the photos although they probably won't get posted until I am back. Looking forward to explaining the history of the site.
Saturday, June 23, 2012
Fortunately, the weather has been better over the past few days and we have spent this time cleaning up the site for the final aerial photo. Wednesday morning, Stefano handed me a bucket and a whisk broom and said, "And now, we clean" and asked me to start in the upper left hand corner of the site and brush up all the sand and loose pebbles. I looked at him and said, "I'm going to need a bigger broom." I cleaned all day Wednesday until my back could not take it any more then switched places with Melissa for an hour to wash pottery. On Thursday, EVERYONE got on site with whisk brooms and continued to clean until the entire site had been swept. After the aerial photo was taken, we continue to dig in Carolina's area and did not stop working until 4pm on Friday. We have uncovered so much but we have also have uncovered more questions. I really look forward to returning here and working with Carolina and her staff again.
On my way to Pompei for two days then Rome then home. Almost out of internet time so I will quit for now and post more later - hopefully some photos as well.
On my way to Pompei for two days then Rome then home. Almost out of internet time so I will quit for now and post more later - hopefully some photos as well.
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
"Mama said there'd be days like this . . . "
The last two days have been so incredibly hot and the Tuscan sun has been brutal. Sunday night after we returned from Cinque Terre, Melissa started throwing up and continued to throw up until 7am in the morning. Ryan started coughing in the middle of the night and I was having one of my rough nights sleeping regardless of the girls' maladies. Today, everyone is better. I am working in the area west of the tomb and we are trying to find out the dates of the various layers. I uncovered several big parts to another amphora and two very old (and very large) nails. Most important is trying to move enough dirt over the next final few days in order to understand what has happened over time in this particular area.
I am hoping for cooler weather tomorrow, or at least a nice breeze.
A domani . . .
The last two days have been so incredibly hot and the Tuscan sun has been brutal. Sunday night after we returned from Cinque Terre, Melissa started throwing up and continued to throw up until 7am in the morning. Ryan started coughing in the middle of the night and I was having one of my rough nights sleeping regardless of the girls' maladies. Today, everyone is better. I am working in the area west of the tomb and we are trying to find out the dates of the various layers. I uncovered several big parts to another amphora and two very old (and very large) nails. Most important is trying to move enough dirt over the next final few days in order to understand what has happened over time in this particular area.
I am hoping for cooler weather tomorrow, or at least a nice breeze.
A domani . . .
Sunday, June 17, 2012
So on Friday, I had the honor of uncovering a very large piece of an amphora. We found pieces of a smaller amphora nearby. Again, I took great photos but have not been able to post anything yet due to the extremely limited internet access. We went to Cinque Terre this past weekend and returned very tired. We are starting the final week on Monday so there will be much work to do in a short period of time.
Thursday, June 14, 2012
Well, it is not easy typing with
a bandaged finger but I wanted to post about this week. On Tuesday, we returned to the tomb area and
started uncovering the tomb. So far, we
have completely filled two “bone bags” and will probably start on a third
tomorrow. The bones are from at least
two people but we don’t know if they were buried together or just found in the
same area because the tomb has been destroyed.
We also don’t know who destroyed the tomb but it could have been the
Romans. We are finding grave goods that
are typically buried with females such as loom weights and the bronze mirror
that was found last week. Yesterday, I
found a very interesting bronze cup that I will post a photo of later. I also found a glass bead and today we
uncovered pottery pieces that compose an Etruscan tea cup. (not sure that the Etruscans drank tea – only
saying that’s what it looks like.) We
also removed one of the craniums today and we’ll remove the other tomorrow. Yesterday, I uncovered a “jaw” with two teeth
still in tact so if both craniums still have their faces and jaws, then we will
know that there are now at least three people buried in the general area where
we are digging. On one hand, I hate that
we are handling / disturbing someone’s final resting place but on the other
hand, whomever destroyed the tomb left the bodies strewn about so at least we
can try to re-assemble them again and show them some respect.
I am exhausted and ready for some
recovery time this weekend. I have
blisters and bruises and I am a dead skin factory. My finger is better – I changed the bandage
today but I look forward to removing the bandage all together.
Monday, June 11, 2012
June 11th - Monday
We had new volunteers and students arrive last night so they had to sit in orientation this morning while only a few of us left for the site. I continued to work on Carolina's wall all morning and the space is very tight between the wall of the structure that Carolina has uncovered and the outer perimeter wall of the site. I have to trowel between the rocks that have become "glued" to the wall with old dirt, etc. The dirt is very hard and I frequently have to use the trowel like a pick or hammer and just before lunch, I managed to slice my middle finger open.
Carolina insisted that she drive me to the hospital in Piombino so I ended up spending the afternoon there. They cleaned it very well and decided to use steri-strips instead of stitches to close the wound. They gave me an antibiotic and also looked at my right eye while I was there. I had a tetanus a year ago so I did not have to get another. They wrapped my middle finger in a bunch of gauze then put a white fishnet thingy over it. I can't get it wet for a week. It doesn't hurt - just an inconvenience. Actually, there is much more discomfort with my right eye but the doc said it's just irritated and gave me some drops.
I'm planning to work tomorrow but we'll have to wait and see. I'm definitely going to have to buy/wear a better pair of gloves! I bought a new camera in Siena this past weekend so I hope to post some photos for you guys very soon.
We had new volunteers and students arrive last night so they had to sit in orientation this morning while only a few of us left for the site. I continued to work on Carolina's wall all morning and the space is very tight between the wall of the structure that Carolina has uncovered and the outer perimeter wall of the site. I have to trowel between the rocks that have become "glued" to the wall with old dirt, etc. The dirt is very hard and I frequently have to use the trowel like a pick or hammer and just before lunch, I managed to slice my middle finger open.
Carolina insisted that she drive me to the hospital in Piombino so I ended up spending the afternoon there. They cleaned it very well and decided to use steri-strips instead of stitches to close the wound. They gave me an antibiotic and also looked at my right eye while I was there. I had a tetanus a year ago so I did not have to get another. They wrapped my middle finger in a bunch of gauze then put a white fishnet thingy over it. I can't get it wet for a week. It doesn't hurt - just an inconvenience. Actually, there is much more discomfort with my right eye but the doc said it's just irritated and gave me some drops.
I'm planning to work tomorrow but we'll have to wait and see. I'm definitely going to have to buy/wear a better pair of gloves! I bought a new camera in Siena this past weekend so I hope to post some photos for you guys very soon.
Sunday, June 10, 2012
June 7, 2012 – Thursday
I still have not viewed the
artifacts uncovered so far. I’m afraid
if I ask, I’ll get stuck on pottery lab duty which I find very boring so I'm going to wait until next week. Hopefully I'll have a camera by then and can take photos to post here.
Today is the last day for the Earth Watch
volunteers so I was happy to be able to work with a few of them at the bone
site near the exterior wall. We have
removed the tibia and other bones but left the cranium (which is face down with
a large hole in the back of the head) to be uncovered later by the
professors. (By the way, the “dagger”
that I mentioned earlier that was discovered with the bones turned out to be a
spear point.) We put a bucket over the bone site so that we would not accidentally step on the cranium or other remaining
bones and continued to work on the exterior wall that seems to extend beyond
the perimeter of the excavation, which will probably mean another excavation in
the near future.
We found a few pieces of pottery,
some possibly part of the bucchero but really not very
much. Today was a lot of dirt moving
with few finds which is a typical day in archaeology, and the lazy students
have ruined my dirt pile ramp. It’s
amazing to me how someone can just walk up with a wheelbarrow of dirt then dump
it at the base of the ramp. I’ve started
yelling at the students (both the Italian students and the American students)
when I see someone approach the dirt pile, which seems to amuse the professors.
So that’s it for the day. It was really just a day of moving dirt. When I got home, I discovered a red half
moon shape below my left scapula that was harshly sunburned. I’ll have to be more careful with my
sunscreen application in the future. In
the evening, we went to Piombino for dinner with the Earth Watch volunteers
then said our goodbyes when we returned home as we would not be seeing most of
them in the morning.
July 8th – Friday
Drizzling and very cool with a
strong wind. It’s just the four American
students now and the ten or so Italian students with the professors. The precipitation had stopped by the time we
got to the site so we worked in the strong winds until the 10:30 break. As soon as we arrived at the café next to the
Archaeological Museum (where we take our breaks), the sky turned dark and started
drizzling harder as the wind whipped the café’s canvas window shades around
like sails. We took a longer break than
usual then went back to the site when the drizzle stopped. I am now working in a different area because
Stefano went to Pisa
to drop off the Earth Watch volunteers at the airport and won’t be back until
Sunday evening. Carolina does not want me to work near the
bone/wall area alone so I’m working on uncovering the area next to a structure
that the Italian students had previously uncovered. The ground is so hard so I was actually glad
to have a little rain to soften the dirt.
After lunch, the sun came out and we continued the grind with winds that
constantly blew handfuls of dirt into our eyes. There were a few goggles but they were
snatched up quickly. Fortunately, we
quit early at 4:15pm and by that time, my right eye was red and swollen from
all the blowing sand.
This was the Italian students’
last day so Carolina
took them for pizza for dinner so the girls in my apartment and I made dinner
for ourselves. Everyone is leaving town
for the weekend, including me and my house-mates. Deborah is headed for Rome tomorrow while Melissa and I are going
to Sienna. The three of us will be on
the same train until Campiglia Marittima then we will go our separate
ways. We think it’s strange that the
three of us will be the “veterans” now that everyone else has gone. We hear that there will be four more Earth
Watch volunteers on Sunday and a new American student named “Ryan” but that’s
the extent of our information.
Regardless, it will be a small group next week and a lot of work.
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
I’m sorry that I am behind in my
updates! We only have internet at the
local bar (where we usually go, following dinner) but I have been logging my posts in Microsoft Word
and will post them now.
Monday
New Passport from the US Embassy
and new credit card from Amex. Took the
train from Rome
to Campiglia Marittima and Carlo from Professor Meagale’s staff picked me up to
drive me to Populonia. Had dinner with
the group then went to bed early.
Tuesday
A cacophony of bird noises woke
me up at 6am but I struggled to get another hour of sleep. Our typical schedule is to leave for the dig
site no later than 8:15am and be set up and ready to work by 8:45am. We take a short break around 10:30am then work until
lunch at 1pm. After lunch, we work until
5pm.
This dig site is very different
from last year’s dig at the Villa. Here,
we are across the street from the Gulf
of Baratti and digging in the Archaeological Park , completely out in the open with no
trees for shade. The Italian sun gets
VERY hot and we apply and re-apply sunscreen at every break. The ground seems harder to work than last
year and by the end of the day, we are all exhausted and completely dirty from
head to toe.
My first assignment was to work
on the outer perimeter “wall” (which is the wall of the giant square hole that
comprises the dig site) which involved using both the pick ax and trowel to try
to making the outer wall perpendicular to the ground. First, you need to break up some of the
harder pieces with the pick ax then you go back with the trowel to “clean” and
make the dig wall even. After that, I
worked in the area where the tomb collapse occurred. There are several tombs nearby that are in
tact but my group was working on an area where a tomb had either caved in or
something else happened to it. There
were actually 3 different teams working on different areas around the tomb. Earlier in the day, one of the teams had
found a bronze mirror that currently cannot not be extracted because of the way
the stones have eroded on and around it.
Presently, you can only observe the bronze handle sticking out of the
stone. Then later this afternoon, I found a bronze ring (perfectly in tact) in the
area outside the tomb. It’s by far the
coolest thing I’ve ever uncovered! We’ll
have a better look at our discoveries tomorrow when we wash the pottery and
clean the ring and other artifacts.
Wednesday
Today, I started out on
wheelbarrow duty which is a drag but we have to take turns doing it. Then Stefano (one of the professors) asked me
to re-engineer the dirt dump site (for the discarded dirt) similar to the way our
dump was set up last year so we built a wall from the discarded stones and an
incline for pushing the wheelbarrows to the top of the pile to deposit a
dump (OF DIRT). After the morning break, I worked
around the tomb again. There is a hole
near the tomb that contains a human tibia and skull and we had to be careful to
leave the bones in tact because they crumble so easily. Yesterday, someone discovered a dagger in the
same area, which was probably a grave good.
After lunch, the professors extracted the block containing the bronze
mirror which was a tricky process. It’s
still encased in stone and dirt but they will try later to extract the mirror
as best they can without doing further damage to it. The mirror is likely another grave good but
for a different person so we are thinking there may be another tomb. More on that later.
Once I have a camera (again) and can take
photos, I will post them to better explain the site and what we are looking
for.
We had a lot of cloud cover this
afternoon which was very pleasant and the work around the bones was very
interesting. We found vertebrae, a tooth
and other bones but the best find was at the very end of the day when we were
cleaning (sweeping) the area near the bones and uncovered a bucchero. Apparently, a bucchero is a vessel that was
only made by the Etruscans so the professors were very excited about it. It does not seem to be a complete piece but there is a big portion of it. However, it is cracked
and will probably fall apart when all the dirt is removed. Another project for the professors.
This is really an interesting excavation! We have uncovered so many things in only a few days which is quite unusual for a typical dig
site. Unfortunately, we still have not had a chance to wash pottery and clean the various items uncovered so I haven't had a chance to see the bronze ring I found yesterday. Hopefully tomorrow (along with the other artifacts.)
Sunday, June 3, 2012
So the trip is off to a rough start.
I have often said that typically there are no victims – only
volunteers, meaning that frequently we become victims only because we allow
ourselves to be victimized or we present ourselves as victims. (There are certainly
many exceptions to this, of course, but quite often – this is the case.)
Friday night at dinner while the
waiter was trying to talk me into dessert, someone reached over the small wall
that separated the outside tables from the motorcycles parked on the street and
took my backpack which was in the chair next to me. It had my camera, passport, and wallet with
my credit/bank cards, driver’s license and 70 euro. Apparently the waiter was in on it because it
would have been impossible for him to have not noticed someone reaching that
far over the wall, and I was the only person eating outside that evening. After living in Manhattan
for such a long time, I considered myself streetwise to the city’s petty
thieves and pickpockets but I was arrogant and that made me vulnerable in Rome . I have learned a
lesson. However, rather than complain
about what has happened, I accept that I should have been more careful and I
choose to be grateful that I still have my cell phone, my computer and most of
my money. Everything in that backpack
can be replaced – it’s “just things” as my father used to say.
However, I will need to stay in Rome an extra day to pick
up a new Amex card on Monday morning and meet with someone at the U.S. Embassy about my passport. I stopped by the Embassy and spoke with a
U.S. Marine on the speaker box outside the gates to report the loss of my
passport, but she said it would be better if I could come back on Monday when
they are open to meet with someone in person about a replacement.
So staying another day in Rome is not the end of
the world but I am anxious to get to the dig site. The hotel has been very kind and helpful,
even giving me a special rate for staying an extra day. I notified the professor in charge of the
excavation and she will try to make arrangements for someone to pick me up on
Monday afternoon. Hopefully, my next post will be more cheerful.
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