The North Carolina Department of Transportation Presents
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General Archaeology Page
Scientists who dig in the ground to uncover information about how people lived in the past are called archaeologists. The work they do is called archaeology. Archaeologists working on colonial American sites use physical and documentary clues to help them discover where to dig. People always leave physical traces or clues where they have lived. Archaeologists call these physical clues artifacts.
Since archaeologists destroy sites as they dig them, they must excavate very carefully so they do not lose valuable data. They make maps, take photographs, and write notes about what they have found. They must also follow certain methods in order to excavate a site properly. The ground beneath your feet is like a layer cake of different-colored and -textured soils. These layers have built up over time, and archaeologists remove them slowly and carefully one at a time. Usually, the deeper the layer of soil is, the farther back in time it goes. Archaeologists sift or screen each layer of soil, saving the artifacts they find from each layer separately. By looking at the artifacts from different time periods, archaeologists can tell what was happening on a site in each period. If they dug out and mixed all of the soils and the artifacts, archaeologists would not be able to know what people were doing there at different times.
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Early Site History |
Archaeological research is a lot like putting a puzzle together or solving a mystery. Archaeologists examine artifacts and the other clues they find on their sites, fitting these puzzle pieces together with documentary information. When they finish, they have a picture of how people lived in the past. Archaeologists working at the Eden House site used both archaeological and documentary information to help them find out how people were living in the early North Carolina colony. | ||
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