Full Description
Based on a long-term archaeology project, Forgotten Things provides an account of working with field school students to discover and excavate archaeological sites, including early twentieth-century Japanese camps, in the Seymour Valley of British Columbia.
The first book in the new Teaching Archaeology series, Forgotten Things gives students a real-world example of archaeological research in practice. It provides an overview of the Seymour Valley ArchaeologyProject from the initial phone call to the disposition of artifacts and archiving of records. The book takes the reader from the inception of the project through fieldwork, laboratory work, drawing inferences, and making the research meaningful. It delves into considerations that guide research design and methods, and it examines the culture of archaeological fieldwork. Through anecdotes, stories from the field, and extracts from field notes, Forgotten Things offers rare insight into the realities of archaeological research not often seen in archaeological studies.
Contents
Dedication
About this Book
Preface
Prologue
1. Beginnings
2. Finding Our Way
3. Archaeology of Settler Sites
4. A Logging Camp at Suicide Creek
5. A Most Unusual Site Near McKenzie Creek
6. Digging in at McKenzie Creek
7. Making the Fieldwork Meaningful
8. Endings
Key Resources and Suggested Readings
Appendix 1: Field School Students
Appendix 2: Assessing Significance
Glossary
Bibliography
Index



