Sunday 26 August 2012

Summer diggin'... Part 2

So, one day back home to wash and re-pack my case, and I was on my plane to Spain...


I stayed for 3 weeks in total around Catalonia, originally to dig on a site with the University of Barcelona. This was also part of the fieldwork requirements for my course.  First day, I travelled to Sants Station and found the hostel where I spent the night.  However, I ran into a bit of a pickle on my second day in Barcelona; as soon as I met the dig supervisor, he told me as we drove north that due to the Spain's current economy and the knock-on effects, the Uni had run out of money for the site funding and the dig was cut to 1 and a half weeks. Oops. Bad for my requirements, and also meant I had nowhere to stay for a week and a half.  But I was in a Zen mood and decided that stuff would figure itself out.


Montlleó (France in the background)

The site is thought to have been a key crossing point in the Pyrenees 15,000 years ago in the early and middle Upper Paleolithic, here called the Magdalenian. In fact, the site was initially dated by the Oxford Radiocarbon Lab. What really attracted me to this site was the prospect of finding such old evidence of human occupation in this area, like the perforated shells that they've previously found here. So I was very happy when a perforated shell was found when we were excavating.  We also found a cut straight snail shell (caracol, en español), animal bone and worked flint, and what may be evidence of a hearth.  However, we'll have to wait til the results are published to find what it all means (and I'm not allowed to say too much here!).  What I can say is that the site is a very curious mixture; it is 1130m above sea level but an open site - extremely hot but with a breeze; it's also on a slope, making it hard to excavate evenly!

Team photo

Ger, Cerdanya, where our hotel was near the excavation

The site!

Eve with one of the shells

Unfortunately, I felt ill after about a week, collapsed on the lobby floor and was in bed for a day and a half. By this time, the dig finished and I found myself by the grace of the wonderful students there being put up by Silvia, a lovely student who lives in an apartment in Badalona. Thank goodness they're so nice! The original plan was that I was going to work in the Uni labs for the next week and a half doing post-excavation work, but this was abandoned since a) they'd finished all the work there and b) it was closed. El problema segunda. Nevermind - instead, I hung out with Silvia and her boyfriend and we went sight-seeing and shopping (perhaps a kind of cultural anthropological study, no?) in Barcelona and Badalona.
Olé olé olé!

Chillin' with Silvia and Marta at Badalona beach

La Sagrada Familia

Parc Guell

Oh, and we visited Port Aventura. What can I say? I like to make the best of a bad situation...!

Us at Shambala!

I also met up with my godparents who happen to live close to Barcelona. They showed me the botanic gardens and the Olympic Stadium for the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, all this while the Olympics were going on back in England.

Part of the Olympic park

Silvia took me clubbing in Barcelona too - different, but amazingly fun! I could say it was an anthropological experience too, but I had probably drunk enough calimocho that my amount of dancing far outweighed any critical observations I could have made. However, there is apparently (I say this because I googled it) an anthropologist at the New University of Lisbon whose post-Ph.d work explores "seduction techniques" in nightclubs. And you thought I made up these things. You can read one of her papers here: http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/lamygpaper.pdf 

At the end of my trip, I was very reluctant to leave Spain, its glorious sunniness and its wonderful people and its interesting past, but I was glad to stop living out of a suitcase... well, for a little while anyway!

You can read about the site of Montlleó here: http://www20.gencat.cat/docs/CulturaDepartament/DGPC/Documents/Arxiu/Trib03-04.pdf p.23-44 (It's in Catalan so copy and paste it into an internet translator if you can't understand it!)

Wednesday 22 August 2012

Summer diggin'... Part I

As you can see by the date of my last post, I've been away lately, so sorry to anyone who actually follows this - there are lots of new updates to come, promise...

What's been happening:

  • Last term I was revising for my end of year exams (Hon Mods) whilst training for Summer Eights.  Our crew survived Eights (with some funky stash and some blesséd weather), unfortunately dropping 2 or 3 places but had a brilliant time overall - despite breaking the front of our bow(!) Exam-wise, after a week and a half of living in the library and wondering if I would make it out alive of the exam halls, I passed!

  • For my course I went on a 2-week training excavation at Dorchester-on-Thames, near Oxford.  On the Roman site, at the end of an allotment, the most important find was a Saxon coin discovered by my friend (who received a bottle of bubbly for it!). Digging a cross-section of a ditch we could map the curvature of the ditch, and intersecting ditches with it by identifying what and how much of what we found in it.  For example, different levels of animal bone, its size, and how the bone stuck out of the ground gave a good indication of where the lines could be drawn, as it were. 
Team photo

Unfortunately, our group didn't get to excavate much of the Neolithic site - a great shame for me! We were taught to use total stations, about identifying different pottery (and there was a lot) and how to photo sites.  I also learnt that bathing in a lake isn't so bad (if a bit chilly) since our campsite had no showers, but the pub dinners definitely made up for it.


The Roman site

In all, Dorchester-on-Thames has a lot more history than I thought, and I found some pretty funky stuff; copper coins, nails (all shapes and sizes), Oxford faux-Samianware, and some huge animal jaws.