What do Archaeologists do?

language humanities

The field of archeology is a scientific field that studies primarily prehistoric cultures to give us information about how people lived and interacted in the distant past. This field belongs to the larger science of anthropology. Archaeologists spend quite a bit of time excavating and analyzing materials found underground at dig sites.

Digs are found throughout the world, and the work done there can be both time-consuming and laborious. However, when archaeologists make finds about early cultures, it can be very exciting. New “finds” add to our knowledge about the way people lived before us.

Archaeologists are not the romantic Indiana Jones type, for the most part. They are also not paleontologists who dig up dinosaurs. The only buried animals archaeologists would find pertinent to their study are domesticated animals, or animals that made up part of an ancient culture’s food source.

Work done on a dig site can be at times painstakingly slow. Soils have to be analyzed a small amount at a time to find any remnants of an older culture. Soils are usually filtered and might turn up half of an old tool or a fragment of bone. These finds are then carbon dated to determine their age. Often digs are initiated when a tiny artifact is found, suggesting that there may be additional artifacts in a particular area.

On digs, archaeologists usually excavate material in 10 by 10 foot squares. Digging must be done carefully to not destroy buried structures or smaller artifacts. Early archaeologists had the unfortunate habit of completely destroying everything they excavated by overdigging a site. So now, anyone who digs on a site does so with great caution.

As discoveries are made, archaeologists catalog all finds, and may later make reports about their findings. They may work in conjunction with social or cultural anthropologists to make guesses about how an older society used tools or what type of gods the society worshipped. Archaeologists can also report on the advanced status of a culture by evaluating certain finds that suggest complex thinking or cultural development.

Archeology can be a fairly dirty and difficult job. It involves a lot of digging, and minute observation of soils. Many digs are in unrelentingly hot locations, without access to showers or even bathrooms. Most archaeologists, however, are too fascinated by the results of digs to mind such privations.

Most archaeologists work with universities or museums, and part of their job is to obtain funding for digs. They also may employ students on digs to have extra man or womanpower on the job. Students usually work without pay, but relish the training they receive in their chosen field.

An interesting look at the field of archaeology is the James Michener fictional novel The Source, which evaluates a dig site in the developing state of Israel. It is particularly fascinating in the way it flips back in time to tell the story of how ancient Jews and earlier peoples functioned in the culturally rich areas that now make up the state of Israel. Though some of the digging tactics are outmoded, the novel still rings true in its essence of archaeology, as the story of these people are fictionally reconstructed to give us information about our predecessors.

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New: Discuss this Article

Posted by: anon3926
I find the past so interesting. Just thinking about life before us, like WAY before us makes me excited. If only we could visit the past. Then we'd know for sure. I'm most interested in the past of humans. How we developed over time. It's hard to imagine that the bones and fossils they find could me one of my ancestors. But thats what makes it all so interesting...not always knowing for sure!

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Written by Tricia Ellis-Christensen

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