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ARCHAEOLOGY
Sailing
Into the Semesters End
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Photo:
Candace diCarlo
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During
a two-hour sail on the
Delaware River on May 3 that marked the end of the semester, students
in Dr. Fredrik Hieberts class in underwater archaeology were pressed
into service to help raise the sails
of the Kalmar Nyckel, a replica of an early-17th-century sailing vessel.
They received instruction in putting their backs into it and the singing
of sea chanteys from the ships first mate. The vessel itself is the official
tall ship of the state of Delaware, and features traditional navigation
equipment, period living-quartersand lots and lots of rigging.
This
was the first time in more than 25 years that an undergraduate course
in underwater archaeology was taught at Penn even though the discipline
was pioneered here by Dr. George F. Bass Gr64, the father of underwater
archaeology. During Basss 15 years at Penn, the University Museum of
Archaeology and Anthropology sent expeditions investigating ancient shipwrecks
along the coast of Turkey and in the Mediterranean Sea.
Hiebert,
assistant professor of anthropology and assistant curator of the Museums
Near East section, decided to revive the course last spring and hopes
to teach it on a regular basis in the future. His own groundbreaking work
with Bob Ballard, discoverer of the Titanic, on the Black Sea Project
[Gazetteer, November/December 2000, July/August 1999] is a prime example
of the new era in underwater archaeology, using robots and satellite
technology instead of scuba gear and combining land-and-sea research
to focus on broader issues like trade, technology development, and the
social impacts of seafaring.
While
a far cry from the two-month voyage across the Atlantic that passengers
would have endured in the 17th century, their time on the Kalmar Nyckel
provided students with the opportunity to step into the very past weve
been painstakingly trying to piece together and understand from the archaeological
evidence and historical documents, says Hiebertwhile still getting back
to the 21st century in time for their next exam.
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Copyright 2001 The Pennsylvania
Gazette Last modified 6/28/01
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