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Students in a summer archaeological methods field course and summer science researchers agree that being out in the field digging for artifacts is far preferable to sitting in a classroom. Twelve students, along with anthropology professors Lacey Carpenter, Hannah Lau, and Colin Quinn, are excavating for relics left behind by early European settlers on a property in Clinton.

“There are ephemeral activities that leave a material signature, and we use that signature to move backward and to reconstruct through other means,” Lau said. “The house has been occupied since the early 19th century. We think a lot of what we are finding is mid-19th to early 20th century.”

These excavations are a component of a larger archaeological project: the Historic Households of Central New York Archaeological Project.

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Assistant Professor of Anthropology Colin Quinn, who collaborated on the student research, said, “Having 5 student-led posters on 5 different topics is pretty unique. I would also say that the quality of our student’s work is much more in line with what is expected of graduate student researchers at the conference. Often our students get mistaken for Ph.D. candidates.”

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