Not Long Now

Lectures are written, databases are downloaded and the bags are packed.  The start of the 2012 field season is just around the corner.  My favorite response when I tell people I'm off to dig?  "Oh, you are going to dig up dinosaurs!"  If only it were true!

I'm sharing here an interview with Daniel Master, one of the excavation's co-directors.  In it he talks a bit about how he got into archaeology and the lure of Ashkelon.

***

The BAR Dig Issue started it all. I had visited Israel before, but I had little idea how archaeological excavations worked. So I picked up a Dig Issue and looked at the options. Several excavations appealed to me; I applied to three. I later learned that dig applications were not particularly competitive, but what did I know? I set off for the first dig that accepted me: the Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon.

Ashkelon had a field school run by Harvard University, but aside from academics, the volunteers were housed in a lovely hotel near one of the nicest beaches in Israel. Who could ask for more?

When I got there, I found that things were even better than I had anticipated. My first morning in Ashkelon, the professor I had read about in BAR, Lawrence E. Stager of Harvard University, introduced himself: “Hi, I’m Larry. Welcome to Ashkelon.” In BAR, I saw the archaeologists as titans, but in Ashkelon the “luminaries” of the field simply treated us as part of the team.

Looking back, I can see that early in that first summer I was already hooked. The fresh air, the outdoors, the physical exertion and the touch of the past kept me first to the field in the morning and last to the hotel in the afternoon. I remember the area supervisor wielding his trowel like a scalpel, scraping a little grey dirt from a little brown dirt, or making vertical sections of sand that were straighter than any soil I had ever seen. The process of archaeology was an art, not a quick and easy subject you could just learn about from a book, but a craft requiring years as an apprentice. I resolved to absorb all that I could, to make my sections straighter, my excava tion cleaner and my eye sharper. Even sweeping a dirt floor (again) or taking another pass with a pick was part of the larger process of becoming an archaeologist.

As soon as I returned home after that season, I already wanted to return. Fortunately for me, my parents indulged and the excavation accommodated.

Over the next few years, as I became the supervisor of a square, I saw that excavation was not just about the craft of digging. Now I was meeting the new volunteers and building them into a team; I was trying to piece together an intricate 50-square-meter three-dimen- sional puzzle with half the pieces missing. Now I was asking: How did this wall corner? Why does this floor stop here? Should we use a big pick or a brush for the next five centimeters? And, most impor- tant, how can I make sure that I write down enough that the next excavator will be able to reconstruct what I have uncovered?

Whether we were excavating a Roman bathhouse or the destruction of Nebuchadnezzar, all of us—staff and volunteers—were uncov- ering stories that had been hidden for millennia. Slowly, carefully, the history of the site was coming into focus. It was during these years that I decided that archaeology might be more than an avocation for me, so I began a graduate program in the subject. During my Ph.D. studies, I was challenged to use the clues from the field to uncover mysteries of the past and contribute to our common humanity.

Before I knew it, the years had passed, a few graduate papers had been written, and I was excavating not 50 square meters, but 400, and not as a student but as a teacher with my own students. I had finished my degree and moved to Wheaton College, a small school with a long history of archaeology. Once there, I saw the artifacts from Tell Dothan, a rich site in the West Bank that Wheaton had excavated but never published. Fortunately, a publication grant from the Shelby White-Leon Levy fund allowed us to put together a final report team, coincidentally made up entirely of people I met during my first season at Ashkelon. The publication process opened my eyes to another vista in archaeology. The objects yielded more and more with deeper study, and the digging, the records and the artifacts gained new life in the book, contributing even more to our under- standing of the past.

After Dothan, it was time to return to Ashkelon. With the help of a generous grant from the Leon Levy Foundation, we restarted the excavations at Ashkelon in 2007. It was another opportunity to be on an expedition with Larry, but now I would direct the new excava- tions while he would spearhead the publications. When I was a volunteer, I practiced the craft; as a square supervisor, I focused on the record keeping and teamwork; as a grid supervisor, I investigated the big puzzle; now, as a director, I set out to design a research program for the site of Ashkelon and build a team to carry it out.

As I stepped back and asked larger questions, I appreciated the uniqueness of Ashkelon: a Mediterranean seaport, one of the largest cities in the southern Levant, a city of merchants and gardens, and home to Canaanites, Philistines, Romans and Crusaders. I also gained a fuller appreciation for the work that happens before and after the season. Operating a dig is almost like running a small company dedicated to exploring the wonders of history, or, as my wife calls it, a second full-time job.

The final chapter has not been written. Larry and I have just finished our third season together as codirectors; the first two volumes of the Ashkelon final report appeared in 2008; and we look to the future with the continued partnership of the Leon Levy Foundation. Already our renewed excavations are rewriting the early history of the Philistines. More final report volumes are soon to appear, and more excavation seasons are planned. And this summer, the story will continue as many of you jump from the pages of BAR into an adventure of your own at Ashkelon.

Daniel M. Master is associate professor of archaeology at Wheaton Col- lege in Wheaton, Illinois. He began working at the site of Ashkelon as a volunteer in 1991 and now heads the project’s field operation.

***

Some will love it, some will not.  Everyone will be dirtier than they have ever been before.  Can't wait!  The plane leaves in 5 days!

Irene Levi-Sala Book Award Winner

The Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon is proud to announce that Ashkelon 3: The Seventh Century B.C. received a 2012 Irene Levi-Sala Book Award in the Final Excavation Report category.  Congratulations to Lawrence E. Stager, Daniel M. Master and J. David Schloen on this well deserved recognition.

And the Winner is...

Thanks to everyone who entered the contest.  We had everything from the practical and then the highly imaginative to the "I only wish it were possible and maybe it is" type of entries.  They were all a lot of fun to read and a great way to lead into the field season.  Due to the range of entries, I've picked a winner in each category.  Remember, fame and glory to all the winners.  And, if you find yourself in Ashkelon at the Dan Gardens Hotel, a non-alcoholic beverage of your choice.

First up, the practical submitted by a non-Ashkelonian regular.  Congratulations to Kirk!

*** Mount a nice wi-fi camera ($100) on a platform ($10) with additional illumination ($20) that can be manually lowered by rope ($10) from above. Have a wireless router ($50) positioned at the entrance of the sewer. The wi-fi camera and a laptop should be configured to connect to the router so that the laptop can control the wi-fi camera (e.g., zoom, 350 deg. pan, etc.). If the platform containing the wi-fi camera is sufficiently weighted, it shouldn't swing too badly or more thought could be given to stabilization.

I think you should do this in hopes of finding classical human excrement residue or other human waste that would wind up in a sewer. If you do, then there has to be loads of data lurking down there in the dark--like what people ate, types of work they did, common diseases/parasites they shared, etc.

cf. sewer work at Herculaneum.***

 

Second, the imaginative.  The winner should come as no surprise to those of us who know him.  Shimi take a bow!  Shimi's entry had me in stiches!

***"Method for the Removal of Culturally-Relevant Archaeological Product and State-Heritage Inhumed Trash from the Sewer in Grid 47 and the Subsequent Exploration Thereof

Reason for Exploring the Sewer:

The Glory of Prussia

Supplies Required:
TNT (several sticks)
Matches (1 book/box)
Heinrich Schliemann costume (1) [Optional: ‘precious artefacts’ (several)]

Approximate cost: $TBD, but presumably not too high – N.B. cost will be higher if ‘precious artefacts’ are to be ‘found’.

Method: Grid or square supervisor, dressed as Heinrich Schliemann, will by means of controlled detonations remove portions of sewer that pose danger of collapse, thereby preparing area for survey. Aforesaid supervisor will be first to survey excavated area and will ‘find’ ‘precious artefacts’. Photographs to be sepia toned and to feature local children in period dress for scale rather than meter sticks. Findings to be published in Jahrbuch der Preußischen Kaiserlichen Archäologischen Instituts***


And finally, last but definitely not least.  This winner should also come as no surprise and I offer my congratulations to Josh!  I too have been tempted to send the Josh Walton 3000 in to do some excavating but his Plan B isn't at all bad.

***The reasons for exploring the sewage system as Ashkelon should be fairly clear and straight forward. If we can trace the sewer system accurately it can help identify the city plan, and should help us locate places of interest for future excavations, such as major streets, large public buildings, etc. How to go about exploring the sewer system is a different issue entirely. While my initial thought was send a certain tunneling machine called the Josh Walton3000 to dig it out and record the findings, this approach has apparently been frowned upon. Therefore I have a second option. First we reenter the breach from last season with a laser measure (approx. $150 for mid end)  and a 2 million candlepower spotlight (Approx. $40). The spotlight can shine over 2 miles so should sufficiently light the opening down to a potential “turn” or “end.” Really long shovels can potentially used to clear away some of the accumulation for better visibility without going too far into the system. Then we use the laser measure to get a reading on the distance to the “turn.” Afterwards we bring in a GPR (variable cost, more if successful and we need it for more than a day), and hope that it can identify the signal of the sewer over the known area. If this is true, if we can identify a certain signature that is distinct, we could potentially use the GPR looking for that signature to trace the entire system.

Alternatively a night vision webcam attached to an all-terrain remote controlled monster truck and drive it through.***

 

Now we just need to see what the directors say!

Again, thanks to everyone who entered!  If we do somehow get into the sewer during the 2012 field season you can be sure we will blog about it.

 

Suprise! It's an Ancient Bathouse

During the offseason, August through May, work at Ashkelon falls into the pleasing rythyms of scholarly research, the drawing of ceramic corpora and the daily maintenance of the site as well as the Ashkelon Lab.  While the pace might be slower there is still much to learn and discover.  And not just by the Leon Levy Expedition.  The ancient city of Ashkelon is now a National Park where visitors come to swim, camp or to spend a day wandering the ruins.  It is operated by the Parks Authority and sometimes they come across something interesting in the maintenance of the park.  Indeed, it is almost impossible to stick a shovel into the ground and not find something.

This winter while renovating the bathrooms on the South Tell, good news for those working in Grid 51, the Parks Authority uncovered the remains of what the Antiquities Authority has determined was probably a bath.  It's a fascinating discovery, this bath which stood on one of the highest points on the South Tell in a neighborhood that enjoyed unparalleled views of the sea.

 

 

 

This is a view of the bathrooms on the South Tell and the area of the Antiquities Authority's salvage excavation.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And here is a picture of the excavation.

 

 

 

 

What happens next remains to be seen but the discovery of the bath has already given us some important information about this area of the city.  With each such discovery we learn a bit more about ancient Ashkelon.

 

 

 

Adventure Looms

If your winter was anything like mine, it was a wonderful thing.  In fact, I'll willingly claim that my hometown didn't have a REAL winter -- not when we had more than a week of 80 degree weather in the middle of March. 

Naturally, the sun and warm temperatures turned my thoughts to Ashkelon as I was reminded of two of the many reasons I love what I do. 

You might say that the strange weather also reminded me of Ashkelon as we enjoyed some unusual weather of our own last summer.  I don't remember ever seeing the fog roll in as it did last summer when we would have been un- surprised to see zombies or some other fantastical creature come wandering out of the mist.  Fortunately, no such creature arrived to wreck havoc on our work but we did enjoy the strangeness of the moment.

So, you've submitted your paperwork and are wondering what you got yourself into?  We'll get into that over the next few weeks.  It starts with a first rate field school, which provides students with in-depth training and education in archaeological method and theory as well as the history and archaeology of Ashkelon and the Near East, and it continues with fun, a key component in any worthwhile education experience.  Finally, it ends with a summer's worth of memories that might warm your bones on a cold winter's day or maybe make you the most interesting person on Facebook -- for a second or two -- or perhaps, as it did for some of us still working at Ashkelon -- change your career goals.

Okay, on with the reading suggestions.  This time I am going old school.  So old school some of you might read this and roll your eyes but I have to do it.  Today I'm going with Agatha Christie.  If I want a fast read and one that makes me think of the Near East, she has three that stand out; They Came to Baghdad, Murder in Mesopotamia and, of course, Death on the Nile.  Another reason to think Agatha Christie?  The American Colony Hotel in Jerusalem, which has featured in at least one movie adaptation of a Christie book, and its timelessness.  The hotel is worth a visit if for no other reason then to peruse its Guest Book which contains the signatures of a veritable who's who of visitors to Jerusalem.  It's brunch is pretty good too.

I have my plane ticket.  Do you have yours?

The Last Day

This is it!  The contest is winding down.  Get your entries in today for your chance to win fame and glory.  Granted, it isn't a $540 million dollar jackpot but who needs that much money when the volunteers of Ashkelon praise you finding a way to explore the city's sewer system? 

The winner will be announced May 1st!

On to other matters.  The deadline for volunteer applications is fast approaching.  This promises to be a fabulous season with work continuing in all three of our main excavation areas: Grids 38, 47 and 51.  In Grid 38 work will again focus on the Philistines and the excavation of domestic architecture.  In Grid 47 we will continue exposing the full dimensions of a Roman period odeon.  And in Grid 51 work will focus on domestic structures of the Persian and Hellenistic periods as the grid moves ever closer to the 604 B.C.E. destruction of Ashkelon. 

The Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon is a teaching expedition where students get practical experience with the theory, methodology and technology of a modern archaeological excavation.  In addition to the learning that goes on in the field, students have the opportunity to attend evening lectures by the professional staff of the excavation as well as visiting archaeologists from all over Israel.  We also offer a one day seminar day where volunteers participate in walking tours of the site as well as seminars on petrography, metals anaylsis, mircoachaeology, zooarchaeology and more.  It really is a wonderful opportunity to fully immerse yourself in the field of archaeology.  Want academic credit for all your learning?  Consider participating in Harvard's Summer School Program.  There is a little more work involved but it is well worth it.

There are still a few more weeks to apply! 

Finally, this week's reading recommendation.  Drawing a great deal on primary sources, Daniel Sperber's The City in Roman Palestine is a fascinating look at this important period.  Ashkelon is mentioned a number times from the wrestling matches held in the city to its basilicas.  Ever wondered how much it would cost to buy some fish and fresh fruit for your dinner while visiting Ashkelon in the fourth century?  Well, we actually know the answer to that question thanks to the remarkable survival of documents from a public official's journey from Egypt to Antioch on business.  Ashkelon was on his route and what Theophanes tells us about daily life in the city in the fourth century is really fascinating.  If you want to learn more, take a look at John Matthews', The Journey of Theophanes: Travel, Business, and Daily Life in the Roman East

 

Final Week

Who will win our "Because It's Cool!" I Want to Excavate the Sewer Contest?  There is still time to submit your entry and win fame and glory if we use your plan to explore the ancient sewers of Ashkelon this summer.  Be creative, be funny, be serious or speculative or whatever you think it will take to come up with the winning plan. The volunteers of Grid 47 are counting on you!

Remember, the deadline to submit volunteer applications, April 9th, is also fast aproaching.  Get your application in today! 

 

More to Read

If interested in the late periods at Ashkelon and the Near East more generally, there are two books I would recommend. 

First, Early Islamic Syria: An Aracheological Assesment by Alan Walmsley.  The author does a good job of outlining the history of the field, identifying important sites, describing the material culture and debating some of the most prominent research questions in the field of Islamic Archaeology.  Overall, it is a good, fast,and informative read.

My second recommendation is Crusader Castles by T.E. Lawrence.  Yes, that T.E. Lawrence.  When he was 21, T.E. Lawrence spent a summer walking throughout Syria-Palestine and he visited every major Crusader castle in the region.  He recorded everything he saw writing notes, drawing sketches and even taking photographs.  A volume containing this material was published after his death in the 1930s.  Recently, a new edition has been published and it is both a fascinating and interesting study.  It is well worth your time.

Enjoy!

Last Weeks for Sewer Contest

We are entering the last few weeks of the "Because It's Cool!" I want to Excavate the Sewer Contest but there is still time to enter. 

Here, you see a Grid 47 volunteer giving a VIP tour of the shaft that led down to the sewer.  While built in the Roman period, the sewer continued to be used well into the Islamic period before silting up and going out of use. 

The finds in the shaft were rich, as is usually the case in sewers, and included nearly complete ceramic vessels, beads, glass vessel fragments and ceramics imported from China. 

 

What might we find if we go further inside?  Maybe it will help us map the city center of Roman, Byzantine and Islamic period Ashkelon.  Maybe it will reveal more about the diet and health of the city's residents.  Maybe it will tell us more about trade and ceramic chronologies.  All of that is possible and more if we can just find a safe way to excavate it.

There is still time to help us find a way.  Enter today!  In 1,000 words or less, tell me how you would do it, what equipment is necessary and the approximate cost for implementing your plan.  I also want to know WHY you think we should do it, why we should excavate the sewer.  One lucky winner will win fame and glory and a non-alcoholic beverage of your choice in the Dan Gardens Hotel.  I can't think of anything better!

Remember, the deadline is March 31st!

Read This

When I asked Professor Daniel Master, co-director of the Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon, what he would tell volunteers to read, this is what he suggested:

Selections from Ashkelon 1-  It is free to download, and chapters 1, 8-11 provide a nice history.  Other chapters can show the range of studies that people have done/the range of things that we find.

For people with a Biblical focus (or at least a Bronze/Iron age focus), Life in Biblical Israel shows how the archaeological remains can be assembled to paint a picture of ancient life.

Stay tuned.  More soon.

What to Read

Recently, I was asked by a friend who will be coming to Ashkelon for the first time what she should read before arriving.  

Well, besides reading Ashkelon I, II and III, I of course said James Michener's The Source.  At the look of dismay that appeared on her face, I assured her that EVERYONE reads it before coming to excavate in Israel.  (I have no idea if this is still true but it was when I first ventured to Israel.)  Bravely she asked if she could borrow my copy and off she went.  And that got me to thinking.  What else might I recommend as good reading material for someone coming to Ashkelon, Israel and/or archaeology for the first time.

 

 

I'm going to work on this and over the next few weeks I'll highlight both fiction and non-fiction choices to get you in the mood for a fabulous summer.

Contest Continues

Thank you to everyone who has entered to contest.  We have had some wonderful responses ranging from the practical and feasible to the nonsensical and highly imaginative.  It certainly makes from some great reading.

 

In this picture you can see Deland standing in the sewer channel.  Thanks to Deland's ingenuity he was able to survey a portion of the sewer and determine that it extends at least 10 meters to the east and west of the opening in which he stands.

 

 

 

 

 As you can see, the sewer is largely silted up but there is maybe a foot or two of space at the top that is not filled in and which gives us an opportunity to get inside safely with the right plan.

 

Maybe your plan will be the one we put into action.

 

Grid 47, I expect you to have some good ideas. 

 

The contest continues until March 31.  The winner will be announced May 1st. 

 

 

 

 

 

Have you read the most recent New York Times article on Ashkelon?  Read about it here.  The article is about a collaboration between the Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon and the Weizmann Institute and the emerging field of microarchaeology.

 

It's Not All Sewage

The lure of built space under ground, especially when it is intact, is very powerful.  During the 2011 field season in Grid 47, the sewer we discovered wasn't the only subterranean architecture we uncovered. 

 

 

 

 

 

The first hint we had of this other architecture came during the 2010 when we found a smooth, plastered object on top of a foundation of cobble size stones which we suspected, but had no way of proving, was a cistern.  As is the case with all such intriguing objects, this one was stuck in the baulk.

You can see the architecture in question, along the dirt bualk on the right side of the picture, just to the right of the red block.

 

 

 

 

We decided to expand the grid prior to the 2011 season and this included the area to the east of the suspected plastered cistern.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

That expansion meant we had to say good bye to our lovely winter garden but doing so would allow us to, we hoped, catch the eastern edge of the odeon.

 

 

 

 

 

 

What we found was very interesting.

 

 

 

 

 

It looked like this.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And then, when it was all cleaned up, it looked like this. 

Readers of the blog and diggers in Grid 47 will remember exactly what it is.  Everyone else will have to wait a little longer to learn what it is, what happened to it and how we have been excavating it.

 

 

Stay tuned for more...

I will say that much like the sewer, this object had volunteers clamoring to get inside.

"Because It's Cool!" I Want to Excavate the Sewer Contest

Unexcavated but not forgotten, the sewer in Grid 47 stands ready for exploration.  If only we had a good reason to go in and a safe way to investigate this truly remarkable discovery.

My argument for why we should excavate the Roman period sewer discovered during the 2011 season -- "Because it's cool!" -- didn't persuade anyone to let us dig it but yours might.

This is your chance to win an ice coffee, or non-alcoholic beverage of your choice, from the Dan Gardens Hotel as well as fame and glory in our informal "Because It's Cool!" I Want to Excavate the Sewer Contest.

It's simple really.  In 1000 words or less describe how we can explore the sewer without putting a person inside.  Your proposal should include why you think the sewer is worth exploring, your plan, the equipment and/or technology required to implement it and the approximate cost of your plan.  The lucky winner may, just may, see their plan put into action.

Mail your plan to tracy@digashkelon.com.

Entries are due by March 31st and the winner will be announced on May 1st. 

 

 

Be creative!  Be inspired!  And find me a way to get into the sewer!  I'm ready to see where it goes!

 

Interesting Read

In case you didn't see it, check out this article about the threats to Leptis Magna in Libya.  Emperor Septimius Severus was born in Leptis Magna and devoted great resources to the embellishment of the city until it rivalled Carthage and Alexandria.  Or that was the plan.  

During the reign of Septimius Severus, the ancient city of Ashkelon also underwent signficant architectural embellishment.  It is believed the odeon we are currently excavating was built during his reign.

Now, to the picture.  The picture I posted an eon and a day ago is of some of the destroyed medieval fortifications in the vicinity of the Jerusalem Gate.  This is the area where the team from Hebrew University worked during the 2011 field season.  

Ashkelon 1 and 2

So, you worked at Ashkelon for a summer, two or three, or maybe even an eternity and you think you know everything there is to know about the site.  Not so fast. What about Grid 16?  Club Med?  The name of the assistant square supervisor in Grid 50 Square 49 in 1993.  Even if all your questions about Ashkelon aren't easily answered, there is a new source to use for your research.

As part of The Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon's committment to furthering scholarly understanding of this important Mediterranean site, we are proud to make Ashkelon 1 and 2 available to download free of charge. These two volumes, the first of which offers an overview of our first season of excavation in 1985 along with some additional reports and the second of which presents imported Roman period pottery, are the first in a ten volume series.  Eventually, each volume in the series will be available for download making the excavation of Ashkelon one of the most accessible in the world.

Planning has begun for the 2012 field season.  Keep an eye on the website for more information.

 

Meanwhile, I'll leave you with this:

 

 

 

 Any thoughts?

Still Summertime... And Loving Every Minute of It!

It really is a small world.  I went to a party today, family in tow, to celebrate the grand opening of a new garden at my children's school. While there, I talked to some parents who told me they ran into some people wearing Leon Levy Ashkelon Expedition t-shirts in downtown Chicago yesterday!  I'm guessing whoever was wearing those t-shirts was from Wheaton College...  Am I right? 

While at Ashkelon, it can feel like you are away from home for forever and a day. Maybe longer.  Then you come home and wow, summer isn't over!  Case in point.  

 

 

 

The lights are on, the sky is getting dark, and I'm sitting in my backyard listening to Paul McCartney rock Wrigley Field. What a great welcome home!

 

 

 

 I hope you are enjoying whatever summer has on tap for you!

One More Thank You

I need to send out a special thanks to Rona and Rafi who have transformed the Ashkelon Excavations Lab into a refuge.  Last night, for the second time this season, they hosted the excavation staff for a BBQ.  The yard is beautiful and a wonderful location for such festivities.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

All the plants you see are edible.  Rafi and Rona brew a fantastic herbal tea from the plants growing in the yard.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The local is beautiful.  The company superb.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And the food?  In a word, delicious!

 

 

 

 

I'm sorry to report that Nikita had no luck in charming Josh out of his portion.

 

 

 

 

 

Thanks again to Rona and Rafi.  We'll see you next year!

And now, I'm turning in my computer.  This is it.  Until next time.

And So It Ends

You will surely be forgiven if you have wondered what happened to us.  Did we succumb, after three days of sweeping dirt to make it "clean," to an incurable desire to sweep?  Are we wandering around Israel looking for piles of dirt to make tidy?  Or perhaps, just perhaps, did we get inside the drain and dig our way to Ashdod?  (Don't worry Grid 47 volunteers, we did not, and I repeat, DID NOT, get in the drain.  Maybe we just thought, "Good riddance" as we watched all of our faithful minions make their way home.  No and no and no. 

The fault is all mine, as is the delay.  I'm sure, since most of your loved ones are home by now, that you have heard how crazy the last week was and, I can confirm that it was just that, crazy busy.  Things have calmed down now, my report is in and I'm free to write one last blog from Israel.

As many of you know, the last week was a cleaning frenzy as we swept, sandbagged, gardened and prepped our areas for their big moment.

 

 

 

Here you can see Grid 47, all ready to go.  The best part about our week of cleaning?  The volunteers had to clean everythng -- even the areas we didn't excavate in this summer!

 

 

 

 

 

The balloon came last Saturday to take our final grid photos.  And no, you may not go for a ride!

 

 

 

 

 

Athough... It would be pretty cool if you could!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

After photos, it was time to make sure that all the grids were prepared for winter.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Josh and Wylie prepare Grid 38 for a long, long, long winter.  Remember, here, every mudbrick is sacred.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It wasn't all shut down the last week though.  This summer we had a group of students from Hebrew University working with us.  They had the privilege -- and good luck -- to dig a little longer than everybody else.  This summer they helped us to investigate the medieval fortifications of the city.  The first area they dug on the North Tel, they hit paydirt almost immediately.  Except, they didn't find Medieval ramparts as they hoped but rather, an MBII mudbrick glacis.  And if that wasn't bad enough, right next to it was a Philistine Tower.

So, it was off to the Jerusalem Gate, where things got interesting, very, very, quickly.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

You never know what the dirt is going to reveal.  On this day, Philip and his crew were in for some surprises.  Nothing was exactly where it was supposed to be, but it all proved to be very, very interesting.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And sometimes, the most exciting discovery of the season is made on the very last day of digging...  Yes, that is an arch.  Any guesses?

 

 

 

 

It was a great season!  We owe a debt of gratitude and a big "thank you everyone" to our volunteers who worked tirelessly -- Alabama John, you feeling okay? -- to make our season a success.  "We appreciate you" as one of our favorite staff members would say if you were here now.

Don't give up on the blog.  It may be less frequent but we'll keep posting throughout the year.  Some of you we may never see again, some of you have already promised you'll be back!  Either way, we enjoyed getting to know you this summer.

Have a good year!