Day One is Done

Day One is Done

The first day of the excavation is always a whirlwind of activity and, I might add, the only day when every single person on the dig makes the 5:00 am bus on time.  Why you ask?  Because most of the team is jet lagged and, much to their disappointment, up long before their alarm clocks go off in the morning.  Today was no exception and things got off without a hitch.  I have a glimpse of each grid as they cleaned in preparation for the start of actual digging in the next few days.

Grid 51 -- Persian period occupation on the South Tell

Grid 51 -- Persian period occupation on the South Tell


Grid 16 -- cutting into the North Tell through the Crusader moat

Grid 16 -- cutting into the North Tell through the Crusader moat

Grid 20 -- the Snake Tower and uncovering the medieval fortifications

Grid 20 -- the Snake Tower and uncovering the medieval fortifications

We're back at it tomorrow at 4:30 am.  I'll try to post something, hopefully with frequent guest posts, every day so check back often to see what's happening on site.

Tool Draft

Today the pottery compound is virtually empty.  Well, empty except for the vicious mosquitoes (or perhaps sand flies) that delight in biting on the legs of whichever archaeologist is standing in their vicinity.  Tomorrow, the pottery compound will be the site of our annual tool draft when the grid supervisors convene to negotiate over and, ultimately, divide up the tools for the season.  Tomorrow promises to be quite busy.

Airport Shuttles

It's a holiday today, Shavuot, so things are quiet.

As a visual aid for Saturday, and those of you who might like one, I'm posting a picture of Elise, the volunteer coordinator, who will be leading the two shuttles to the airport.  

Find her and she'll make sure you get to the right place.

Logistical Matters

Saturday is fast approaching and with it some practical matters with which to deal.  Most importantly, if you are flying in to Ben Gurion on Saturday there are two scheduled shuttles to ferry volunteers and staff from the airport to the lovely Dan Gardens Hotel in Ashkelon.  The first shuttle is scheduled for 3:00 pm and the second 8:00 pm.  The shuttles will be led/hosted by a member of the Ashkelon staff, likely our volunteer coordinator Elise.  

If you haven't already let Robyn at Harvard know which shuttle you plan/hope to be on, it is a good idea to do so.  We want to make sure everyone gets to Ashkelon.

If you don't want to wait for the shuttles you have few options as it will be Shabbat and neither the trains nor the buses will be running.  Best bet is a taxi in which case you also want to round up other volunteers, if any are around, as taxis can get expensive.

The good news is that there are several seating areas, some shops, an ATM, and several cafes once you pass through customs and all that.  While there is no good place to hang out while jet lagged, Ben Gurion isn't the worst of your options.  It may, in fact, be quieter than the hotel which will be full of guests.

Work starts first thing Sunday mooring with a 4:30 wake up call.  See you then if not before.

Daily Update

We were back in the field today.  The first order of business was preparing a new area for a salvage excavation ahead of the installation of a large pump for the park's new sewer system.

This new area is adjacent to the park offices and our pottery compound.  Our goal is to excavate a 10 x 10 meter area down 3.6 meters (the depth required for the pump).  It's going to be an intense 5 weeks once we get started.  

While a  GPR survey done several years ago as well as a coring project revealed little archaeological material in the area, the wider expanse we'll be opening has great potential.  This location is more or less 30 meters from what we believe to be the approximate location of the cardo (the main north-south street of the city from the Roman period onwards) and may hold, therefore, structures associated with the street.

We start this project in two weeks so check back then to see our progress.

A Week to Go

It's a hot one today so we are all working in the lab.  Supervisor computers are updated and ready to go.  Ben is preparing the total stations for the summer.  Josh is making sure we have enough supplies, tools and other sundries.  As for everyone else?  We're working on various research projects.

The first volunteer arrives tomorrow, a group of supervisors arrives on Sunday which is the same day we'll do some digging in a salvage excavation project we are conducting in cooperation with the Parks Authority.  The next big wave of arrivals appears to be Thursday when much of the remaining staff arrives in town.  The season is definitely picking up steam.

I'll try to blog each and every day which is our informal way of keeping friends, families, volunteers, and whoever else decides to stop by informed of our progress.  I'll highlight the various excavation areas, with pictures, throughout the season.  I'll also feature special guest posts by volunteers so check back often to see what is happening on the excavation.

 

 

The Lab

Just a quick post on a very busy day.  

After more then 15 years we are saying goodbye to our longtime lab (the "Mabada").  Here you can see the first floor looking a little empty.  The boxes are filled with pottery sherds/vessels waiting to be checked against the hundreds of drawings that were done over the winter.  Still a lot of work to do before we close the Lab for good at the end of the season.


Pottery Compound

Did some work in the pottery compound today where things are still on the quiet side.

We also walked over to the Snake Tower to get a look at things there.  Its all cleaned up and ready for volunteers.

The path we took to get to the Snake Tower took us through the old camp where the team stayed during the first season of excavation in 1985.  Abandoned for years, it looks a bit different now.

Great weather today, overcast and breezy but it isn't supposed to last.  Friday's forecast is calling for 104 degrees.  Sounds like a good day to work in the Lab.

It's official.  The preseason has started.  We arrived yesterday, spent the night wrestling with jet lag and fatigue, per the usual, and were off and running this morning.  Today, Daniel Master and I participated in a conference at Ashkelon College on Ashkelon and its environs.  Ben Felker, a member of our GIS team spent his day in the Lab working on various projects.  And Josh ran around doing Lab Director business ahead of a Thursday run up to Jerusalem to get supplies for the season. 

Tomorrow we will be out in the pottery compound planning the remainder of the preseason.  I'm looking forward a productive few weeks.

Randomly, a note about the hotel, our fabulous home away from home.  This year they've installed an ATM machine.  Old timers will appreciate the importance and value in this.  No longer do weary volunteers or staff members need to trudge up the hill to get money.  Now, it's just a hop, skip and a jump down to the lobby. 

Check back soon for pictures from the site.  I hope to walk around some of excavation areas in the next few days.

The Snake Tower

Today, a brief word about a new excavation project this summer.  We are lucky to have Denys Pringle joining us this season to conduct an excavation of the fortification system.  The Snake Tower in point of fact.  For six weeks he and Hannah Buckingham will lead a team of volunteers in a project that promises to shed light on the construction, organization and chronology of ancient Ashkelon's fortifications.  This work will build significantly on Pringle's exhaustive survey of the fortifications.  I, for one, am eager to see what they come up with.

Remains of one of the medieval towers

Remains of one of the medieval towers

Preparations are well under way as we move closer to the start of the season.  The first staff members head over in a week.  Many of the specialists follow soon after and then it will be only a week or so before the remainder of the team arrives and we get to work.  Josh Walton, grid supervisor and the current Lab Director, tells me the summer is already a scorcher so get ready.  It promises to be a hot one.

Questions and Answers

So now its time to talk a little more about where exactly we'll be digging.  The site is quite large, approximately 150 acres or so.  In our almost 30 years of excavation we have excavated only the smallest portion of the site in part because our research design requires depth in our excavation areas and because, as archaeologists, we want to leave research material for future generations that might approach the site with different questions, methodologies and technologies.  We still have a lot to learn, however, about our ongoing excavation areas as well as several new ones that we'll be digging this summer.

First up, Grid 51.  Located on the South Tell, Grid 51 was first opened in 1997.  It is currently, and has been for some time, under the leadership of Kate Birney.  Under her direction, excavation has revealed a complete sequence from the Islamic/Crusader period down into the Persian period.  Looming large this year is Nebuchadnezzar's destruction of Ashkelon in 604 B.C.  In fact, this year for the first time in several years, Grid 51 will have all its squares open.  It should be a very exciting year.

Next, the new grid on the North Tell.  This is an exciting new project that will be under the direction of Josh Walton.  He will be digging a step trench in an attempt to uncover a complete Islamic/Crusader through Bronze Age sequence on the North Tell, something we've never been able to do before.  I asked Josh for more information on what he plans to do this summer and here is what he told me:

"A few thoughts on the North Tell: I hope that this step trench will prove interesting for a number of ongoing projects at the site including both the later and early history of the site, although this year we will probably be primarily excavating later levels.  The majority of excavation so far at the site has taken place on the South Tell (Grids 38,50 and 51) and outside of the site on the North Tell (Grid 2). The North Tell itself is underexplored, with the primary data coming from Grid 23, which had some nice remains from the hellenistic and later periods, as well as traces of EB pottery. The hope is to get a better understanding of the settlement on the north tell, to fill in some gaps in our understanding of the site. Because we are digging at the edge of the crusader moat we may get some material relating to its construction. For the Islamic and Hellenistic periods any architecture we find can hopefully be linked up with the finds from Grid 23 to help with our understanding of site planning and layout. Since this would have been on the acropolis of the north tell there is also the chance that we find some substantial later period architecture, which is always exciting. In future seasons the hope is to find some remains from the Bronze and Iron Ages, including architecture from the earliest settlement on the site from the Early Bronze Age. But as of this moment the only MB finds we have are from the gate area, and no architecture from within the city to go with it. Any domestic structures from the MB would be very interesting and obviously quite significant. The same is true for the Iron Age, where we know the rampart was refortified and towers were constructed in the Iron IIA, but very little has been found within the site. By excavating here the hope is to add to our knowledge of settlement across the site by getting a complete section of the occupation levels of the North Tell."

 

A special project will be led by Denys Pringle and Hannah Buckingham in the area of the medieval ramparts.  Their work will focus on trying to elucidate the sequence of the fortification system.  This project is part of a thorough survey and reassessment of the fortifications, some of the most visible and impressive archaeological remains on site.

Ongoing research and publication projects and several other small projects figure into the mix as well for what promises to be another very busy summer in Ashkelon.  


The Field School

Now its time to get down to the business of archaeology.  That's why we are all coming to Ashkelon, right?  To hold history in our hands.

Volunteers and staff clean up Grid 51 at the start of the 2013 field season

Volunteers and staff clean up Grid 51 at the start of the 2013 field season

Curious about an archaeological field school and what it entails?  Simply put, its six weeks of the most intensive "learn by doing" program imaginable.  Six days a week volunteers get hands-on experience as they learn about archaeological method and theory.  The most important component is daily excavation -- it is very important to make it to the field each and every day -- when the bulk of instruction takes place.  Work in the field is supplemented by an evening lecture series by Ashkelon staff members as well as visiting scholars.  Students enrolled in one of the affiliated summer school programs are required to attend the lectures.  Those volunteers not enrolled are also encouraged to attend if at all interested in the history and archaeology of Ashkelon and the wider Near East.

One of the highlights of the first week is a day long program of seminars which introduces volunteers to various aspects of the excavation's work.  There are tours of the site and sessions on everything from XRF, GIS and botanicals, to zooarchaeology and microarchaeology.  It's a great opportunity to learn about the technologies used on site.  We don't spend all our time in the dirt.

Adam Aja leads a session on XRF on Seminar Day.

Adam Aja leads a session on XRF on Seminar Day.

The expedition sponsors several field trips each summer which introduce volunteers to places such as Jerusalem and the Dead Sea as well as important archaeological sites including Masada and other nearby excavations.  These trips are included in the volunteer fee and are lead by staff members.

The goal of the field school is that every volunteer, whether enrolled in a summer school program or not, will understand the fundamentals of archaeology by the end of the season. Students enrolled in summer school will have additional requirements which they will learn about from their instructors.  Everyone, however, should be full trained and able to take their skills to other excavations or back to the classroom.

For some, this will be the initial preparation for a career in the field of archaeology.  For the majority, this will be an amazing summer experience that provides you with good stories and even better memories.  Whatever brings you to Ashkelon, welcome.

 

Planning for the Summer

Only three weeks until the first group of supervisors heads over to Ashkelon to help Josh Walton, Lab Director and Grid Supervisor, prepare for the season.  That means the volunteer departure date cannot be far behind and along with it, lots of questions about the summer.

Ashkelon is a seaside town located 45 minutes south of Tel Aviv.  The site itself is in a national park right on the beach and it is not unheard of for volunteers to run down the hill and go for a swim during Fruit Break.  While breezes off the Mediterranean Sea provide much needed cooling throughout the day it is, nevertheless, a challenging work environment.  Hydration is key to making it through the day.  Fortunately, water is plentiful (and drinkable) in the park.  A water bottle is a must.  Many volunteers bring Gatorade or other similar products to add a little flavor.  It is difficult to impossible to find such items in Israel so you do need to bring it with you if you want more than water.  Sunscreen and hats are also very important in helping to manage the sun.  Many but not all excavation areas will be shaded by "shade clothes" but it is wise to come prepared for any situation.

What to wear you wonder?  Closed toe shoes are a must.  No sandals are allowed in the field.  This is true for volunteers and staff alike and is really a safety issue.  Beyond that requirement there is a great deal of flexibility.  Shorts and t-shirts are most common.  Some people decide on pants and long sleeve shirts.  Basic rule of thumb is to make sure whatever you plan on, it's comfortable.  Same is true for out of the field.  There is one big party a year which gives everyone a chance to put on their "good clothes."  In Ashkelon this often means putting on the nice pair of sandals.  The best news?  We get laundry service twice a week. 

The hotel offers us a lot of comforts that many excavations don't get to enjoy.  Rooms are air conditioned and come equipped with small refrigerators and an electric teapot.  So bring your Via or other favorite coffee or tea, you'll be able to make some in the room.  Most of our meals are eaten in the hotel and food is plentiful.  Breakfast in the hotel, with all the fresh pastries on tap, is always a special treat.  Most days, however, we eat breakfast out in the field in the location below.

Breakfast spot by Pottery Compound

Breakfast spot by Pottery Compound

We work six days a week stopping at 1:00 on Friday to give people time to travel before the start of Shabbat.  Israel is a small country so the good news its easy to travel and get to almost any place you might want to see.  The expedition sponsors several field trips, including one to Jerusalem, to help orient everyone to the sights.  Buses and trains run before and after Shabbat, rental cars are readily available (you just need your American driver's license), and taxis, both local and long distance, generally run all the time.

Many people decide to stay in Ashkelon on weekends.  The beach is a ten minute walk from the hotel.  The marina lies a short walk to the north and there are a number of restaurants, some with free wifi, that are great for dinner, grabbing a coffee, or just wandering around to take in the sights. Walk up the hill away from the coast and you'll find yourself at the grocery store or, more importantly, the "close mall" where you can grab a coffee at Aroma, Israel's major coffee chain, go shopping for a book or even stock up on gummies.  Just a little further is McDonald's if you find you have a craving for home.  There is a movie theatre in town and all the major summer releases will be showing there usually only a week or two later than their release date in the US.  In other words, there is plenty to do close to your summer home-away-from-home. 

ATMs are also readily available though there is a small service charge for using one.  You can use credit cards almost every where with the exception of many of the small local stores.  It is also fairly easy to find money changers if you prefer to go that route.

Finally, what about internet access?  The good news is that the hotel has free wifi in the lobby.  It's also possible to buy wifi.  As mentioned previously, many of the cafes near the hotel offer free wifi so it is easy to stay connected.  Bring adaptors appropriate for Israel so that necessary electronics can be charged.

Next time, we'll talk a little more about the field school and a day in the field.  Until then, here's another glimpse of the small fair that set up shop in Ashkelon this month.

Welcome Volunteers

The application deadline has passed and planning for the summer season is well under way.  Welcome to everyone who will be joining us this summer.  I imagine there will be some familiar faces as well as many new ones.  

Curious to know more about what you have gotten yourself into?  This website is, of course, the best spot to learn everything you could possibly want to know about the Leon Levy Expedition to Ashkelon and our ongoing work. 

The following links can tell you a little more about the site, the city and where we stay.  (Please note, these sources are independent of the excavation.)

Rick Gore's 2001 National Geographic article on Ashkelon can be found here.  It provides a good overview of the site and its history.

Want to learn more about the Dan Gardens Hotel where we stay?  You can find pictures and more information here.   Not too shabby, staying in a hotel with laundry service, air conditioning and a swimming pool.  If your family asks, the answer is "yes,"  we really are doing archaeology.  

If you want to learn a little about the city of Ashkelon, you can go here.

Check back over the next few weeks for more information as we continue to prepare for the 2014 season.

Organizing 2013 volunteer/staff photo

Organizing 2013 volunteer/staff photo

New Excavation Area

The walk has been made and Grid Supervisor Joshua Walton has a new excavation area to call home.  This summer he will open a step trench on the North Tell in either Grid 16 or 17.  (The exact location will be identified by the GIS team prior to the start of the season.)

New Grid on the North Tell

New Grid on the North Tell

The goal for this and subsequent seasons is to get as complete an occupational sequence from the Bronze Age through the Islamic/Crusader period as possible.  

Visible in the photo?  Probable remains from the medieval fortifications.

Since work first began in 1985 we have learned a great deal about settlement on the North Tell but this promises to be one of the most informative years yet.

There's still time to join the volunteer staff.  Get your application in today!

Rainy Season

While many students and faculty were enjoying Spring Break here, several staff members went off to Ashkelon to continue preparations for the summer.  The greatest challenge to making progress on various projects?  The rain.  Dr. Kate Birney, in Ashkelon working on an assessment of the Hellenistic period ceramic corpus, was challenged to improvise a work space during periods of heavy rain.  The solution?  One of our storage containers.  I'll include a picture, the poor quality is my fault not hers, to give you a sense of just how dreary it can get. 

Dr. Daniel Master, co-director of the excavation, was also in Ashkelon walking the site with Josh Walton, one of the grid supervisors, selecting the location for a new excavation area on the North Tell.  We should know more soon about where that work will take place.

Volunteer applications are due April 7th.  With several new areas opening and Grid 51 racing towards 604 B.C.E. it promises to be an exciting season.  Get yours in today!