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Subject:
From:
Rita Elliott <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 18 Jul 2018 16:07:59 -0400
Content-Type:
text/plain
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Hey Linda,
Martha Zierden and the Charleston Museum/city delineated the 18th century
redan by using bricks in what was otherwise a sea of asphalt. I am sure she
can provide the specifics if you are interested. Not exactly 15th century,
but it may give you ideas...
Best,
Rita

Rita Elliott, M.A., RPA 11477
*Education Coordinator & Research Associate*
The LAMAR Institute, P.O. Box 2992, Savannah, GA 31402
www.thelamarinstitute.org  [log in to unmask]  706.341.7797

On Wed, Jul 18, 2018 at 1:10 PM, Linda Derry <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> Histarchers,
>
> Can anyone suggest some good examples  of sites where the locations of very
> large buried archaeological features have been marked for public
> interpretation without digging up the features or harming them in any way?
>
> For example, in Franklin TN, I saw that a portion of backfilled Civil War
> trenches were marked out using grey slag on the ground surface.  The slag
> was contained by landscape edging.   I noticed that grass was beginning to
> emerge through the rock  so it might not be a permanent installation unless
> there was a plan to regularly spray the rock with chemical weed killer.
>
> I want to mark the location of a very large semi-circular moat around a
> 15th century late Mississippian village.  It was back filled in the mid
> 19th century, but was used for a few decades as the centerpiece of an early
> 19th town plan.  I thought about planting a tall prairie style grass, but I
> what I really need is something that is a visual clue but something that
> visitors can easily walk across to access the acreage inside the
> semicircle.   I am hoping to accomplish this without much disturbance to
> the mid-19th century fill in side the moat. And of course, I do not have an
> unlimited budget.
>
> Any ideas or examples?  I know there is someone out there that can help me
> solve this puzzle.
>
> Linda Derry
> Site Director, Old Cahawba Archaeological Park
> Alabama Historical Commission
> 9518 Cahaba Road, Orrville, AL 36767
> park:  334/ 875-2529
> [log in to unmask]
>
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