If you are a friend of the Gabii Project, you will have seen from our facebook posts that a lot has been going on on site for the past four weeks! After a stint of preparatory work with staff only, a team of 40 students joined us on Monday June 29th for our seventh straight season of excavation at Gabii.
Despite the recent heat wave, activities in the three excavation sectors are progressing with the same enthusiasm ever since. The Area D group is completing the investigation of a cluster of Early Iron Age huts, whose stratified sequence is providing tantalizing new evidence on the earliest phases of city formation at Gabii. The Environmental Lab team is processing dozens of samples from these deposits, which will help us reconstruct the function of the structures, economic patterns, and ancient diet. In neighboring Area C, we reopened a trench first excavated in 2009-2012, which revealed a large atrium house. We are now exploring the Early Republican levels of the city-block, and we hope to reach into the same Archaic deposits attested in Area D. In Area F, three rooms of the monumental public building brought to light in the past two seasons remain to be documented. Once this will have been accomplished, we will have a complete picture of this exceptionally important building. Meanwhile, the Topo team is producing scores of photomodels (we are over 1000 now...). It is a busy time in the Finds Lab too, with washing pottery in the morning and sorting, drawing and studying the finds in the afternoon.
Several visitors and friends came to see the progress of the excavation, including Kim Bowes and Richard Hodges, Lisa Fentress, and David Potter, who gave a lecture on Epigraphy to our students. We were particularly pleased to welcome a group of children participating in the Summer Camp of the Children's Hospital of Padova.
Ciao for now!
The Gabii Project is an archaeological initiative focused on the excavation, exploration, and documentation of the ancient city of Gabii, located to the east of Rome in central Italy
Thursday, July 16, 2015
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
Android Tablets at Gabii
BY J. TROY SAMUELS, PhD student in the Interdepartmental Program in Classical Art and Archaeology, University of Michigan
Buon Giorno from Rome! This summer, the Gabii Project, a University of Michigan archaeological excavation and field school, undertook our sixth full season of fieldwork focused on the ancient Latin city of Gabii. Directed by University of Michigan professor Nicola Terrenato, this large-scale open area excavation aims to both increase our understanding of this city, a neighbor and rival to Rome in the first millennium BCE, and educate students in archaeological method, theory, Roman history, and myriad other topics. To that end, this season we welcomed forty-two volunteers from a variety of undergraduate and graduate colleges and universities to Rome, who, along with various staff members, spent the last five weeks significantly expanding our understanding of the city of Gabii, its people, and its history.
Alongside the normal challenges and opportunities offered by such a
large-scale undertaking, the 2014 edition of the project featured a
massive shift in recording strategies. Instead of the paper forms used
in previous seasons, this year we decided to go paperless in the field.
All data was recorded exclusively on four Panasonic Toughpads and seven
Android tablets. Despite early trepidations, perhaps best exemplified by
the Seven Deadly Sin–themed names assigned to the seven Android
tablets, this new system has proved highly successful. Paperless
recording not only cut down on off-site data entry but also encouraged a
degree of student autonomy in information gathering and recording. The
individual nature of tablet data entry encouraged students to attempt to
record and understand the archaeology on their own terms before seeking
the help of their supervisors. By the end of the second week, it was
commonplace to see five students on their own tablets, independently
entering data pertaining to the stratigraphic unit they had excavated by
themselves. The presence of excellent students helped this transition
go smoothly, and paperless recording will certainly be a feature at
Gabii for years to come.
In terms of archaeological discovery, this season was also highly
successful. The large size of the project allows for two distinct areas
of excavation, Area F, focused on expanding our understanding of the monumental complex
revealed last season, and Area D, focused on an occupation area from
the early, formative phases of the city. While vastly different in terms
of surviving architecture and excavation method, both areas continue to
provide important information that will shape our understanding of the
cities and people of first-millennium BCE central Italy. We are excited
both about the many things we uncovered and the future seasons that will
help us continue to better understand the multifaceted, fascinating
material history of this important site.
For more information please visit our websites, Facebook page, or read our wonderful student blogs.
http://gabiiproject.org/
http://sitemaker.umich.edu/gabiiproject/home
https://www.facebook.com/gabii.project
http://agergabinus.blogspot.it/
This post was adapted from Troy Samuels' post to The Kelsey Museum's blog.
Buon Giorno from Rome! This summer, the Gabii Project, a University of Michigan archaeological excavation and field school, undertook our sixth full season of fieldwork focused on the ancient Latin city of Gabii. Directed by University of Michigan professor Nicola Terrenato, this large-scale open area excavation aims to both increase our understanding of this city, a neighbor and rival to Rome in the first millennium BCE, and educate students in archaeological method, theory, Roman history, and myriad other topics. To that end, this season we welcomed forty-two volunteers from a variety of undergraduate and graduate colleges and universities to Rome, who, along with various staff members, spent the last five weeks significantly expanding our understanding of the city of Gabii, its people, and its history.
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Gabii Project 2014 Team
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Matt Naglak (University of Michigan, IPCAA) creates a photo model while Dr. Marilyn Evans (ICCS) instructs Rachel Goldstein (Yale University) in her work on “Wrath,” the Android tablet. |
For more information please visit our websites, Facebook page, or read our wonderful student blogs.
http://gabiiproject.org/
http://sitemaker.umich.edu/gabiiproject/home
https://www.facebook.com/gabii.project
http://agergabinus.blogspot.it/
This post was adapted from Troy Samuels' post to The Kelsey Museum's blog.
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
The Gabii Project: Archaeology in The Information Age
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Racel Opitz demonstrates use of the tablets to students . |
“We have scale issues,” Rachel chuckles, “Well, they’re not issues because the method works.”
Rachel’s team has implemented strategies and introduced technologies aimed at increasing efficiency within The Gabii Project to support a large open area excavation. They upgrade software and propose new methods nearly every field season. Most recently, Rachel brought tablet technology to the scene, replacing almost all of the paper recording formerly done in the trenches with direct to digital recording on Panasonic ToughPads and Android tablets, linked in real-time to the project’s ARK database and GIS system.
“One of the reasons we were able to open such a large excavation area as is that the recording is just so fast,” Rachel states plainly. “You can answer very different archaeological questions working at this scale”
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Several forms of digital recording can be uploaded and processed in real-time using the current configuration. |
“More and more people are doing some variant on what we’re doing, and that’s a good thing. Of course we try to stay at the forefront, so five years from now we’ll be doing something totally different.”
You can follow Rachel’s work at: http://gabiiserver.adsroot.itcs.umich.edu/gabiigoesdigital/
This post was adapted from James Reslier-Wells' post to The 2014 International Day of Archaeology on behalf of The Gabii Project.
The Gabii Project: A Moment with Field Directors Anna and Marcello
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Gabii Project Managing and Field Directors Marcello Mogetta and Anna Gallone visit Area F to see how things are going. |
The Gabii Project is an excavation and field school run jointly with The University of Michigan and The University of Verona. We are excavating the Ancient Latin city of Gabii, about 20 km East of Rome. The city grew alongside Rome through the first millennium, BC, and into the 3rd century AD, when it was finally abandoned. Throughout its existence, the city underwent many of the same changes as its more famous neighbor except for one crucial point: it hasn’t been developed further. This fact allows us pure excavation of the site, without millennia of modernization stacked atop it.
But today, we focus less on the
story of the site, and more on those who have cultivated it. First, we
have Managing and Field Directors Marcello Mogetta, and Anna Gallone…
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Anna Gallone and Marcello Mogetta taking a quick break.
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At The Gabii Project, however, Marcello’s work is mainly administrative. As a so-called “big dig,” there is a lot of logistical work to be done not only on-site, dealing with safety concerns, and choosing where to dig and where to spend money, but also during the off season where securing permits, writing and submitting papers, and choosing new staff take precedence.
“The important point to realize is that these are not isolated tasks,” maintains Marcello, “It’s so linked together… and this is not something that starts on June 1st and ends on August 1st, it continues throughout the off season.”
“What happens here in five weeks is the result of ten months of preparation,” Chimes in Anna, whose work is also primarily logistical.
Even with all of the preparations and planning, the two are still very busy during the field season. This affords the two little time to participate in the actual fieldwork, their real passion. While they do make time to buck this trend where they can—such as when they lead the excavation of a lead sarcophagus in 2009—the two long for their days working in the field.
“Our secret dream is to go work as volunteers in another field school, with fewer responsibilities,” Marcello half-jokes, with Anna adding: “Back to the old days, when the only thing that really mattered was excavating a layer correctly and finding something cool.”
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Anna Gallone and Marcello Mogetta snag a rare moment to join the active excavation. |
“I’ve been a field archaeologist for 20 years now,” states Anna. “I have never ever seen a site with so many people working together at the same time on so many different aspects.”
As for Marcello, “The project is constantly evolving, I mean the way we started six years ago, you would hardly recognize it. In a way, this is like a living organism, growing and changing, so I’m very curious to see what this is going to look like in 10 years.”
This post was adapted from James Reslier-Wells' post to The 2014 International Day of Archaeology on behalf of The Gabii Project.
Sunday, December 29, 2013
Tha Gabii Project and the state of Italian archaeology
An interview with Nic Terrenato just appeared on the Italian newspaper Il Fatto Quotidiano. The article discusses the state of Italian archaeology in light of the recent funding cuts by the Italian government, and highlights the important contribution of US-based and other foreign institutions.
Gabii in the Top 10 Discoveries of 2013!
The Archaeology magazine has selected Gabii's Area F building as one of the Top 10 archaeological discoveries of 2013! A large chunk of this monumental building, which features imposing ashlar architecture and finely appointed floors, was uncovered in 2012-2013. In July 2013 the sensational find was first announced in a short article by Prof. Mario Torelli, featured in the Italian newspaper La Repubblica. Additional coverage from news outlets in the UK and the US soon followed. Most notable are a piece that appeared in the New York Times, and a release by the University of Michigan's news service. Both include a summary of the finds, and quotes from Nic Terrenato and other team members. A story on the dig was included in the september/october 2013 issue of the UK-based magazine Minerva.
Monday, November 18, 2013
Lecture on Lapis Gabinus at the Kelsey Museum FAST series
Jason Farr (Michigan) will present the results of current research on the well-preserved quarries at Gabii in a a lecture titled "Lapis Gabinus and the Economy of Urban Construction: Recent Fieldwork at Gabii and Rome". The talk is part of the Field Archaeology Series on Thursday, and is sponsored by the Interdepartmental Program in Classical Art and Archaeology and the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology. Thursday November 21st at 6:00 pm (Kelsey Museum, Lecture Hall).
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