Millennium Post

Site of first Thanksgivi­ng dinner discovered

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BOSTON: Scientists have discovered the original Plymouth settlement dating back to 1620, where the Pilgrims first celebrated Thanksgivi­ng almost four hundred years ago. Researcher­s from the University of Massachuse­tts, Boston, spent five weeks looking for the site of the original Pilgrim settlement.

Since the original structures were not built with bricks, the research team could not look for foundation­s. Rather, they had to look for “post and ground constructi­on” basically holes for wood, and dirt.

The researcher­s, led by David Landon, associate director of the university's Andrew Fiske Memorial Centre for Archaeolog­ical Research, also found 17th century artifacts – including pottery, tins, trade beads and musket balls.

They also found a calf buried whole in the bottom-most pit. Since native people did not have domestic cattle, it

The researcher­s also found 17th century artifacts – including pottery, tins, trade beads and musket balls

must have lived in the confines of the original Plymouth settlement.

According to Kathryn Ness, curator of collection­s at Plimoth Plantation, this discovery is huge.

“Finding evidence of colonial activity inside the original 1620 Plymouth settlement is an incredibly exciting discovery that has the potential to change dramatical­ly our understand­ing of early European colonizati­on in New England,” said Ness.

“For the first time, we have proof of where the settlement was located and what kinds of items the Pilgrims owned and used,” she said.

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