The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Dig find excites archaeolog­ists

Evidence of an ancient dwelling uncovered in national forest.

- By Mark Davis mdavis@ajc.com

Those were tumultuous times. Disease had swept the land, felling untold numbers of people. War had claimed more.

Intruders came from the north too. They wanted the land — or, in some cases, the people who lived there.

In the midst of this chaos, a family built a home. They erected it near a stream in the green hills. It had a hearth in its center. On winter nights, surely, the family crouched before it, listening to the wind.

Who were the people who lived there? Where did they go? Those answers, lost some 400 years ago, may lie in the soil of the Chattahooc­hee National Forest.

Archaeolog­ists and

volunteers recently wrapped up digging at a forest tract where a house stood four centuries ago. The dig, the second conducted at the site, turned up evidence of human occupation — pot shards, the remains of a smoking pipe, the circular hearth.

Scientists will spend the next year studying their finds before returning to the site in March. They consider the artifacts valuable in helping understand a period about which they know little.

James Wettstaed, an archaeolog­ist at the national forest, in north Georgia, is eager to return.

“It’s one of the neatest sites I’ve ever seen,” said Wettstaed, who has worked for the U.S. Forest Service for 26 years. “It’s close to the top of one of the most important sites I’ve ever seen.”

Officials won’t say exactly where the home’s remains are located, only that it’s somewhere in the folds of 750,000 federally-owned acres. They don’t want looters defiling the site.

The site turned up two years ago. Off-road enthusiast­s on all-terrain and four-wheel-drive trucks had torn up a stretch of forest floor, exposing the soil. Forest service officials called in archaeolog­ists to conduct sample digs on the tract, just in case something from another era turned up. It did: the dirt surrendere­d evidence of a long-ago structure.

In March 2014, scientists, aided by volunteers, conducted the first dig. They found evidence of fence posts and scorched areas, hints of a structure perhaps 25 feet across. They returned last month for another dig and came back with pottery shards and the remains of a pipe that someone had used to smoke tobacco. Tests estimated the artifacts were about 400 years old.

Who were those people? They could have been connected to Creek or Cherokee tribes indigenous to the region. Or they may have been Native Americans from farther north, moving into new land.

Whoever they were, they may have had tense lives. Four centuries ago, some Native Americans raided other tribes for slaves. The ravages of diseases brought the previous century by Spanish explorer and conquistad­or Hernando de Soto lingered. And people were at war with each other.

Whoever dwelt in the house, said Wettstaed, “lived in chaotic times.”

The site, Wettstaed said, had been popular for centuries. Archaeolog­ists also found a few items dating to about AD 100, others to 1100.

The artifacts are getting a thorough cleaning and review. Wettstaed said he and others plan to learn everything they can from the mysteries surrendere­d in the forest.

Mark Williams, an archaeolog­y professor at the University of Georgia, is curious about this latest find.

Williams is director of the Georgia Archaeolog­ical Site File, a compendium of archaeolog­ical sites across the state. Some date back as far as 14,000 years. He’s also director of the university’s Laboratory of Archaeolog­y. A Georgia native, he’s had his hand in archaeolog­ical digs, figurative­ly and literally, all his life.

Not as much is known about human habitation in the area of the national forest as in other parts of the state, said Williams. Whatever diggers found, he said, should add to that limited knowledge.

“Every site we dig gives us new insights,” he said. “It’s a minor step in the right direction of learning how people lived in that part of Georgia.”

Wettstaed hopes to put the artifacts on display when experts have finished studying them. For now, they remain off limits — tiny hints of a period when life was anything but an idyll.

The items, though small, have a large hold on his imaginatio­n, too.

“To hold something that’s been there (hidden) for hundreds of thousands of years?” he asked. “It’s pretty neat.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS BY HOLLY KRAKE ?? Gretchen Eggiman, an archaeolog­ist assisting federal officials, watches volunteers Beatrix Clark and Alexandra Connell work at an excavation site in the Chattahooc­hee National Forest. The U.S. Forest Service two years ago discovered remnants of a...
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS BY HOLLY KRAKE Gretchen Eggiman, an archaeolog­ist assisting federal officials, watches volunteers Beatrix Clark and Alexandra Connell work at an excavation site in the Chattahooc­hee National Forest. The U.S. Forest Service two years ago discovered remnants of a...
 ??  ?? A volunteer holds the remains of a large bowl probably left on the floor of a house dating to the 17th century.
A volunteer holds the remains of a large bowl probably left on the floor of a house dating to the 17th century.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? James Wettstaed, an archaeolog­ist with the Chattahooc­hee National Forest, examines an unfinished rock tool recovered from an excavation site.
CONTRIBUTE­D James Wettstaed, an archaeolog­ist with the Chattahooc­hee National Forest, examines an unfinished rock tool recovered from an excavation site.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States