EXCAVATORS NEEDED, NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY

Join an archaeological excavation

Survey and test sites

 University of South Carolina
Wateree Archaeological
Research Project (W.A.R.P)
along the Wateree River in
central South Carolina
near Camden

Students and volunteers participate fully in the project, including excavating, mapping, note-taking, and artifact processing.  Join our scientific team and archaeological field school!

INDEX
(double-click)

               

 

             

 

      

 

      

 

     

 

       


 

About WARP

The original scope for the Wateree Archaeological Research Project (WARP) was described by Ferguson and Green (1984b:1) as follows: "The project is designed to investigate human-land relationships in the Wateree River Valley utilizing a wide range of approaches including anthropology, archaeology, geography, history, folklore as well as the natural sciences." As originally envisioned, the project would focus on the entire Wateree Valley, from initial occupation through the present time.  However, it was not until 1998 that concerted survey and testing took place at Wateree Valley sites other than Mulberry.

In 1998, Gail Wagner (Department of Anthropology) and Chris Judge (Department of Natural Resources Heritage Trust) as co-principal investigators used matching grants to survey, map, and test the Mulberry site and two other nearby mound/town sites along the Wateree River, the Adamson site and the Belmont Neck site.  The fieldwork in 1998 directed by John Cable resulted in clarification of the ceramic chronology for the Wateree Valley, a fresh assessment of site sizes and integrity, topographic maps of each site, and a summary of plant use through time in central South Carolina.

Their plans are to continue to elucidate the history and lifeways of the Mississippian period of people who occupied the Wateree Valley, through the framework of human-landscape interactions.

The Mulberry Site (38KE12)

The large mound/town site known as Mulberry was once a capital city of Cofitachequi, a chiefdom on the Wateree River central South Carolina from A.D. 1100 - 1700.  Occupation spans the Belmont Neck, Savannah II, Adamson, Town Creek, McDowell, Mulberry, and Daniels ceramic phases, as well as an as-yet unnamed late protohistoric ceramic phase.

    

Mulberry was visited by Hernando de Soto in 1540 and by other Spanish and English explorers through 1670.  In 1806 as many as ten mounds were observed, but now only two are visible.  Some of the mounds would have been flat-topped with a temple or public (rather than private) structure on top.

     

The Mulberry site is located on the present-day historic Mulberry Plantation.  Excavations at this and other sites on the property have been initiated and supported by the owners of the property.

     

The first archaeological excavations were undertaken by the mound division of the Bureau of American Ethnology in the spring of 1891.  Only sketchy notes remain of this early exploration, since the field director died before finishing his excavation!  Two of the mounds were trenched.  No further work was done at the site until 1952, when A.R. Kelly at the University of Georgia along with support from the Charleston Museum undertook to profile Mound A, which had long been eroding into the river, and to uncover a portion of the village to the south of the mounds.  No further archaeological explorations occurred for 21 years, although in 1970 a portion of the site was placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

     

It was not until archaeologists were established at the University of South Carolina that a concerted effort was directed toward exploration of this site.  Limited testing in 1973 by Leland G. Ferguson led to the initiation of the Wateree Archaeological Research Project (WARP) in 1979.  From 1979 through 1982, and again in 1985, the Department of Anthropology at the University of South Carolina ran archaeological field schools at the Mulberry site.  During this period, fieldwork was directed by a number of researchers and , until 1985, all work was focused on the area in and adjacent to the mounds.  These early field schools explored site stratigraphy, examined mound construction, looked for paleosurfaces, searched for evidence of historic slave occupation, and established a ceramic chronology.  And, they resulted in six Masters theses on the Mulberry site.

     

The 1985 field season, directed by Chester DePratter and Joan Gero, was significant in that it initiated the first excavations in a portion of the village distant from the mounds.  It was this area of the village that was the focus of Gail E. Wagner's field research in alternate years from 1990 through 1998.  During this period, the first prehistoric structure (House 1) was uncovered and excavated.  This is not only the first prehistoric structure excavated at this site, it is the first entire structure from any time period in the state of South Carolina!

   

House 1 is a square structure, 6.6 m on a side, built with single wall post construction except for a narrow, short trench door in the southwest corner.  Like other late prehistoric houses found in surrounding states, the center of the house was an open square delimited by four central support posts.  There appear to be inner partitions as well as benches along the walls, an entry vestibule, and a central puddled clay hearth.  One radiocarbon date places occupation of this structure at about A.D. 1680.  The fact that over 2#kg of mica were recovered from this structure, coupled with its location near the edge of town, indicates it was a workshop where mica was fashioned into finished products (Wagner 1998b).  Finished mica products such as oval to round disks with central cut-out crosses were sewn onto the clothing of only certain elites.

   

During the 2000 and 2002field season, a portion of a stockade around the mound precinct was located.  The inhabitants dug a flat-bottomed wall trench into midden.  Later midden accumulated only on the mound side of the wooden wall erected in the wall trench.  We believe we located the remnants of Mound C (bulldozed into the creek in the 1950s).  Finally, another structure was found within the mound precinct.

 

Above, the crew for the 2000 Field season, 

with Mounds A and B in the background.

 

 An oblique profile view of the

 stockade wall trench

   A plan view of the abrupt 

edge to the upper midden

at the stockade line.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Belmont Neck Site (38KE6)

The Belmont Neck site was the earliest of the mound centers to be occupied in this portion of the Wateree Valley.  Occupation ranges from A.D. 950 - 1300, spanning Swift Creek, early Etowah, Belmont Neck, and Savannah II ceramic phases.  A single-mound center, it appears that the mound was built on top of a low terrace remnant.  In the 1800s, an overseer's house and associated slave cabins were placed on top of this terrace and mound.  A family photograph from the 1930s shows the frame house with brick piers and chimney on top of a remnant of the prehistoric mound.

Archaeological investigations so far conducted at the Belmont Neck site include a surface collection in 1985 when it was a plowed field; in 1998, 77 systematic shovel test pits and a 1 x 2 m test unit on the natural terrace; and a second 1 x 2 m test unit in the spring of 2001 at the highest remnant of the mound.  During the 2004-2005 field season, the 1 x 2 m unit begun in 2001 was completed, and another two 1 x 2 m units placed over looter potholes on the mound remnant were begun. Geomorphological investigations entailed the excavation of 66 Giddings core holes (located at 4 – 16 m intervals for 800 m N-S and 250 m E-W through the center of the mound), 5 hand auger holes, and four backhoe trenches.

The Mississippian component occupies an area of about 9.7 acres.  Cable (2000) hypothesizes that the town had two distinct residential sectors separated by a central plaza and the small platform mound. Excavation of a 1 x 2 m unit through the highest remnant of the mound reveals that the mound consisted of just two stages of construction (Wagner 2005). Stage One, approximately 13 x 24 m in size and 27 cm in depth, was placed on top of a dense midden/natural A horizon that ranged from 8-21 cm in thickness. Midden from the surrounding village was used to build this first stage of the mound. For construction of Stage Two, dirt of three colors (black, gray, and yellow) was carefully selected from low-lying areas off site. This dirt is practically sterile, or free of artifacts. Stage Two, which did not extend the area covered by the mound, presently measures about 40 cm thick. When the mound was abandoned, it appears to have been 13 x 24 m in area and no taller than about 1 m in height, despite an early 1800 estimate by Blanding (Squier and Davis 1848:107) that the mound was 15 ft (x m) high: his eye was misled by the height of the natural terrace remnant underlying the mound.

The midden underlying the mound and in Stage One has unusually good preservation of both plant and animal remains, including very small fish bones. The inhabitants of Belmont Neck were growing maize (Zea mays), maygrass (Phalaris caroliniana), domesticated chenopod (Chenopodium sp.), and tobacco (Nicotiana sp.). They also collected hickory, acorn, hazelnut, and other wild products such as maypops (Passiflora incarnata). The dependence on the starchy seed complex (maygrass and chenopod) in conjunction with maize is similar to the diet of peoples at comparably aged Mississippian sites west of the Appalachian Mountains, but so far is unusual for South Carolina.

In 2006, Belmont Neck was listed on the National Register of Historic Places for two significant historic periods. First, it was an early (A.D. 950-1300) location of the Mississippian experience in South Carolina. It may be the earliest Mississippian site associated with a mound yet studied in this state. Second, during the latter half of the eighteenth century, it was the location of indigo production. Backcountry indigo commercial production, although a short-lived phenomenon lasting less than fifty years (ca. 1750s-1796), provided the second leading economic staple for the colony of South Carolina and was a major impetus for increasing the number of slaves. Colonel John Chesnut (1743-1818), who purchased this land some time between 1764-1777, established an overseer and a cadre of slaves to produce indigo between about 1772-1796, when the indigo market collapsed. By 1790, John Chesnut was the single largest slave owner in Camden District, one of the largest landowners in the South Carolina backcountry, and was one of the wealthiest landowners, due in large part to his production of indigo. Camden was perhaps the most significant backcountry distribution point for inland indigo production in South Carolina.

 

                             

 

Excavation of three units on top of mound at the                    Profile through mound at Belmont Neck site. From
Belmont Neck site. Note three colors of basket-                     base up, note a midden/A horizon (black) on top of
laid fill of second mound stage in unit in foreground.               a B horizon (yellow). A postmold originates in
Two units in background are located over looter                     Mound Stage 1 and cuts down through the old ground
potholes.                                                                             surface. Mound Stage 2 consists of sterile dirt of three
                                                                                          colors (black, gray, yellow). The top of Stage 2 has
                                                                                          been mixed by plowing.

 

 

 

Who May Participate


 

    

We're looking for excavators who are in good physical shape, able to walk over rough terrain, and will to work long, hot days in the South Carolina sun.  Sound tempting??  No prior excavation or field experience is required, and although it is useful to have taken Principles of Archaeology or any other introductory course that introduces you to the basic methods and vocabulary or archaeology, no prior coursework is required.  You'll just have a bigger vocabulary to learn than someone who has taken such a course.  Volunteers under the age of 16 may be accepted if they are accompanied by an adult or otherwise demonstrate the level of maturity necessary for sustained work in the sun.  New volunteers must commit to working at least one five-day work week.

 

What do students and volunteers do?  Excavate units, keep field notes, 

describe dirt, take cores, screen dirt, set up units, wash artifacts, make maps, and so on.  Generally you and a partner are assigned a unit for which you are responsible.

 

 

 

Current Field Season


Our primary objective during the 2008 field season is to recover material from the village at the Belmont Neck site (38KE6), which was occupied between about A.D. 950-1300. If we are lucky, we may locate and begin excavation of a house. The materials we recover will be compared to those found associated with the mound during the 2004 excavation field season, and they will serve to help us understand day-to-day life, diet, and how the inhabitants of this mound town affected the vegetation around them.

We have several secondary objectives we may pursue (or students may adopt as their 6-credit course projects) as time allows. We’d like to examine the “neck” of Belmont Neck to look for evidence of fortification. We’d like to trench an edge of the mound to record the slope angle in order to help us confirm the original height of the mound. We’d like to continue shovel testing on a grid to refine the boundaries of the site. We’d like to locate the “old field” marked on the earliest plat maps, with the objective of locating an isolated Mississippian farmstead. We’d like to explore historic Long Pond for historic/prehistoric trash deposits. Finally, we’d like to map in detail the possible 1700s indigo vat area.

Students and volunteers participate fully in all aspects of excavation, from mapping and note-taking to screening and excavation. All participants will practice describing dirt, an integral skill needed by all archaeologists. We end each day with a tour of each unit, during which excavators present a summary of what they accomplished that day.

Our work day begins at 7:15 am in Camden, SC, and ends at 3:30 pm. Our work week runs from Tuesdays through Saturdays, with Sunday and Monday off. On Saturdays we hold a pot-luck “Pig Out” lunch. Our field season begins May 13 and ends June 28.

Excavations take place in a remote area on private property and unannounced visitors are not welcome. All participants and visitors must fill out a legal release waiver before they are allowed on the property. If you would like to volunteer to help on a regular basis (for example, every Saturday, or for one entire week), please compete and return a volunteer application form.


Here are some faces from previous years

Students who wish to take the course for credit should refer to the fee schedules posted by the University of South Carolina. ANTH 322 may be taken by undergraduates for either 3 credits (basic digging) or 6 credits (digging plus an additional research project/paper). ANTH 722 is a 6-credit course. Although both courses begin at the start of Maymester, they are classified as Summer Session I courses because that is when they end. Students pay an additional $30 fee for course materials, including a Field Manual and a Laboratory Manual. An optional textbook is available at the local bookstores.

Volunteers pay a $30 fee for course materials, including a Field Manual and a Laboratory Manual. This fee may be waived for local volunteers with limited budgets.

Contact information: Dr. Gail Wagner, Department of Anthropology, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC  29208; office (803) 777-6548; department office (803) 777-6500; fax (803) 777-0259; gail.wagner@sc.edu 



Camden

Camden, founded in 1733 and incorporated in 1791, is located on the Wateree River in Kershaw County, central South Carolina, in an area known as the Olde English District.  It is home of the famous steeplechase races, the Carolina Cup and the Colonial Cup.  It has many fine horses and historic homes.  Camden was originally settled by Quaker colonists, and the old Quaker Cemetery is an interesting place to visit.  It contains a memorial to Dr. William Blanding, the physician who first described the Mulberry site in 1806.  In 1780, General Cornwallis of the British army established his headquarters in Camden, and for nearly a year Camden was the main supply post for southern British operations.  The two battles fought here were both British victories.

Historic Camden Revolutionary War Park, the original site of old Camden, showcases historic structures and serves as a source of information on the history of the area.  It is an excellent place to begin a tour of Camden.  Further information and brochures may be obtained at the Chamber of Commerce.

Camden is located 32 miles east of Columbia off 1-20 and 124 miles northwest of Charleston.  It is serviced by Amtrak and bus.  Take the Rt. 521 exit north off I-20 to reach Historic Camden Revolutionary War Park and the present town of Camden, or enter town via Rt.1 from the north.  Lugoff is a nearby town at Rt. 601 and I-20, convenient to reaching the excavation site and near the Amtrak station.

Click here for information on South Carolina

 

Meet the Principal Investigator

Dr. Gail E. Wagner (back left of picture, wearing the red shirt) is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of South Carolina.  She is a paleoethnobotanist, an archaeologist who studies the relationships between peoples and plants.  In addition to her research on the Mississippian period in the Wateree Valley, she works with organizations to re-create Indian gardens, researches maize, tobacco, and late prehistoric human-plant relationships; and directs the South Carolina Homegarden Project (a look at present use of yards and gardens in South Carolina).  To view basic information on plants and peoples in ancient North American, see http://www.cas.sc.edu/ANTH/AncientGardening.html

 

To Sign Up

Download or print a volunteer application form, undergraduate application form, or graduate application form. 

Email: gail.wagner@sc.edu .  Email is the best way to reach Dr. Wagner!

Undergraduate                                  Graduate                                             Volunteer




Bibliography

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Cable, John S.

     2000    Demographic Succession as a Factor in Explaining Offsetting Occupation Spans

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Cable, John S., Gail E. Wagner, and Christopher Judge

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1982    Paleoethnobotany in the Wateree River Valley. Unpublished M.A. thesis, Department

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Structure and Content as a Basis for Cultural Interpretation. Unpublished M.A.

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Thomas, Cyrus

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Wagner, Gail E.

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of South Carolina, Columbia.

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Carolinas, edited by David G. Anderson and Virginia Horak, pp. 18-25. Readings in

Archeological Resource Protection, No. 2. Interagency Archeological Services

Division, National Park Service, Atlanta.

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South Carolina, Columbia, SC

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South Carolina, Columbia, SC.

1998a  W.A.R.P. X 1998 Field Notes. On File, Department of Anthropology, University of

South Carolina, Columbia.

1998b  A Mica Workshop at the Edge of Town. Paper presented at 55th Annual

Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Greenville, SC. On File, Department of

Anthropology, University of South Carolina, Columbia.

     1999    W.A.R.P. XI Field Notes. On File, Department of Anthropology, University of

                 South Carolina, Columbia.

1999

Wateree Archaeological Research Project 1998 Survey and Testing of the Belmont Neck (38KE6), Adamson (38KE11), and Mulberry (38KE12) Sites: Mississippian Occupation in the Wateree River Valley.  By John S. Cable, Gail E. Wagner, and Christopher Judge.  Grant report for South Carolina Department of Archives and History. October. Book.

     2000a  W.A.R.P. XII Field Notes. On File, Department of Anthropology, University of

                 South Carolina, Columbia.

     2000b  Mississippian Plant Use in the Middle Wateree Valley. Paper at 57th Southeastern

                 Archaeological Conference, Macon, GA.

     2001    Landscapes of the Eye. Paper at 24th Society of Ethnobiology Conference, Durango,

                 CO.

2001 The Mississippian Landscape of Central South Carolina.  Paper presented at the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Chattanooga, TN. Nov. 14-17
2002 The Wateree Archaeological Research Project 2002 Field Season.  Council of South Carolina Professional Archaeologists Newsletter XX11(1):1-5
2002 The Mulberry Site (38KE12): Summary of a Mississippian Mound Center in Central South Carolina.  Paper presented at the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Biloxi, MS. Nov. 6-9
2003 Report on the Wateree Archaeological Research Project 2003 Field Season, Council of South Carolina Professional Archaeologists Newsletter XXIV(3):15-20.
2003 Mapping Cofitachequi.  Paper presented at Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Charlotte, NC. Nov. 12-15 and at Archaeological Society of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, Feb. 21, 2004
2005 The W.A.R.P. 2004-2005 Field Season at Belmont Neck (38KE06). Council of South Carolina Professional Archaeologists Newsletter XXVI(4):1-7.
2005 Early Mississippian in Central South Carolina at the Belmont Neck Site (38KE06). Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Columbia, SC. 3-5 Nov.

Wagner, Gail E. and Heather Bartley

2005

Belmont Neck (38KE06): Investigations at the Earliest Mound Center in Central South Carolina. Unpublished paper presented at the Archaeological Society of South Carolina conference, Columbia, SC. February.

 

Questions?

Contact Dr. Gail E. Wagner, Department of Anthropology, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC  29208; Phone (803) 777-6548; Fax (803) 777-0259; email gail.wagner@sc.edu

 

To Return to the Department of Anthropology homepage

http://www.cas.sc.edu/ANTH/index.html 

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This page updated March 19, 2008

 

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