Proyecto Arqueológico
Costa del Soconusco
I intend
this blog to be mostly about the science – testing and refining our
understanding of what processes created the archaeological record, especially
in the estuary zone of far southern Chiapas. Before getting to the science,
however, there’s a lot of project management
stuff that has to get done, and I think a realistic account of the science has
to include some record of the logistics, personnel, field conditions, and so
on. Therefore, this and some subsequent entries will describe a bit of what we
have faced in our work on what I am currently calling the “Proyecto Arqueológico Costa del Soconusco” (PACS).
I arrived
at the Tapachula airport on Wednesday, December 7, 2011, and was met by Don
Jorge Hernandez, my foreman in Chiapas. Don Jorge had brought Alejandro, the
guy who had agreed to rent me his truck. We headed down the highway toward
Cuauhtemoc, which was to be my home for the next several months.
I had
arranged previously to rent Don Jorge's daughter's house. It was clean, but
devoid of furnishings, so my first couple of days were devoted to trips into
Tapachula, to buy things like chairs, shelves, beds, and other necessary items.
I bought a lot of stuff at the WalMart, a practice that Don Jorge viewed dimly
because of the comparatively high prices. For me, however, the time saving and
convenience of finding everything in one place outweighed the added cost.
On
Friday, December 9 I went out to the field for the first time. Don Jorge had
had a crew working on clearing mounds on the ex-Rancho Soledad since
mid-November, so access issues for this area were pretty well worked out and
something like 10 mounds were cleared and ready for survey with the
magnetometer. As of early December, the water level in this area was knee-high,
so getting to the mounds required wading through deep water and mud and/or a
canoe ride. The mounds themselves are above water, their summits being from one
to maybe 10 meters elevation above water. The clearing operation had left large
palms and other trees, which create good shade and overall pleasant working
conditions.
Javier and Emanuel
On
Friday, December 9, two students from Guatemala, Javier Estrada and Emanuel Von
Serich, arrived at the Tapachula bus station. They had a week and a half or so
before the Xmas holiday began and had accepted my invitation to come learn a
little bit about the archaeology of the coastal swamps. I knew them from
January, 2011, when they helped me on a magnetometer and GPR survey at
Kaminaljuyu. Their experience was a perfect fit for the first couple of weeks
on this project, when I would need people who could work on their own as I
continued to wrestle with logistical issues. I was not disappointed, as they
took over the magnetometer work and completed all of the cleared Rancho Soledad
mounds before returning to Guatemala City on December 20.
Barbara
Voorhies also came for a visit on Monday, December 12 and stayed for a couple
of nights. Our project area is 50 Km or so southeast of the Acapetahua Estuary,
where Barbara has been working since the early 1970s. Her main focus has been
on the Archaic Period shell middens, which apparently are confined to the
Acapetahua region and have not been found farther east, either in my study area
or further east, in Guatemala. Barbara helped Javier and Emanuel with the mag
survey, and demonstrated her affinity for early stuff by surface collecting a
tecomate on RS-3, a site I had previously assumed to be exclusively Classic
(tecomates -- neckless jars -- are Formative usually Early Formatice). After her stay with us, Barbara headed to the
Acapetahua area for some social activities with her friends there.
On
December 13, while Javier and Emanuel were doing mag survey at RS-2, Don Jorge
and I walked to the site of Bermudez (Ber-1) from RS-1. Although it is only 1.2
km straight line distance, the trail wound around a lot, making the actual
distance much longer. Additionally, the water/mud was almost waist deep in
places, making for extremely slow going
Tim, Paul, Evan, and Scott
My US
archaeological crew chiefs started to arrive on Thursday, December 16, the
first being Tim Garfin, a MA student from CSUN. Tim had a couple days to work
with Javier and Emanuel on the mag, so some of the skills were passed on. On 17
December Tim and I used the new bridge/trail to Bermudez And took some footage
for later viewing by my class. We also explored south of Ber-1 with Ramon
Grajales, who led us to a small archaeological mound that we had not picked out
on the LiDAR. It does appear on theLiDAR, however, so the lesson is that we
were too conservative in picking out mounds. It is designated Ber-1a. Noteworthy
too is the fact that we have found no false positives so far, so we have
abundant proof of the usefulness of LiDAR to identify neArly 100% of
archaeological remains in the swamp.
Evan
Zufah (CSULB senior) and Paul Burger (CSULB MA student) arrived on December 20,
giving me two days to get them oriented before leaving for a Xmas holiday with
my family on San Cristobal de las Casas. I decided to minimize logistical
headaches by putting them all on excavations during my absence. Tom started a
test excavation at RS-23, while Paul and Evan started one at RS-3. Both
excavations were placed over magnetic anomalies, which we hypothesized would
represent firing features. The excavations continued, with some well justified
expansions during Xmas week. Scott Bigney (recent CSUDH graduate) arrived on 28
December, and began helping with Tim's excavation.
Although
excavation results are beyond my current purpose, it is worthwhile to note that
both excavations produced abundant,
clear evidence of the firing features that we hypothesized should exist at the
sites. Another striking result is the very high sherd density encountered. This
is especially striking because surface remains were almost absent; thus,
surface collection would be a poor strategy for recovering samples from these
sites.
Vehicles
The 1990 Ford Ranger that I rented from Alejandro worked, at
least at first, but it provided insufficient transportation for 10 workers plus
four archaeologists. Fortunately however, used trucks are fairly easy to find
along the Guatemalan border, A little shopping turned up a 1993 Toyota that a
mechanic assured me was in good shape, despite the 344k miles showing on the
odometer. Interestingly, the truck had been sold to a wholesaler by Cerritos
Nissan in 2007, and had about 13,000 miles added over the past few years in
Mexico. It did require some new tires, brakes, and a few other minor things.
The brakes, in particular, proved to be a continuing problem: despite the best
efforts of the mechanic over the course of several days, the car still pulls
slightly to the right, and the brake fluid drops over the course of several
days.
The Ford Ranger has also gone through some rough times. The oil
pressure gauge had been registering mostly 0 oil pressure from the beginning,
and Alejandro had assured me it was just the gauge, and as long as you changed
the oil every month it would run fine. At just around a month, the motor
started making a horrible rattle – as if it had no oil in key areas. An oil
change did stop the noise, but only for five days this time. The mechanic
contradicted Alejandro’s assessment, and diagnosed the problem as a bad oil
pump and delivery system. He pulled the motor, and in fact the pump and
circulation system were completely plugged with melted plastic and metal – the car
had been running with no oil circulation for weeks! Miraculously, a new oil pump and a set of
crankshaft bearings returned the motor to functional status.
Other miscellaneous problems with the vehicles have included
flats, a starter motor rebuild for the Ford, and dead batteries. Additionally,
in order to carry canoes and the 6-meter coring tubes, I had a rack (called a redila in Spanish) made for the Toyota. Beyond
the considerable direct expense to the project of vehicle acquisition,
modification, and maintenance is a considerable time cost; I calculate that I spent
more than half of my time during the first four weeks of the project running
back and forth to mechanics shops, auto parts stores, alignment shops, and so
on.
Other vehicles important to the project include three canoes,
one purchased by the project and two smaller ones rented. These are short,
shallow-draft boats that can negotiate the sharp bends and submerged mangrove
logs that sometimes block access to the sites. Finally, a cart pulled by a
30-year old horse named Gorrión serves for getting the canoe into some tight,
muddy locations where we couldn’t take the trucks.
Getting around in the
swamp
Eleven workers are currently employed on PACS. By far the
biggest job they have to do involves clearing paths and canals through the
swamp and then clearing the mounds of vegetation, so that we can run
geophysical surveys, surface collections, and, test excavations. Machetes are
by far the most useful tools for these tasks, but very large downed trees that
sometimes block the canals require something bigger, namely a 4.5-horsepower
chainsaw that we bought in Tapachula.
The week of January 15 the workers started staying out on one of
the mounds, so that they wouldn’t lose time traveling to and from work. Fishing
in the evenings yields an abundance of gar pike and mojarra. This week they plan
to hunt an alligator. Food is plentiful, but after dark the swamp apparently
becomes a bit creepy. Some of the workers claim to have heard a “man of the
swamp” who is irritated at their presence. More concretely, they have heard a
snarling feline at night, which could be a panther; although panthers are
native to coastal southern Mesoamerica, a growing human population has pushed
them to marginal areas, such as the swamp. Two of our archaeologists, Tim
Garfin and Paul Burger are also planning to spend three nights camped out in
the swamp this week.
This sounds almost like the beginning of a book for the general public. It is fascinating. What adventures! Maybe you could throw in a few pictures?
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