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Archaeology

Archaeology Seniors 2011-2012

Archaeology Senior Majors 2011-12 (l-r): Emily Butcher, Christopher Haslam, Renee Hennemann, Katie Kowicki, D. Claire Burns, Annruubenia Capellin, Anatasia Wallace, Catherine Gullett

Wooster students in archaeology experience the whole range of the discipline, from classroom studies, to fieldwork and lab research, and finally to formal presentation of the results in Independent Study and at academic conferences.  Archaeology at Wooster is an interdisciplinary program designed to reflect the interrelatedness of participating fields.  As they identify unique achievements and recurrent patterns in past societies, Wooster archaeologists draw from: the humanities --- languages, linguistics, art, literature, and religion; history and the social sciences --- anthropology and economics; and the physical sciences --- geology, chemistry, and biology.  The program is designed both for majors and those students with an interest in archaeology as a significant, but not a major, emphasis in their liberal education.

Archaeologists research the human past, focusing on evidence from material culture and the natural environment, in ways that often offer insights into contemporary society.  Urban life, for example, carries many of the same benefits and drawbacks today that it did for the inhabitants of the Roman Empire.  Examining the archaeological record helps uncover the ways that ordinary people organized their lives to cope with a variety of conditions.  By showing what changed, and why, archaeology reveals the evolving patterns of human diversity and helps place humanity in its chronological and ecological contexts.

Fieldwork

Wooster archaeology students participate in fieldwork, the cornerstone of research.  Fieldwork provides the opportunity to apply the concepts and methods of the classroom to real archaeological problems.  Recent students have participate in excavations in Arizona and other U.S. locations as well as Greece, Honduras, Great Britain, Cyprus, Italy, and Ireland.

Take a few minutes and review The Trowel Owl and discover what adventures await.

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Profile Mike DiPaolo '99

Mike Dipaolo 

By the time DiPaolo had completed orientation, he knew he wanted a career in archaeology. Currently the executive director of the Lewes Historical Society, DiPaolo is confident that his I.S. experience at Wooster opened professional doors.

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