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Archaeology Field Schools
| Africa - Gambia - St. Mary's College Gambia Field School |
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Archaeology Field School Location and Dates
Application Deadline
2010-02-28
Start Date
2010-05-28
End Date
2010-07-16
Archaeology Field School Location
The Gambia, West Africa
Archaeology Field School Tuition and Credits
Sponsoring College/Institution
Academic Credit
8 credit hours
Archaeology Field School Description
Gambia Field Study Program 2010
May 28 – July 16, 2010
The St. Mary’s College Department of Anthropology announces plans for its 2010 Gambia Field Study Program. This will be the College’s eighth biennial field study program. The program began as a six-week study tour in 1996. It has grown steadily, and now brings together American and Gambian students, citizens and professionals to pursue collaborative research activities of mutual scholarly and community interest over a seven week period.
The plans for the 2010 program reflect an effort to expand and refine our research potential and relevancy with our Gambian partners. Non-Gambian program participants will now choose to take part in either the archaeology or ethnography track of the field study program. Following an initial four-day orientation for the entire group near the capital city of Banjul, those pursuing the archaeology track will travel to the historic riverine trade site of Berefet village, in the Foni district of the Western Region. Those choosing the ethnography track will settle at the College’s compound in Kanifing.
All field study program participants will:
Study either the Wolof or Mandinka languages;
Meet Gambian professionals who will lecture on Gambia’s history, environment, society and culture;
Participate in field trips within Gambia and Senegal;
Conduct first-hand archaeological or ethnographic research with guidance from American and Gambian mentors;
Complete a research paper.
The program fee covers the following expenditures:
Room and board (3 meals per day) for the duration of the trip;
All in-country travel and fees;
Health and emergency evacuation insurance;
Gambian visa fee;
8 upper-level credits of anthropology.
Participants will be responsible for their own personal expenditures.
Archaeology in Berefet village, Foni
According to Berefet villagers, their community was founded nearly 800 years ago. They are now living in the fourth location, having moved steadily away from the river to their current upland site.
Berefet is located immediately south of the better known World Heritage Sites of Fort James on James Island, and the villages of Albreda (Albadar) and Juffure (Jillifree) located on the “Ceded Mile” of Niumi district in the North Bank Region. According to oral history, Berefet is an old trading village that played a role in the networks that supported the trans-Saharan trade prior to European contact with Africans south of the Sahara. The Royal Africa Company maintained factories at Berefet, and the site was most certainly associated with the larger scale Euro-African trade just across the river on James Island, Albreda and Juffure.
The 2010 Gambia Field Studies program proposes to conduct the first systematic survey, map and test the Berefet site in collaboration with the Gambia’s National Centre for Arts and Culture (NCAC) Division of Museums and Monuments (DMM) and the citizens of Berefet village itself. At the same tim src="/plugins/editors/tinymce/jscripts/tiny_mce/themes/advanced/langs/en.js" type="text/javascript"> e, the program will collaborate with the NCAC’s Division for Research and Documentation (DRD) staff and citizens of Berefet and neighboring villages to collect oral histories of the area.
Gambia Field Study Program Archaeology & Oral History Staff
Liza Gijanto, principal archaeologist (Syracuse U)
Baba Ceesay, deputy director-general (NCAC)
Lamin Sanyang, archaeology assistant (NCAC)
Bakary Sanyang, cultural officer (NCAC)
Lamin Yarboe, field research/oral history (NCAC)
Lamin Nyagado, field research/oral history (NCAC)
Archaeology Field School Additional Information
Archaeology Field School Type
archaeology
Time Period
17th to 20th century
Number of years this Archaeology Field School has been in operation
7
Directors and Instructors
William Roberts, St. Mary's College of Maryland Liza Gijanto, Syracuse University
Specialized skills you will have the opportunity to learn
Site survey and mapping
European trade material analysis (beads, pipes, ceramics, glass)
African locally produced ceramic and pipe analysis
Oral history recording and documentation
Archival research
Botanical collection and flotation
On rain days will there be lab work?
yes
Will there be additional organized activities?
Trips to the Gambia river upcountry including site visits to James Island, Juffure, and the Stone Circles at Wassu Trip to Goree Island in Senegal
Will there be additional organized activities?
yes
Archaeology Field School Contact Information and Website
Field School Contact Information
Be sure to let them know you heard about their program on ShovelBums!
William Roberts wcroberts@smcm.edu Liza Gijanto lgijanto@maxwell.syr.edu
Field School Contact E-mail:
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