First 2013 Zagora trench discussions on site

by Irma Havlicek
Powerhouse Museum Web Producer

Yesterday morning (Sunday 22 September 2013), some of us headed out to Zagora to have the first discussions at each of the five trenches selected for excavation this season.

All three team leaders were there: Meg Miller, Lesley Beaumont and Stavros Paspalas. Also there, of course, were the trench supervisors for this year: Excavation area 1 – Ivana Vetta; Excavation area 2 – Mel Melnyczek; Excavation area 3 – Hugh Thomas; Excavation area 4 – Kristen Mann; Excavation area 5 – Paul Donnelly.

Following are photographs of each of the trench sites in order we visited them:

Excavation area number 3. Trench supervisor - Hugh Thomas
Excavation area number 3. This is the site of one of the test trenches which were excavated in the final couple of weeks of the 2012 season. Ivana Vetta was trench supervisor last year but this year Hugh Thomas (who was in Ivana’s team last year) will be trench supervisor. The surface you can see is backfill placed there at the end of the season last year to protect the area. From left: Mel Melnyczek, Ivana Vetta, Hugh Thomas, Lesley Beaumont, Meg Miller, Andrew Wilson, Paul Donnelly, Kristen Mann (behind) and Stavros Paspalas.

Read more

Zagora team reunion at the Kantouni Restaurant

by Irma Havlicek
Powerhouse Museum web producer

The Kantouni Pensione and Restaurant at Batsi, Andros, is once again alive with the sounds of archaeologists, now planning the 2013 season of the Zagora Archaeological Project. The first of us to have arrived on Thursday and Friday 19 and 20 September, had dinner outside in the balmy night air of the Kantouni courtyard last night (Friday 20 September), just as we had done in the early days of the season last year, when it was warm enough to do so.

Our first dinner at the Kantouni Restaurant, 2013
Dinner at the Kantouni Restaurant on Friday 20 September 2013 was like being reunited with old friends. Clockwise, from left: Steven Vasilakis, Andrew Wilson, Jane McMahon, Sami Beaumont-Cankaya, Hugh Thomas, Matthew Miller-Csapo, Meg Miller, Lea Alexopoulos, Aleksandra Moustakas, Beatrice McLoughlin, Lesley Beaumont, Lydia Beaumont-Cankaya, Kristen Mann, Paul Donnelly, Ivana Vetta and Mel Melnyczek.

Read more

Getting to Andros for the 2013 Zagora season

Paul looking out over what was ancient Mesopotamiaby Irma Havlicek
Powerhouse Museum web producer

Travel is an important part of the life and work of an archaeologist. They must go where the archaeological sites are – and those are spread throughout the world.

Paul Donnelly, Powerhouse Museum Curator (as well as archaeologist) and I set out for the Greek Aegean island of Andros from Sydney Airport on Thursday 19 September. We had a 15-hour flight to Abu Dhabi, a couple of hours stopover there, then a 5-hour flight to Athens.

Flying over Iraq - what was ancient MesopotamiaOur flight to Athens was in daylight and Paul spent much of the time looking out the plane window (pictured, above, right), and pointing out features of the land and waterways below. “Look,” he said as we flew over Iraq, “there’s the River Tigris…. and the Euphrates – so important in ancient Mesopotamia.” (A view from the aircraft is pictured at right.)

Read more

Design of a Geometric settlement model

by Irma Havlicek
Powerhouse Museum Web ProducerFigures in the Geometric settlement model landscape

A model of a Geometric period settlement is being developed by Powerhouse web producer, Kate Lamerton, to complement the Zagora Archaeological Project (ZAP). It is primarily for children – but then everybody of all ages who’s seen it wants to play with it (including me!) – don’t you? You can see a photo of a detail of the work-in-progress at right.

Read more

Windy Zagora

by Irma Havlicek
Online Producer, Powerhouse Museum

Here’s a video (2 mins 17 secs) showing how very windy it can be at Zagora. I can tell you from personal experience that the wind sometimes felt stronger than I was able to capture in the video.

Read more

4WD training – more preparations for Zagora 2013

by Dr Lesley Beaumont,
one of the three team leaders of the Zagora Archaeological Project

Meg Miller and Lesley Beaumont with 4WD achievement certificate
Meg Miller and Lesley Beaumont both smiling after earning their 4WD daredevil achievement certificates

Last Friday, Meg Miller, another of the team leaders of the Zagora Archaeological Project, and I undertook a four-wheel drive training course at Eastern Creek in western Sydney. We undertook the training course so that this year we will be equipped and competent to take a 4WD vehicle down an unsealed track that will allow us to get a little closer to the Zagora site to deliver equipment at the beginning of the day and to transport heavy excavation finds to the Archaeological Museum at the end of the day.

This will obviate the need for our team members to carry heavy and bulky items along the rough donkey track that they will be walking every morning and afternoon for half-an-hour in each direction in order to access the site.

Read more

Safety first at Zagora

Lesley Beaumont starting to put Meg Miller into the recovery position
Lesley Beaumont starting to put Meg Miller into the recovery position; photo and © Archondia Thanos

by Dr Lesley Beaumont

Acutely aware that safety is of vital importance at Zagora, Dr Meg Miller, Dr Archondia Thanos and I undertook Remote Area First Aid training with St John’s Ambulance Australia on Monday and Tuesday 15 and 16 July 2013. This is an example of the many skills (apart from archaeological ones) that archaeologists routinely develop in the planning and undertaking of archaeological projects.

We had one Remote Area Trained First Aider, Ivana Vetta, with our team last year. Ivana will be with us again this year as a Trench Supervisor – but also available to use her first aid skills.

Read more

Why slag matters

Ivana Vetta, our slag expert
Ivana Vetta, our slag expert © PHM; photo by Irma Havlicek

by Irma Havlicek
Online Producer, Powerhouse Museum

Ivana Vetta, who wrote the previous post about slag, is working on a Ph. D based on her research into metal at Zagora. Here’s what I found out from Ivana about why finding slag at Zagora is important.

Slag, which is a waste by-product of either metal-smelting or metal-smithing, has been found at Zagora in the past*.

Smelting is the process of heating the ore (metal in rock) to very high temperatures to separate out the iron and eliminate impurities (slag).

Read more

Exploring the mines of Andros

Ivana Vetta on a scree slope
Ivana Vetta on a scree slope; © AAIA; photo by Hugh Thomas

by Ivana Vetta
Archaeologist

[Note: Ivana Vetta will be returning to Andros with the Zagora team in September 2013, and would now like to share with you this post that she wrote in her time at Zagora during the 2012 field season. Another post, ‘Why slag matters’ (and it does!) will follow shortly.]

“I found it!!!” Hugh yelled from down below, the top of his head barely visible down in the deep crevice, “I have found the entrance to the mine!”

The plan had been hatched weeks ago when Archondia (archaeologist, Dr Archondia Thanos) was reading her guide book of the island and found that there were ancient iron mines near the Hellenistic Tower at Agios Petros (St Peters).

Exploring the potential iron sources on Andros is particularly important for my research on metalworking at Zagora. The previous excavations at the site, 1967-1974, and the 2012 season’s investigations noted significant evidence of iron working on and around the site. This evidence is mostly in the form of slag, the waste product produced from the smelting of metal ore and smithing of metal objects.

Read more

Back to Zagora – 23 September to 1 November 2013!

Professor Meg Miller and Dr Stavros Paspalas, with Zagora behind them.
Professor Meg Miller and Dr Stavros Paspalas, with Zagora behind them (2012). © PHM; photo by Irma Havlicek.

by Irma Havlicek
Online Producer, Powerhouse Museum

We’ve been given approval by the Greek Ministry of Culture to return to Zagora for another archaeological season – from 23 September to 1 November 2013.

This is wonderful news for us all, and the team leaders, Professor Meg Miller, Dr Lesley Beaumont and Dr Stavros Paspalas, are busy arranging everything for a return this year.

Dr Lesley Beaumont working in the field at Zagora
Dr Lesley Beaumont working in the field at Zagora (2012). © PHM; photo by Irma Havlicek.

Read more