SUMMER NEBRASKAN MONDAY, JULY 16,1972 Digging for traces of the post m jP its1 PAGE 4 vfl 11 In Cass County, a few miles outside Weeping Water, two faculty members and nine students from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln worked during first summer session on an archaeological dig. Heading the dig was Dr. Dale Henning, associate professor of anthropology, assisted by Dr. John Weymoth, physics professor. The excavation is a site originally dug in the 1930s by amateur archaeologist Dr. Lloyd N. Kunkel, still a practicing physician in Weeping Water. Kunkel completely excavated the six Indian lodge sites known to be in the immediate area. His findings were reported by David Mayer Gradwohl in a Nebraska State Historial Society publication in 1969. In the 1930s, in addition to his own archaeological work, Kunkel served as an informant and guide for many professional archaeologists working in the area. All of the house sites are believed to have been inhabited 1200 A.D. by an Indian tribe of the Nebraska Culture, a part of the Central Plains Tradition. The semi-sebterranean houses were rectangular, with tunnel-like entrances. The floors were about three feet below the surface. The widely spaced lodges probably were made of wood and clay and don't appear to have been erected in any pattern to form a village. In the current excavation, all the earth that is removed with shovel and trowel is sifted carefully through wire mesh screens to find any small chips and flakes that were missed the first time. The original work was done only with shovels looking for easily visible artifacts. Last Wednesday, work at the site stopped for the summer. It will be resumed for several weeks in the fall and completed next summer. 4t-. H ... ... . " I , sr " .1 X fi ,. ' 1 1- . T -I i I 1 v 2 '.,".! i. -1 v i " 'V-t J ' Photos and Story by Carol Proud, NU School of Journalism .mm" i nf - 13 ' .' 7 r-vz.i' 1 17 J. Upper ri()ht: Dr, Weymoth testing for lodge floor by tampling earth color. Top center: Screening for pottery chips. Right: Measuring t preliminary trench. Lower left: Tools for accurate organizing and recording, an absolute necessity. -K:- - r nr r-' eJLww '1 1(1 I : 7 lm'K'y, 'for Tv 1 W4jWj,)wtj","tiii v -ar! fi?m ;