Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Picture of Me

In order to please a certain special someone who suggests that too many of my photos are of trees or buildings instead of people, especially of myself, this post is entirely devoted to pictures taken by other people and belatedly gathered from facebook, email attachments, other websites, etc. I will be in all of them, proving that I have in fact visited the places mentioned elsewhere on this site, so if you don't particularly like looking at me, you should probably avoid reading more of this post.










(left top) practising EDM (electronic distance measurement) at Myrtleberry.
(right top) also on Exmoor, standing around a 20th century metal war... thing.
(left bottom) out for the Rugby WC, with my camera-shy flatmate, Caryn.

Monday, October 29, 2007

London


The requisite photo of Tower Bridge.









And here is Collin dressed up as "A Package From Home" complete with bubble wrap and candy.

The Rugby World Cup


Danielle, Cody, Debbie, and Bjarke: fellow post-grads in the Archaeology Dept.







This is Caryn hiding shamelessly behind her South African Springboks scarf.

Rugby and London and Gingers, oh my!

Since my last post, there have been several major happenings: the Rugby World Cup, my successful navigation of the National Express and the London underground, and a Halloween party at which I dressed up as a Ginger Kid. For those unfamiliar with the South Park episode, just know that there exists a theory involving the satanic, soul-devouring characteristics of redheads. Check http://www.gingerkids.org/ for more details. I'm told that my costume was extremely creepy.

But my romp through the wild realms of "gingervitis" was actually the most recent happening (it was last Saturday night at Collin's London flat, well, it really overtook his entire building) so I'll back up a bit. The Rugby World Cup was quite exciting - England was in the final for the second time in a row (they won in 2003), playing against South Africa. If you remember, my flatmate Caryn is from South Africa, so we had a great time infiltrating a pub down the hill, grabbing a couch seat right in front of the biggest TV screen ever, and cheering ourselves hoarse. I'm sorry to report that England lost, but it was a fantastic time and we did beat France in the semi-finals so there's still a bit of bragging power.

As for London, I took a coach on Friday afternoon in order to spend the weekend visiting Collin at his Maida Vale flat. He lives with a whole crowd of other Americans involved in his internship/MBA programme, who were very nice to meet. On Saturday, Collin and I explored the Borough Market (located underneath rail tracks and stocked with all the cheese, bread, fruit, veg, cupcakes, mulled wine, and dead pheasants you could ever desire), wandered over London Bridge, and ate kebabs for dinner, which are worth mentioning because unlike American shish-kebabs, they don't come on a stick. Imagine a gyro (or a pita) that's very very yummy and very very messy. On Sunday, we visited Collin's work place (UBS) and the Barbican art gallery to see an exhibit on the representation of sex in art. Don't worry parents, it was very informative and tasteful. There was quite a bit of Greek pottery, so I should be able to write the trip off as a university-related expense, right?

That's all for now... halfway to the horizon is a arch/anthro Halloween party in the dorm common room, a field trip to Gloucester on Thursday, and Guy Fawkes next Monday, and on the horizon is a visit from Mom, so there's plenty to anticipate.

Friday, October 12, 2007

Around Bath

(above) The River Avon and the Pulteney Bridge.




(right) The Bath Cathedral.







(left) The Bath Aviary.






(right) The Royal Crescent.

Around Bristol


(right) The Bristol Council House.







(left) A somewhat creepy
example of Bristolian graffiti/art.

A quick dip and a trip down the rabbit hole

Recap! Saturday Oct. 6 : Molly, a friend from St. Olaf, visited from Germany. We walked around the University district and the city centre, discovered the most fabulously adorable and expensive shop in the city, and went out to dinner with my flatmate Caryn to a restaurant/bar called Las Iguanas. On Sunday we caught a train to Bath (it's a whopping 13-minute trip) and made a pilgrimage to the Jane Austen Centre and did a bit of shopping. Sometimes it's just way too much fun to be a girl. :) We stopped by the Bath Cathedral for evensong before travelling back to Bristol in time to visit the Suspension Bridge despite my inability to efficiently navigate the bus system. Molly left for London on Monday morning, and a reciprocal adventure in Germany is definitely called for.

This week I've had my first classroom classes... not too frightening despite an impressive stack of books to read before next week. Caryn and I attended the International Students Welcome Party last night at the city science museum; I must admit, wandering around the museum for free, crawling through tunnels in the "Alice Through the Looking Glass" exhibit, was much more interesting than the speakers, although the Lord Mayor of Bristol was wearing about 4 tons of bright red robes complete with gold braid and a large feathered hat. They do seem to enjoy a bit of dress-up around here.

Friday, October 5, 2007

The End of the Exmoor Adventure


(right) Not to be left out, the "Alligator of Exmoor." Or maybe it's a crocodile, I never remember the difference.






(left) This is a lovely example of Exmoor's "mini-lithic" stone monuments - it's less than a foot high.








(above) The view from the top of the hill was spectacular. The hill is semi-officially called "Hangman's Hill," although I think that if you made a criminal climb all the way up there, he'd probably tie the noose himself just to save the effort of catching his breath.


(right) Rob made use of all our much-appreciated rest stops to point out possible prehistoric features such as terracing.

Exmoor Out of Breath

(above) Our Med/MALA group at Combe Martin beach on a lunch break. Just after eating, we climbed a very very very big hill to explore a previously unexplored site. Such is the life of a dedicated archaeologist.


(right) A bit more of Combe Martin - the water is salty because the Severn Estuary widens quite a lot before merging with the Atlantic.








(left) Yes, we hiked up that hill. The sheep also thought we were crazy, but at the top is an unsurveyed potential prehistoric site (see next post).

Exmoor in the Sun



(left) Sunshine at last! Exmoor includes uncultivated moorland, farmland, and fenced-in areas for sheep and cow grazing.






(right) Myrtleberry, thought to be a prehistoric hill fort. We attempted to survey the site using both older techniques (tape measures, control poles, and a hand-drawn pencil map) and newer EDM (electronic distance measurement) technology.



(above) I'd just like to point out that this photo was not edited in any way. Spiffy.

And a little less misty now

(above) Porlock Beach on the Severn Estuary, home to a very changeable tide and (allegedly) many flint shards.



(left) Our trusty Land Rover: it never failed us despite the many hills, sharp turns, bumpy roadways, and the world's dumbest pheasants.

Exmoor in the Mist


(above) Rob and part of our group standing around a stone circle at Hawkcombe Head. The mist was fairly constant for the first two days and then, quite miraculously, cleared away for Thursday and Friday.




(right) Exmoor is misty and wet as well; we searched these puddles for pieces of flint, which is not native to the area and is thus evidence of ancient activity.

Exmoor

I've just returned from a 4-day excursion to Exmoor and, for the record, I'm strongly tempted to give up the Mediterranean all together and just wander around Britain for the next 20 years climbing over Mesolithic barrows and tripping over "mini-lithic" stone rows and circles. Exmoor is southwest of Bristol - on the map, you travel down along the south side of the Severn Estuary to the almost-invisible green patch. It doesn't have monuments as well-studied or as dramatic as Stonehenge, but I learned a lot about identifying subtle earthworks (mounds, banks, ditches, etc.) and general surveying techniques.

All of the Archaeology/Anthropology programmes went along and split up to study different aspects of the area, but our group - the Meds and the MALAs (MA in Landscape Archaeology) - was by far the best. Our instructor Rob works for the Exmoor conservancy as a resident archaeologist and somehow managed to make us see building platforms, roads, and hill forts (and over-lying medieval ridge-and-furrow agriculture) in a landscape that at first glance looked vaguely bumpy with perhaps a few scattered rocks.

So, combine vigorous trampling over the moor with group dinner at the Exford pub every night with the opportunity to explore Neolithic, Bronze, and Iron Age sites, and we had, to quote the department head, an utterly "fab" field trip.