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Time Team America - Fort Raleigh

Time Team: Fort Raleigh

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Time Team America excavating at Fort Raleigh, Roanoke Island

Time Team America excavating at Fort Raleigh, Roanoke Island

Crystal Street
2009. Oregon Public Broadcasting. 60 minutes.

Introducing the Time Team

The first American version of the madly popular British reality TV series Time Team aired in the summer of 2009, and the episodes are now available on DVD. The first of the series features ongoing investigations at Fort Raleigh, North Carolina, the site of the first English colony in the American continents. The site is perhaps more famously known as the Lost Colony of Roanoke Island, and its legend about Virginia Dare, the first English child born in the Americas. The mysterious disappearance of the colonists has inspired untold numbers of American children into learning about the past.

Time Team professionals appearing on this video include historical and urban archaeologist Julie Schablitsky, currently at the Maryland State Highway Administration; Plains prehistorian Adrien Hannus at Augustana College in South Dakota; anthropologist Joe Watkins, Director of the Native American Studies Program at the University of Oklahoma; historical archaeologist Eric Deetz of the James River Institute for Archaeology; geophysicist Meg Watters at Brown University; and head excavator Chelsea Rose, a graduate student at Sonoma State University.

Time Team and Fort Raleigh

Time Team AmericaPhoto Credit: Meg Gaillard

Time Team America's hour long video on Fort Raleigh documents three days of excavations, assisted by geophysical survey. The test area is located at an area of the island that had been identified as containing historic artifacts of the right age about 10 years ago. In the video, two large trenches are excavated over the three days in this area, opened using a backhoe to strip off the wind-blown sand believed to have been deposited on the area after the American Revolution. Backhoe stripping is a perfectly legitimate technique, which I suspect will surprise some viewers; its good and bad points aren't described here, but someday I might get to that.

The video does a good job of presenting the story, cramming an enormous quantity of information into an hour. Discussions of the site and excavation progress are held between the members of Time Team America and First Colony Foundation members Nick Luccketti and Eric Klingelhofer. Historical information about the site comes from historian Karen Kupperman, Jim Holt of the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation and the iconic historical archaeologist Ivor Noel Hume, who excavated at Fort Raleigh in 1991. The current five-year-long project of excavations are being run by the First Colony Foundation, assisted by members from Colonial Williamsburg and Jamestown, two important historic colonial sites.

I like that there is considerable amount of discussion given over to recreating the colony, both with drawings and discussion of the context for both the colonist and local Native American situation. Tiny fragments of artifacts discovered during the dig are also described and the whole vessels recreated, which is a nice feature.

I have one minor bone to pick: I'm a bit confused about what exact geophysical survey method is being used. There are several that it could be, but I personally don't know enough about the various techniques to recognize this particular method. Geophysicist Meg Watters does a great job of explaining how the methodology works at the ground beneath the surface, but a name for the method would have been nice. It may be simply too arcane an issue to fit into the short amount of time and dense information within the program.

On the Website

The PBS website for Time Team America's visit to Fort Raleigh has a slew of great resources: TTA member Julie Schlabitsky writes about what it's like to meet Ivor Noel Hume; Eric Deetz describes how to section a posthole; and of course you can see the video itself in its entirety. And they provide an update for the ongoing research at Fort Raleigh. What they haven't got is a bibliography, which I've assembled because that's just the kind of a girl I am.

Bottom Line

I thoroughly enjoyed the video, and am thrilled to see this fabulous opportunity to showcase archaeology with all its warts and glories; the website contains lots more information, and all in all, I'm glad to see that Time Team America is off to such an auspicious start.

Disclosure: A review copy was provided by the publisher. For more information, please see our Ethics Policy.

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