Sunday, December 16, 2012

Root & Rock Medicine with a dose of Vitamin B

Another hut excavation yields rocks and a few nice artifacts.


Here, my first glass of the hut becomes visible. Using my dig knife vs. the shovel insures that any glass I come across doesn't get the hatchet job. Using the knife affords one to feel when the blade crosses the smooth surface of glass. A very different sensation than even smooth rock. This bottle was directly under a couple of tightly wedged rocks and a root to boot.

This tiny medicinal came from the 9 o'clock location as you look down into the hole and hidden in the undercut. As you can see, some very large rocks have already come out.

Digging in the same direction as the location of the bottle led to the eventual recovery of the second part of the doctor's prescription. A perfect Company letter B, a weak signal that I scraped out well after sundown.





Lead Rations

Digging out huts can be interesting to say the least. As buried objects come to light they may present as something familiar...then turn out to be the oddity or the unusual. It's a fun aspect of the recovery. Case in point, while excavating a hut, this object was uncovered in one corner. Upon first glance, it appears that I have just uncovered the oxidized solder-filled back of an eagle breast plate or perhaps the back end of an artillery shell and its lead sabot. It is almost identical in circumference for an eagle plate or an 8-10lb shell. But there are some flags that go up that make my mind detour and 2nd guess my initial wish-driven reaction.




Looking closely, a clearly visible rust ring suggests this is neither plate nor shell. If it were an eagle plate then there should be rusty remnants of the two attachment loops within and across the disc, not a full ring of rust encircling. A lead sabot would likewise show no rust ring.



Upon extraction and closer inspection it becomes evident that a soldier has melted lead in a tin ration can to a depth of about 1.5". What remains is the tin can wrap around an oxidized lead hockey puck. The soldier has used his knife in the center to create a depressed cone with blade spokes where the lead would last solidify. A very neat soldier-made relic in my opinion. Purpose unknown. The lead-filled tin would certainly have been a stable fixture on a shelf holding down writing paper in a drafty hut. Who knows.