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Students Dig into Denver's Past

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Author(s)

Justin Beach

Jon Stone

Media Relations Manager

Jon Stone

快活app parking lot turns into the site of an archeological dig

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As the city of Denver continues to evolve and grow, new construction further buries our past. However, before听听transforms the 快活app campus, a group of students had the opportunity to unearth some history.

鈥淭he main thing that we are doing is teaching these students how to do archaeology,鈥 said听, an associate professor in the听Department of Anthropology. 鈥淎rchaeology isn鈥檛 dinosaurs and it doesn鈥檛 have to be King Tut. It can be your own past of your own town.鈥

Earlier this month, Clark and Professor听听led a team of anthropology graduate and undergraduate students on an archaeological dig of a site located directly west of Sturm Hall. The parking lot will soon become a new residence hall for first-year students. It鈥檚 the first phase of听, a long-term vision for how 快活app will transform the student experience over the years and decades ahead.

鈥淲e are doing history in a way that is not written down in the history books,鈥 Conyers said. 鈥淲e are doing history by looking at the material records of people鈥檚 lives. These are the things they don鈥檛 write in their diaries and these are the things that are not published in the paper.鈥

Before the University purchased the land and turned it into a parking lot, it used to be covered by single-family homes. Using old pictures, maps and tax records, the team was able to determine what the neighborhood looked like in the early 1900s. Then, using ground-penetrating radar (GPR), they determined exactly where the homes once stood and where the best locations would be to dig.

鈥淲e created three-dimensional images, like a cat scan of someone鈥檚 body, but in this case, we did a CT scan of the ground,鈥 Conyers said. 鈥淲e can tell how deep objects are and where they sit in space within the whole parking lot.鈥

The team settled on two different dig sites; the cellar of the home that once stood at 2019 S. Race St. and the garage of the home that was once located at 2003 S. Race St.

Audrey Isberg was only two years old when her family moved into the home at 2003 S. Race St. Now, more than 90 years later, she clearly remembers what the area once looked like.

鈥淚 thought it would be kind of fun to see what they are finding because I didn鈥檛 imagine they would find very much,鈥 Isberg said as she watched the students dig up her old garage.

After four days of digging students found tiles, nails, bricks and even old seeds from a garden. However, in the end, it was not about what they found.

鈥淭his is the best way to get a feel for what it鈥檚 actually like to be an archaeologist; you don鈥檛 get it from reading reports or talking about it,鈥 said Courtney Seffense, a third-year student majoring in anthropology and chemistry. 鈥淭his is a completely different experience from the classroom.鈥

To watch coverage of this event from KUSA-9NEWS, please click听.