Archaeology Schools

gunsil

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Dec 27, 2012
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Harvard has the best anthropology department in the US. I took Anth/arch at OU (university of OK) but left after discovering that less then one tenth of one percent of of all anth/arch students ever actually get to go on digs. Most of the students you see in Nat Geo magazine digging cool ancient sites paid many thousands of dollars to go on these expeditions. Sadly most who get degrees in this field end up as professors and never really see much field work. I went to OU because I didn't have the grades or the money for Harvard and OU had a good native American studies anth department. I don't know if they still do, I went there sixty years ago.
 

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Nathan-Drake0075

Nathan-Drake0075

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Mar 10, 2018
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Thank you so much for the insight! How important is it to have a degree to seacher for sunken ships and coins?
 

TwoYewts

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Oct 29, 2013
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Not sure if it will help; but, I believe I recall seeing Archaeology News magazines in my local Barnes & Noble that had adverts in the back pages listing fieldwork opportunities and educational tours etc. Also you can try going to the Archaeological Institute of America's website to see offerings (https://www.archaeological.org/fieldwork/afob). The only thing is, I believe 9 out of 10 postings are all for overseas locations. Not sure if that is something you are looking to do.

Hope that helps.
TwoYewts
 

ToddsPoint

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Mar 2, 2018
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You could join the ASAA. American Society for Amateur Archaeologists. It's free. This is Mike Gramly's group. He digs with volunteer diggers. No experience necessary. You'll get a real good taste of sitting in a hole digging and can decide if you like it or not without committing to getting a degree. Hot weather, bugs, poison ivy roots everywhere. Been there, done that. Gary
 

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Nathan-Drake0075

Nathan-Drake0075

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Mar 10, 2018
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Thank you both! I will surly look into those! I've always wanted to go on a dig!
 

Tom_in_CA

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If you think that getting an archie degree will help you find more goodies, .... think again. The methods they use is tedious and boring. They will spend a week digging and sifting a 5 x 5 ft. pit. Spending copious amounts of time writing about each nail, shard, bone, etc... that they find.

I have assisted in some archie digs, and ... quite frankly ... it was boring. For us md'rs, we get a signal, dig it up, and put it in our apron. And move on to the next beep. But to the archie, they flag the beep, write a page about the beep, dig it up with tweezers and brushes, blah blah blah.

About the only benefit that being an archie might benefit you, is that you might get some carte-blanche to some sites. But you would be the immediate disdain from other archies, if they saw you using standard md'ing methods. They BRISTLE at the thought of "collecting" and "value", etc.... To them, a crockery shard, or a square nail is JUST as meritorious as a 1909s vdb or a gold coin. But to us md'rs, we chuck the nail or shard aside as junk, and go on to the next beep.
 

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