Skeleton Printouts On The Ground

Here's a novel way to present a cemetery excavation to visitors.

At Broby in Täby, one of the world's most runestone-rich spots, is the 11th century inhumation cemetery of the famous Iarlabanki family. My colleague Lars Andersson of Stockholm County Museum's archaeology service has been excavating it bit by bit for years. Many graves are exquisitely preserved. After finishing each piece of the site he covers it again with the original ploughsoil, leaving no visible trace of his interventions. How do you present such a site to the many visitors? (Täby is an affluent suburb of Stockholm.)

Lars has had photographs of the graves in their finest prepared condition printed onto tarpaulin fabric by a company that otherwise makes the rain-proof advertisements hanging from highway overpasses. Every time he opens a new piece of the cemetery he puts the printed tarps of all the graves of earlier seasons in their spots on the ground using an EDM total station. And so when outreach officer Jennifer Shutzberg shows the site she can walk from grave to grave and demonstrate to people just what they were like and where they were even though the bones and small finds have been in museum stores for years. Well done Lars!

More like this

I've made two archaeological field interventions today. First I seeded a site with finds, then I got some finds out of another site. Fieldwalking back in March, I found a grindstone and some knapped quartz at a Bronze Age site in Botkyrka parish. Taking their positions with GPS, I've filed a brief…
For many years, the Museum of National Antiquities in Stockholm was strictly a custodian and exhibitor of archaeological finds, performing no excavations of its own. Recently, however, its staff has resumed excavations on a small scale. The unusual nature of this fieldwork identifies it as…
In 2005, a team led by myself and Howard Williams excavated a 9th century boat inhumation burial at Skamby in Kuddby parish, Ãstergötland, Sweden. The finest finds we made in the grave were a collection of 23 amber gaming pieces. These are extremely rare, the previous Swedish set having surfaced…
[More blog entries about archaeology, Belgium, Merovingian, burial; arkeologi, Belgien, folkvandringstiden, vendeltiden, gravar.] Belgian Dear Reader Bruno is one of the astronomy buffs behind Blog Wega (in Dutch). A piece about Bruno's nearest archaeological site wouldn't fit that blog, but I'm…

What a good idea! So simple and yet so effective.

By archaeozoo (not verified) on 28 May 2012 #permalink

Clever idea indeed! Well done!

By Daniel J. Andrews (not verified) on 31 May 2012 #permalink

Great Idea. The only problem being of course that printing these probably costs as much as the budget of most smaller excavations. So you definitely have to find a sponsor!