I know that many of you enjoyed my web page back in the day, but I decided I needed an easier format to let you all know what I was doing. This space is to let you know what I am doing (and finding) while roaming around Nevada on my days in and out of the field. I will be updating the site periodically, adding photos and weird stuff to keep you all entertained. I may even do some podcasts, we shall see. I hope you enjoy the new site.
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Jessika Lives Here
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
The end
Darby's wedding was a sucess...it was really fun and moving. We girls looked ultra cute in our dresses and the sun decided to shine. I didn't really get any pictures...I was too busy enjoying myself.
I had a blast at my Uncle Ron's house celebrating Kelly's 50 birthday during the Labour Day weekend. The whole family turned out for the event.
Now I am back in England happy to be with Richard and Miki. I even got a new job working part-time as a barista at Costa Coffee in Leeds...I think it will actually be fun. I get to work with my friend Johnny which will make it even better.
So, I will most likely be taking a hiatus from blogging, but am considering starting up a new one in the near future...you will all get emails.
Signing off for now...
Jessika
Friday, August 15, 2008
Ramblin down to Phoenix
I was so excited, I pulled over onto some BLM roads and had to take pictures.
Here are some choice photos from the trip.
Notice the dark clouds...this is the biggest rain storm I have ever had the pleasure to drive in. I had to pull over, along with an Oregonian driver. That is how bad it was.
Desert Therapy
When I started this trip, I thought I would be doing more camping. Unfortunately, that didn’t happen. I got wrapped up in the convenience of hotels. While I am writing this, I am camping, and though camping alone can be lonely, it definitely lets you think (and want to kill the little kids that can’t stop yelling in the RV next to me).
I chose well for this short stay. Lone Pine, the Alabama Hills where many cowboy TV shows were shot. Where people like Carry Grant and Gene Autry did their thing. This is also an area I surveyed with the fire fighters when I was working for the Forest Service. It is beautiful and hot during the day. The area is seated just below
I have found that anywhere in the
This year the desert is green. Even now in August, the sagebrush and rabbit brush still look alive and vibrant instead of brown and dreary. In times past, by August, I was ready to high-tail it out of the desert and back to the trees. I am sad to leave it’s beautiful ranges and endless valleys. I love everything the desert has to offer and have appreciated it fully.
I love it here. It has made me happy. It has made me feel alive.
I love being an archaeologist. It is an extremely exciting and exhausting occupation. This summer has made me angry, excited, sad and proud. I met unique and awesome people who got to know me better than most of my friends at home. Out here you get to know your co-workers better than anyone could at an office job. I will deeply miss these people and hope to be able to see them again.
This summer is something I have needed since my grandmother died in 2006. A chance to remember who I am and that life goes on. I am independent and fun, spontaneous and stubborn, understanding and blunt. I have the ability to be free.
All of these things are important for an archaeologist. The job can be infuriatingly frustrating because you don’t know when or where the next job will be. When you get the phone call you are whisked away to a secret, beautiful location (ok, I am playing it up a little bit…you are whisked away to some God forbidden, middle of no where valley in the middle of the desert…you say ‘tomato and I say tawmawtoe’) that allows you complete internalization of your thoughts and feelings (go a head, let it go, the person 30 meters away will never know) the best psychologist in the world. This can be imprisoning or enlightening and some days downright annoying if you have the wrong little ditty that loops over and over in your head for 10 hours.
But the conversations with your crew-mates are the best part and the final touch on this ‘desert therapy.’ Thrown together in a car with no radio reception allows a plethora of conversation and you get to know these people maybe more than they would have meant.
I wish I had camped more.
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
What exactly is it I do?
I have another example of the surveying, but the movie turned out making me a little nauseasous, so I am not going to put it up yet.
Thursday, August 7, 2008
Radiation and Sunburns
Anyway...
We are going to start surveying in Railroad Valley, one of the areas that was effected by the A-bomb testing at the Nevada Test Site but is now highly investigated for resources and wildlife. I am actually excited about it because I have read a lot about it. Incredibly deserty.
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Tuesday, August 5, 2008
Reno to San Mateo to see Ben
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I forget how beautiful Northern California is. After spending the afternoon being yuppie (we had to do some shopping for Ben's house as he is planning on decorating it. We ended up in IKEA, Bed Bath and Beyond, Costco and Target drinking our Starbucks) we drove down to Half Moon Bay and into the Santa Cruz Mountains. The ocean is so beautiful and in Ben's Subaru Outback, we cruised all the winding roads in the mountains...SWEET!
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Unfortunately, I didn't take any pictures.
I would really like to thank Ben for letting me crash at his apartment and spending some time catching up. I hadn't seen Ben for 3 years and I can never have a trip to Reno and not see him.
My last week...Part 1...Eureka
Eureka Survey 2 |
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Short and sweet
The Drive:
The first day was all driving. It took about 6 hours to get there. On the way, we noticed that our new 1999 Surburban's breaks were a bit mushy so we had to stop at Les Shawb to get them looked at. In the end, we waited until we got back to Reno to get them fixed.
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Wells to Bishop Creek Reservoir:
The project area was not far from the Super 8 Motel we were staying at.
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The actual project area:
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As always the area was beautiful. We lucked out too because there was a pretty good breeze and there was cloud cover for the majority of day 2.
During one of the linear surveys, I had to cross a barbed wire fence. Now usually I will go under or through a barbed wire fence. I never get stuck or hurt, but in this instance, I had to go over. As Jarred coxed me to go over the fence, telling me where to put my feet, I put my foot on a wire that was not secured to the post. So of corse, my foot slid down and I ended up stratteling the fence...thankfully I was not a guy. However, my left thigh got caught on one of the barbs. It really hurt and began to bleed. I finished out the line with blood dripping down my leg. I wasn't really sure how much I was bleeding until I got out of the car when we got to the hotel and found blood all over the leather seats in the back. I was able to get the blood out no problem. I managed to get a couple of pictures of my cool wound.
What is even more unfortunate about this is that my doctor let me know that I am overdue for a Tetnis shot, so guess what that means? I am hoping Workman's Comp will pay.
What was also weird was that my shins are completely covered in bruises. For being the shortest session on relatively easy and sparsely vegetated ground, I ended up the most abused out of all the sessions. Of course I did have my one trip and fall that has become quite a tradition, but that can only help account for very few of the bruises.
The project area managed to yield no important sites (only a couple of lithic scatters) and therefore our session was cut short by a day. Although I was sad because I wanted more money, I was glad we did not have to stay in the hotel another night. This place was horrible. In February 2008, Wells had a 6.0 earthquake that managed to destroy many of it's historic buildings. I am attributing the dilapidated state of the floors and ceilings to that, but the smells and thin walls have nothing to do with the earthquake. I must say, that the staff were incredibly nice.
Photo Album for the week...please click on picture to view the whole album:
Bishop Creek Reservoir survey |
Next week (August 5th), we will be heading back out to Eureka doing more survey. Unfortunately this will be my last session. I will be heading to Uncle Greg and Auntie Sue's in Arizona on the 14th and then back to Eugene for Darby's wedding on August 23rd. After that, I am back to Gig Harbor to get ready to return to my lovely husband and kitty in the UK on September 2nd.
I am so depressed at how fast this summer has gone, but have had a blast doing what I love most, Archaeology.
Sunday, July 27, 2008
A funky loop to the Mono Basin
I love the Mono Basin. I know almost every inch of it from when I was working with the Forest Service in 2004.
I went on a funky loop down HWY 395 to Mono Lake and then back up HWY 95. For the most part I am boycotting California because of it's gas prices (is $5.50 really necessary when you can get gas in Nevada for $3.95?), but I had to go see the lake again.
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At the end of my trip I accidentally ended up in Virginia City. I have been meaning to go there, now I know I HAVE to go there...even if just to see the cemetery. Here is a cool site where you can see all the buildings: http://www.ghosttowns.com/states/nv/virginiacity.html
Friday, July 25, 2008
Sunscreen
In the past I have used Banana Boat's Sport 30 spf sunscreen and overall have a good result, minimal face breakout and can usually get by with minimal re-application.
This year, I finally got a "sunburn" while using Banana Boat Sport (OK, so normal people would just say that I had gotten a little too much sun. I got redder than normal with a bit of itching and a small amount of stinging. All these symptoms were gone in a day and I got "tan.") even though I was re-applying every couple of hours. This made me think about my sunscreen again.
I was looking through one of the Reno independent newspapers and they had an article on the top 10 "safe" sunscreens. It gave a link to "Skin Deep" a website that dissects all the cosmetics sold on the market, including sunscreen and soaps.
Did you ever want to know what all of those weird ingredients in your cosmetics were? They tell you on the website and how they all can give you cancer of one sort or another. I found this site really interesting and I will be choosing a new sunscreen in the not to distant future.
Thursday, July 24, 2008
For all my guinea pig homies...Bringing you some joy and funnies
So you can compare, here is the Kitty Cat song:
Sunshine, lollypops, and rainbows everywhere
My View to the Right
So...
I have been in Reno for a week and a half. We didn't have any fieldwork this week so I was stuck in the office for a few days. I have been at the Fitzgerald which has pretty nice rooms. They are huge and the view that I have is really nice. So I have been extended my stay here 4 times now. The Truckee White River Park is near, so I get to hear concerts and go down to the river when I get bored.
Truckee River White Water Park on the Truckee River
I went on a covert literature search Monday (covert because I was given 1 hour notice). I was paid to be in the car for a total of 10 hours and 4 hours of research time at the Elko BLM. Literature searches have to be done in the BLM district where a survey is going to take place. We go through reports of previous surveys to print out information on previously recorded sites in the project area. Pretty easy.
During my trip to Elko, there was a major lightening storm that created pouring rain (very odd for Nevada in July). The cool part was, it created a double rainbow. One was particularly vibrant.
We finally got the word that a group of us will be going to Wells, NV for 4 days beginning Monday and then a likely chance of the whole crew being on session August 5th...if this is true, that will be my last session and I will be heading home on the 12th.
Saturday, July 19, 2008
DAH, NAH, NAH, NAH, NAH, NAH, NAH....BATMAN
The best Batman movie ever.
I can't say more than that to respect all of you who are planning to see it.
Monday, July 14, 2008
Skele gained, Lessons Learned
So, what happens when a burial is found? Well, we contact BLM, because it is on their land. The police and coroner maybe called in if the skeleton is thought to be new. Due to artifacts that we found with the skeleton (brass buttons and buckles) and the site it was located in (frying pan, tin cans, a butter knife), I would think it is historical and therefore NAGPRA won't be involved.
Anyway, I learned that I can be confident that I know what I am talking about. When my crew boss randomly picked up the metatarsal and didn't recognize it as an animal he knew of (being a zooarchaeologist), he was gonna let it go. But I could swear it was human, so I took it from him and pondered it for a long time. I knew it was human the second I saw it, but because I lack confidence in my ability to identify remains anymore, I was still not 100% sure until I found the phalanges.
Another lesson learned on this trip is that I need to speak up when I don't feel well in the field. We had a particularly hot day on Wednesday like high 90's. I was working with an all boy group who survey really really fast. Well, I started to feel a little dizzy and lightheaded, then I could feel a bit of a headache. I began to not be able to walk correctly, always tripping over things and my brain wasn't working the way it should have. I had drunk a gallon of water in 4 hours but wasn't really sweating the way one should. So from all those symptoms, I still had a hard time speaking up. Finally, after 3 failed attempts to allow the word exit my mouth, I was finally able to tell my crew chief that I was desperate and needed to go back to the car, which was now about 2 miles away. Needless to say I had to stay in for 2 days because I had gotten mild heat stroke.
This lesson was that I need to be more active in how I feel, and to not worry about what others are going to think about me being sick. No one blames me for having to stay in because of heat problems. They don't want me to die. So, I need to get over that self consciousness.
We have been surveying in Kobhe Valley outside of Eureka on BLM land for a mining project at Mount Rose. It is really beautiful. Too bad there is so much smoke from the California fires.
Sorry the film is a little fast.
Sunday, July 6, 2008
Historic Mines, 4th of July and the Olympic Trials in Eugene
During these 2 sessions, we have found numerous garbage dumps and structures. On our last 2 days, we found an old track that was used to send ore down the valley. We followed this track about a mile and came across a structure that was used to (or at least what we think) process the ore.
In essence, we put all the pieces together to find that this area was used by unaffiliated individuals who were mining in the same area and sharing the equipment to process their ore.
This is very exciting and I was so happy that all this was uncovered on the last day.
session 2 |
I spent the 4th with Darby, making the journey from Reno to Veneta once again. The trip is only about 425 miles. It is a gorgeous drive. I camped at Eagle Lake on my way up to save money. No one was camping this year...
We attended a small festival in Eugene on the 4th but left before the fireworks. On the 5th we celebrated my belated 30th birthday. We ate food, got drunk and danced. It was fun.
To top off my trip, we attended the finals for the Olympic Trials for Track and Field. It was incredibly exciting. Watching it on TV doesn't show you how fast these athletes are. What I found the most amazing were the pole vaulters. The amount of strength it takes to hurl yourself over a pole at 16 ft, is astonishing.
I am adding some pictures of Darby's new house. It is huge. They have a 5 acer plot that many deer and wild turkeys frequent. It will look amazing for their wedding.
Darby's house |
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Car chases and wildfires
Every session something incredibly exciting happends. Whether it is drama in the crew, flat tires or in our case a police allowed car chase.
On our way home along I-80 we noticed a car on an off ramp with some people fighting. At a closer look, it was 2 huge men beating a small woman.
We were concerned, so we made the 9-1-1 call, and backed down the ramp to get the lisence number and to basically let them know we were on the case.
They jumped in the car and drove off. We follow the car for 20 minutes while on the phone with dispatch, they give us the green light to go as fast as we can following the car. We ended up losing them because we were in a 4 Runner that was full of crap and wouldn't go much faster than 100 mph. The car ended up getting off at an exit and swung to go the opposite direction on I-80. Finally the cops appear, tons of them, going really fast and we tell them that they were headed in the opposite direction.
In the end, they were caught. But the best part was that the woman told the cops to thank us. I was so glad because we were afraid that she wouldn't prosecute or would take their side. She was beaten pretty badly though.
On to the wildfires...
So there are about 800 wildfires going on in the California Sierra's. Because Reno is in a valley, well much of NEvada is a basin/range, all the smoke has gathered there. It is horrible. You can't see a mile ahead, it is similar to fog in October, only you can't breathe. Needless to say, my camping plans were ruined and because I have asthma, I fled the area and decided to go to Darby's. The smoke was present from Reno to Aiden, CA.
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It was unfortunate, because the drive is really pretty, but because of the smoke...there were no mountains. We also saw the smoke in Battle Mountain. The valley that we have a view of has been gone for a couple of days now. I guess the smoke covers Northern Nevada to the Utah border and get this...more
Here are some pictures of my drive out of the city. In all of these pictures there are supposed to be huge 10,000 ft mountains.
Saturday, June 21, 2008
Update for project area google map pict
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Happy Birthday
Happy Birthday!
Have a good day. hope u don't mind me posting a doofer, but this is so funny and I wanted to wish u happy birthday!
Emma
x
Friday, June 20, 2008
Birthdays, work and stuff
Though the past 4 days have been hard, we found some cool stuff. There are 3 crews and I really only know what has happened with my crew. I do know that one crew already finished 40 miles of surveying even with sites they recorded. My crew has not done so much in mileage as we have to recording. We now have recorded 13 sites. And many of them were no picnic. The majority of the sites were historic dating from the late 1900 to the 1950s. Lots of cans and glass, but the cooler part was that there were structures and car parts.
Man, we make a big deal about recycling, but the miners in the early 1900's could not be matched. They used everything. Old tin cans, car parts and bottles to make everything. And low and behold it is still there over 100 years later. Yes, all of it is dilapidated, but if someone had been there keeping it up, I bet it would look perfect.
The area is so pretty. I will put our project area below. It is huge!! Most of the area is on the picture but we are moving East/ West between the two mountain ranges.
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We are working on BLM land that allows the mine (the name escapes me) to drill for metals. I think this one is a silver mine.
I have included a bunch of pictures. A total of 6 really nice points have been found by our crew, the other teams had much more, but they had no historical sites.
Click on the picture to see the whole album.
Buffalo Valley 1 |
Oh yeah, and my 30th birthday is tomorrow.
Sunday, June 15, 2008
Weird Stuff
1. Panic at the Disco playing "Gin and Juice" with Snoop Dogg.
2. The Summer 2008 Commercial for "Bones."
3. A Kooks song being played in the background of a Michelob Wine Coolers commercial. I will explain...I swear these kids are 17 (but when I looked it up, they are actually 23, so they have been legal for a while.)
4. People wanting to see Rise Against videos on MTV.
5. The Pussy Cat Dolls performing on "So You Think You Can Dance."
6. Snoop Dogg doing country...with Willie Nelson.
Given, there are many other weird things, but these are the only ones I bothered to write down.
So Emma...are you laughing yet?
Road Trip no 2- I-80 West to CA-49 N to Hwy 395 South
I went to this neat little cemetery that looked quite new, however, many of the headstones had dates that were old. I decided that this cemetery must have been moved. What I really liked about many of the headstones was the pictures that some of them had.
Tahoe and HWY 49 |
Friday, June 13, 2008
Now a Warning!!!
I just wanted to let you know that from now on, I will be copying and pasting any comments that have been emailed to me on the website. I would rather not have to do this, so please leave comments on the website.
Road Trip no.1- The Black Rock Desert
I finally did it, the one thing that has been burning on my mind for the last 6 months (at least), I WENT TO THE BLACK ROCK DESERT. This is where they hold Burning Man every year. People also come here to break the land speed records.
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I took the car out on the playa and drove, I was a little wary though because the lake bed is so alkaline that it can eat through tires. BUT DON'T WORRY, I didn't drive as far as I wanted to (about 5 miles) because I didn't want to be stuck out there. I had enough water, but I didn't want to chance it. And don't worry Flip, I will be getting the car washed in a little bit.
So here are some pictures and a couple of videos. I just wanted to note that when I take pictures from the car, I am just pointing and shooting. No setting up shots are done, all the pictures are by chance.
Black Rock |
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Carson City and the Mining Safety and Health Class
I stayed at the Plaza Hotel. It was a lot nicer than the reviews I read online. I had a little kitchen area, breakfast was included and the hotel had a swimming pool. However, they had no internet. If they had, this place would be close to perfect for the lower priced hotels ($45/ night) I have stayed at.
Safety training is the most boring thing on Earth, and what’s up with having the lights off so we can see the Power Point better, it is only encouraging sleep. Not even the coffee they have saves us from sleeping.
I arrived my first day knackered from the 14 hr drive. I couldn’t keep my eyes closed and I was quite nauseous (which I decided was car sickness). Not only did I have to run out of the room to throw up, but I slepted through the morning. On the plus side, everyone wanted to talk to me and know where I was from. When I told them I had just driven from the
…it was similar to the time I was in Women Must Weep at Annie Right Prep and one of the girls knocked over the lamp during the play (this is on tape for those of you interested). I could not stop laughing for the life of me, but because I was on stage as the lead, I had to control it by letting my stomach laugh without letting the sound out…
Anyway, it was really funny.
Today (Thursday) I completed the training and got my New Miner’s Surface Safety Certification. Now I can work at a mine, as an archaeologist or any other mining personnel.
I managed to get myself out of
I checked into The Grand Sierra Resort and logged onto the internet for the first time in 3 days…it seems like it has been much longer than that.
The Great Drive
The drive from the exit to
Central Oregon
I was glad to get gas (petrol) in
When I came down the pass to
Monday, June 9, 2008
Going to Carson
I had such fun while I was in the Harbor. I got to see my family and sit around the house and enjoy the cold damp...but the view was pretty as you all saw from "Cacophony of Sound." I got to attend Darby's wedding shower, which was tons of fun, but because I am a bad bride's maid, I have no pictures to show you because I didn't take a camera.
I have no idea what my schedule is going to be in the up coming days and I don't know if I will have internet access, but when I do, I will let you know.
Well, it is 12:30 am, I had better get some sleep.
Thursday, June 5, 2008
Hillary Clinton, you will be remembered.
Sunday, June 1, 2008
cacophony of sound at 5 o'clock am
Saturday, May 31, 2008
Back in the US...Step One
Since I don't have to be in Reno until next Tuesday, I will now spend the next week planning on how I will afford to drive my car with gas prices at $4.15/ gal (the least expensive I have seen).
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Caskets From Costco?
This almost made me pee my pants a little.
A Costco funeral line....now we can be cheap all the way to the end. They should allow you a discount to buy in bulk.
Monday, May 19, 2008
Why Am I So Excited About Staring at the Ground in the Desert?
Just in case anyone is interested in reading a little about the Great Basin, I have a wikipedia page for you.
From what I gathered from my boss, we will be surveying mines and some housing developments.
You want to know why we do these surveys? Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act states (very basically, Sorry Darby) that federal agencies have to acknowledge that historic places exist and are a non-renewable resource (or a cultural resource). Therefore, survey needs to be carried out so an Environmental Impact Statement can be submitted and SHPO (State and Tribal Historic Preservations Officers) can have their way with it...Darby knows all about this...to decide if the place needs to be preserved.
BLM of Nevada
Stuff we look for:
We record all kinds of material, as long as it is 50 years or older. I don't know what they are going to do when we get to the mass manufacturing age. It is kinda stupid to record a pop can from the late 1970's onward, plus they are everywhere.
Glass bottles, tins, clothing, leather, nails and buildings are all fair game to be recorded and mapped. The most common historical artifacts we find are garbage pits full of tin cans. Bottles are my personal favorite.
An interesting piece of information to know while staring at the ground in Gold Mining Country, is to look for tobacco tins nailed to wooden posts. These tins were used to mark mining claims. Where you find these posts, you are likely to find small tailings, the piles of gravel left over from the test pits dug to see if the site was worth mining.
Old tins
We find tons of obsidian lithic scatters that, every once and a while, yield a nice projectile point. These scatters tell us a lot about the area. For instance, if the site has a high concentration of flakes and is scattered over a large area, it can be assumed that this area was a long term camp and that it was a primary area of tool production. In these areas, we find primary, secondary and tertiary flakes. If there are large stones and pinyon trees around, we may find metates and manos that were used for grinding pine nuts. If you see many bedrock metates...you have yourself a milling camp. WOO HOO!!
Projectile points
Bedrock metate
Now, who made these artifacts? There are a couple of tribes to consider. The Paiute, the Shoshone, and the Ute. I suggest a quick read over this website:
Great Basin Indians
I will now let all of this information settle in your brains and hope that you can see why I am so excited about staring at the ground in the desert this summer.
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Testing RSS
There is an RSS feed to this page, so you can see when I, or someone else, has added to the page. Scroll down to the bottom where it says "subscribe to this page," and click. Now, I don't know how this works for any web page but google.com. When you click it will let you know. I recommend that people get a google home page which is discribed in the RSS link I gave above.
Enjoy a short video of 8 mile flat, a video I took 3 years ago while working in Nevada.
Hello
So I am going to be heading to Nevada in a couple of weeks to begin a 4 month field season with my old boss. I am very excited.
The schedule is interesting with 8 days on (10 hr. days) and 6 days off, I will hopefully have time to explore and relax in the Sierras. I haven't really made any plans at the moment, but you will hear about them here on my new blog spot.
Richard and Miki are going to be staying the the UK while I am gone :(...but I am sure they (and I ) will be fine.