Anthropology Students Take Overnight Field Trip to Rural-Life Museum
Friday, October 24, 2008
Students enrolled in Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, taught by D. Robert Cooley, assistant professor of anthropology/environmental science (who provided the photos) visited the Meadowcroft Rock Shelter and Museum of Rural Life in early October. Archaeological excavations at the rock shelter, near Avella, have revealed substantial evidence that humans have been camping at and utilizing the site continuously since 16,000 years ago approximately 5,000 years earlier than the traditionally accepted understanding of the earliest human occupation of North America. During the extra-credit field trip, five students camped overnight at the facility, tried their hand at replicas of ancient tools and toured a recreated Eastern Woodland Indian community and a 19th-century rural village. Students making the trip were Courtney L. Vail, of State College; Krysta L. Shaffer, of Jersey Shore; Jared M. George, of Annville; Eric R. Elder, of Williamsport; and Zachary S. Adams, of Millerton.