John Smith's well: Time lapse excavation

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  • Опубликовано: 15 фев 2011
  • From April to December of 2009 archaeologists with the Jamestown Rediscovery project at Historic Jamestowne in Virginia unearthed what was likely Jamestown's first well inside the center of James Fort. Captain John Smith himself likely ordered the construction of this well in late 1608 or early 1609. This well was nearly 16 feet deep and located below the floor of a cellar. The following video represents a time-lapse of that nine-month period of excavation.
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Комментарии • 47

  • @cbassoo7
    @cbassoo7 3 месяца назад +1

    This is the only truthful thing the AP has reported this year. Good job.

  • @shawnwilliams3597
    @shawnwilliams3597 5 лет назад +4

    Thank you very much for sharing your wonderful video with us. This is Ivana from Canada.

  • @TheHolyMongolEmpire
    @TheHolyMongolEmpire 11 лет назад +7

    You guys have the best job in the world.

  • @amybarb25
    @amybarb25 8 лет назад +9

    This is so incredibly fascinating . I'm so glad you guys recorded this. Absolutely amazing work.

  • @karenmiller1705
    @karenmiller1705 6 лет назад +5

    My ancestor John Short was one of the settlers of Jamestown. I'm definitely interested in the settlement and history!

  • @AnotherAmateur
    @AnotherAmateur 12 лет назад +3

    Very cool. We visited Jamestown in 1994 and got to watch one of the first excavations being dug. In 2009 we revisited the site and were amazed to see how much had changed. I had the chance to chat with Bill Kelso and later sent to him my video of the earlier excavation. I've uploaded a short video of a diorama on display at Jamestown back in 1994. Great work you are doing!

  • @stephenburns3678
    @stephenburns3678 Год назад

    Priceless.
    Thank you

  • @Triple316
    @Triple316 5 лет назад +3

    Awesome! You all have worked so hard to get to do this. I’m impressed!

  • @marymathis9299
    @marymathis9299 9 лет назад +1

    Thank you for both your explanation and the years you all have invested to bring to us the truest history of our nation's beginnings.

  • @TheHolyMongolEmpire
    @TheHolyMongolEmpire 7 лет назад +5

    I can't wait to visit Jamestown, hope to get there soon. Been reading about it for almost 15 years. Such fascinating history.

  • @ericx4124
    @ericx4124 6 лет назад +2

    I enjoyed this. Thank you.

  • @jeffbaxter8770
    @jeffbaxter8770 4 года назад +1

    Thank you, fascinating stuff.
    More please

  • @azianboy317
    @azianboy317 9 лет назад +2

    amazing work!

  • @sherreenations5275
    @sherreenations5275 4 года назад +3

    I was there the day they brought up the first bucket of mud..met Dr. Kelso and got a pic of that meeting
    .me and my mom also PATRICIA CORNWALL WAS THERE and the blue and yellow national forensic copter flying over filming us looking into that bucket didn't know what was going on till later very fitting since I have ancestry back to 1500s in this country
    ..yes the one that had 32 children lol true.Isle of Wight..would love to have a signed copy of the above photo of me and my mom..signed by Beverly and Dr. Kelso..please!

  • @thedynastycontinues945
    @thedynastycontinues945 5 лет назад +3

    Truly Amazing.

  • @sherir4462
    @sherir4462 4 года назад +1

    Wow! I have chills!

  • @lindaeasley5606
    @lindaeasley5606 2 года назад +1

    This is particularly fascinating when you have ancestors who were among the Virginia colonists

  • @puppy2haley
    @puppy2haley 5 лет назад +1

    Just amazing!!!!

  • @JamestownRediscovery
    @JamestownRediscovery  12 лет назад +7

    @AnotherAmateur
    It's always interesting to hear how people feel about how much has changed out here since we began. Thanks for your interest and come back again when you get the chance.

    • @rosemarywharfe7347
      @rosemarywharfe7347 3 года назад

      What a discovery. Thankyou. Look forward to seeing more.

  • @JohnnyButtons
    @JohnnyButtons 4 года назад +1

    Wow.... just wow.

  • @debrapapen
    @debrapapen 2 года назад

    Soooo Cool!

  • @digginz8603
    @digginz8603 5 лет назад +3

    Hey guys! Question: were the colonists were throwing garbage and rotting carcasses in their water supply?

  • @brettb.7425
    @brettb.7425 5 лет назад +1

    I’m thinking about going for a PhD in archaeology and am absolutely fascinated by these digs. I do have a question. If you expect rain, i presume you have large tarps ready for covering the site. Is this correct? It may be a self explanatory question but I have to ask. Great work and happy digging. God bless!! Brett

  • @ericsgreyhairwisdom5799
    @ericsgreyhairwisdom5799 5 лет назад +3

    What depth for what age? The first thing I learned in treasure hunting is 1 inch depth = 10 years of history.

  • @waynelkohrjr.8557
    @waynelkohrjr.8557 4 года назад +1

    Y was that caller so deep
    Was it flood plane over hundreds of years.

  • @CodyGall
    @CodyGall 2 года назад

    How could the artifacts be both conserved and preserved?

  • @marymathis9299
    @marymathis9299 9 лет назад +1

    It's amazing...thank you all for this! Seems curious that what we would term as "trash" was found in their well...would they have been thoughtless and not realized they were polluting their water source, or is it more that it was no longer useful as a water source it became the first landfill in America? I realize there were a great deal of artifacts found which tell a story; could the things "not found" here be an indicator to life as it was being lived during this time? All this is like a magnet, pulls you back again and again to see what's new and to re-examine what has already been viewed to help fill in those gaps. Cool stuff...gratefully, m.m.

    • @JamestownRediscovery
      @JamestownRediscovery  9 лет назад

      It's filled b/c the water source has already gone bad so they abandoned it. We believe this particular well went bad due to salt water contamination and then was filled with trash. I see your name every now and then on this channel, thanks for your support and interest.

    • @marymathis9299
      @marymathis9299 9 лет назад

      JamestownRediscovery You are so welcome; when I say this is like a magnet - it REALLY is...I have to come back frequently. At this point in life, I would love to be able to rewind the clock and decide for history and become a "real digger" and not just enjoying the labors of others, but since that will never be, I will be pleased to watch and enjoy you all and your great work. Going back to the well, I have heard something about the possibility of poison being used by the peers of the first settlers who were perhaps trying to do away with the Jamestown folk. How do you all feel about that? Does it seem to "hold water"? thanks, m.m.

    • @JamestownRediscovery
      @JamestownRediscovery  9 лет назад

      Mary Mathis Those of us who have spent the last 20 years out here working on the fort site don't buy into poison well theories. That being said there are pretty high natural arsenic levels as one gets closer to the swamps on the island. These wells were pretty far removed from the swamp so it should not have been an issue.

  • @KateFergeson
    @KateFergeson 3 года назад

    Was it only six horses who were consumed? I thought it was perhaps more since “Six Mares and two Horses (stallions)” were shipped to the fort? I had read that one mare died en route on the Blessing, but that that the others made it?

  • @rec1412
    @rec1412 6 лет назад +1

    Have any out houses been discovered?

    • @JamestownRediscovery
      @JamestownRediscovery  6 лет назад

      Not one privy on the entire island in over 100 yrs of archaeology, which is a bit strange.

  • @PDGreen-ec7ss
    @PDGreen-ec7ss 3 года назад

    Was the barrel used to put implements in? Sounds like the well was used to hide the inplement and horse bones; maybe some were eating better than others! Just a thought. No privey's would mean certain that ground water contamination.

  • @daveybass655
    @daveybass655 3 года назад +1

    Oh man. Besides John Smith, and Pocahontas, my family is the first inter racial family in America.
    When Capt. Nathaniel Bass married the daughter of the Powhattan king, a native woman named Elizabeth. And my family is still here, 400 years later !

  • @matcha721
    @matcha721 5 лет назад +1

    when they tried s hard to suck water out of the well but it just kept coming and they couldn't get deeper.

  • @beardg304
    @beardg304 Год назад

    Why did people throw all of their trash down the well?

  • @carbidegrd1
    @carbidegrd1 5 лет назад +1

    why would you throw the remains of dogs and horses into your well?

    • @bun04y
      @bun04y 5 лет назад +2

      I would guess that since the well was dug so close to the river that the water in the well kept becoming brackish (salty) so the well then became a trash pit...which would also explain all the artifacts found in the well.

  • @chrisedy9116
    @chrisedy9116 4 года назад +1

    I have found something they would love But they Keep it to themselves So NO Way

    • @somethingsomethingusername802
      @somethingsomethingusername802 3 года назад

      "keep it for themselves", also know as, preserve it in far better conditions for far longer than any layperson would be able to, while also displaying it to the public, and documenting/analyzing it to further understand the area from which it was found (maybe where it came from, who likely made it, how it ended up there, why, etc.).
      It's much more than "keeping it for themselves", that's actually exactly what you are doing, and why we have Preservation/Conservation Laws to prevent it.

  • @TribeWilloughby
    @TribeWilloughby 4 года назад +1

    Look what Y'all have done to poor Harry... You should understand by now how much harm this Disney story has done

  • @spymaine89
    @spymaine89 6 лет назад +3

    no excuse for starving in winter. there in summer should have stored. knew the land, ax thru frozen ground, eat roots, bugs, other sm lifeforms under rocks, logs. the pity is how obtuse they were.

  • @scottnix4991
    @scottnix4991 3 года назад

    I know I will not get a response after all this time, but why would they throw animal remains into their drinking water supply? It doesn't make sense.

    • @JamestownRediscovery
      @JamestownRediscovery  3 года назад +1

      We get this question a lot! The animal remains in the well were deposited after the well had already been abandoned for drinking water. These early Jamestown wells would often go bad due to salt water contamination from the nearby James River, and once they could no longer provide potable water the former wells would become trash pits. Since the Jamestown colonists did not have trash collection to bring waste such as animal remains to an offsite location, they would often throw their trash away in pits like wells like this one that were no longer in use.

  • @peggygraham6129
    @peggygraham6129 11 месяцев назад

    While I appreciate your work using metric measurements would have you understood by the scientific community and the rest of us in the world.