Jojo R. Bersales, chair of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, returned to USC last April 24 accompanied by faculty member and skeletal analyst Bonn Aure, alumnus Dennis Bait-it, and students Loyd Sato and John Henry Helle after 31 days of archaeological excavations on the grounds of
The latest round of excavations brings to 26 the total number of burials that have been recovered from the front of the church and convent of Boljoon, the Patrocinio de la Santisima Virgen, since excavations began in February and again in May-June last year. The most astounding find of this current dig was a large bent tube earring worn by a male burial who was also interred with a jarlet from the Anxi kiln in
Burials
All the ceramic wares found complete, most of which covered the faces of male burials, have been determined to be from the Zhangzhou kilns and are dated to the late 1500s to early 1600s, or at a time when Boljoon was still a small visita, with pioneering Augustinian missionaries probably coming to the are only once a year or not at all.
This latest round of excavations was funded by the Spanish Program for Cultural Cooperation and was carried out with a team from the
Gold pendants with gold, carnelian and glass spacers from Burial 17 and the bent hollow tube gold earing from Burial 20
The excavations were logistically supported by the Governor Gwendolyn Garcia, through the Committee on Sites, Relics and Structures, as well as the
An on-site press conference last April 22 was conducted as part of the public archaeology or applied anthropology side of the dig, which included evening lectures and film shows attended by local residents of Boljoon. An exit survey was also conducted by Loyd Sato, a public archaeology intern doing Summer Internship in Anthropology.
A temporary exhibition of the finds and a reconstruction of at least one of the burials will be carried out soon at the USC. All burials will soon be studied by Bersales and Aure.
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26 / April / 2008