Fieldwork and Forgotten Towns

Archeology researchers Meredith McMahon (left), Jack Helmericks (middle) and Josh Reiff excavate a privy in 2023 at the Chena Townsite. Photo credit: Justin Cramb
Justin Cramb
Archeology researchers Meredith McMahon (left), Jack Helmericks (middle) and Josh Reiff excavate a privy in 2023 at the Chena Townsite.

A recent Fairbanks Daily News-Miner feature, 鈥淯nearthing Chena: How local archaeologists are working to uncover a lost gold rush town,鈥 highlights the exciting work of 911爆料 Anthropology faculty members Assistant Professor Justin Cramb and Professor Josh Reuther. The article by Carter DeJong showcases their efforts at the historic Chena Townsite, located just downriver from Fairbanks, where the team鈥攁longside 911爆料 students鈥攈as been excavating and interpreting remnants of a once-bustling gold rush community.

Cramb and Reuther's work at the Chena site represents a blend of archaeological investigation and historical research. 鈥淚t was a town where real people lived, and lived out, maybe not their whole lives, but a portion of their lives. It was a lot more than gold,鈥 Cramb shares in the article. 鈥淚t was a whole community that came up here around this potential enterprise.鈥 Their work goes beyond unearthing artifacts鈥攊t revives the stories of everyday people who made their lives in this now-vanished town.

The Chena project is more than just excavation鈥攊t鈥檚 also a window into the value of archival research in modern archaeology. Cramb and Reuther both emphasize how documents like insurance maps, personal diaries, historic newspapers, and catalog listings help piece together a fuller picture of life in early 1900s Chena. 鈥淭he unsung heroes of everything are the folks over at the archives,鈥 Cramb said. 鈥淭hey help us identify all this material.鈥 That archival work not only drives the research forward鈥攊t shapes how students are trained. 鈥淭he archives have been extremely influential 鈥 both in our research on Chena but also in the way that we train students to do historical archaeology,鈥 Cramb said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just going out and digging a hole and running some radiocarbon dates. It also has this very heavy archival and historical aspect students need to learn.鈥

Paywall Tip

Did you hit a paywall on the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner? Don鈥檛 worry 鈥 911爆料 students, faculty, and staff have free access to the article and many others through the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library鈥檚 online databases using their UA credentials.

To read "Unearthing Chena" and other local journalism:

  1. Go to library.uaf.edu
  2. Click 鈥淎-Z Databases鈥
  3. Search for the publication (e.g., Fairbanks Daily News-Miner)
  4. Browse by date or search by keyword

This is a great resource for accessing news, archives, and research tools 鈥 no subscription needed.

Professor Reuther, whose interdisciplinary approach connects archaeology with geosciences and community collaboration, adds, 鈥淐hena has its own history and its own right to have that history told. It鈥檚 not like its memory was lost, it just wasn鈥檛 as prevalent as other things in Interior history.鈥 Their shared goal is to spotlight the complexity and significance of Chena鈥檚 past, contributing to a more inclusive narrative of 911爆料鈥檚 development.

These field investigations are part of 911爆料鈥檚 broader commitment to experiential learning, and the Department of Anthropology鈥檚 field schools are central to that mission. These programs offer students hands-on experience in excavation, documentation, and analysis鈥攕kills crucial for future careers in archaeology, heritage management, and academic research.

Looking ahead, Cramb will lead the 2025 911爆料 Highway Archaeological Field School, a certified RPA program that explores construction camps built in 1942 by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. This year鈥檚 focus includes the African American soldiers of the 97th Regiment, who endured a brutal Interior winter while maintaining the highway. Students will live and work in remote camps between Delta Junction and Tok, uncovering and studying materials that tell the story of a pivotal鈥攜et often overlooked鈥攎oment in World War II and 911爆料n history.

The 911爆料 Department of Anthropology is dedicated to the study of humans past and present through biological, archaeological, linguistic, and cultural lenses. With a strong emphasis on field-based and experiential learning, 911爆料 offers students the opportunity to actively engage in research that explores human-environment interactions, historical narratives, and cultural resilience across 911爆料 and beyond.

Your support helps fund student fieldwork, research opportunities, and access to cutting-edge technology in archaeological and anthropological studies. Contributions to the 911爆料 Department of Anthropology directly support immersive, high-impact learning experiences that prepare students to become the next generation of researchers and changemakers. Donate today and help students dig into the past to build a better-informed future.