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Thursday, June 30, 2011

30 Reasons Why You Should Become An Archaeologist


Sometimes it’s not about the school, money, or where you’ll move your family after you graduate. It takes a special individual to do what archaeologists do, and there are some perks and not so nice aspects of the field, but you have to be willing to sacrifice.



If you’re considering a field in archaeology, and up to this point the only research you’ve done is studying the Triple AAA guide to Archaeology schools or posting a question in yahoo answers about how to become an archaeologist, start reading—take it with a grain a sand if you will.
  1. You know Indiana Jones was a just a movie, but you still believe there was an Indiana Jones.
  2. You love history.
  3. You were always a curious kid.
  4. You don’t mind getting dirty.
  5. You like manual labor.
  6. You want to teach people about the past.
  7. You would do it for free.
  8. You believe archaeology is Not about the Money.
  9. You’ve been watching the History Channel since you were a kid and you scream at the TV when they perpetuate pseudohistory. ~Caraobrian
  10. You prefer to watch history and archaeology documentaries while having cocktails with your friends on the weekend.
  11. You tweet about #archaeology everyday, even on #FollowFriday when people are normally taking a break from archaeology. Yeah right! A break? What’s That?
  12. You think archaeology will unite and change the world.
  13. You believe you could “Journey to the Center of the Earth”.
  14. You dream about discovering Alexander the Great’s Tomb and becoming famous.
  15. You dig the attire.
  16. The education involved in becoming an archaeology is well worth it.
  17. You’re still looking for the secrets of the pyramids.
  18. You believe turning up 8 millimeters of top soil in a year is awesome!
  19. The thrill of discovery. This might mean discovering your trowel after you buried it on a dig and forgot.
  20. You don’t have to shower at field school.
  21. The food rocks in the field.
  22. You love working with tools.
  23. Archaeology allows you to use your brain on a daily basis.
  24. Guys get buff and ripped while digging. Women get a great tan and we get to look at the guys getting buff!
  25. The smell of museums and artifacts is intoxicating.
  26. While excavating a pyramid, you secretly hope you will come face to face with Amenhotep and he’ll offer to share his loot.
  27. You love the outdoors and sweating until all layers of your clothing are stuck to you.
  28. In the words of Artofmanliness, “No matter how hard they deny it, every archaeologist is a fan of Indiana Jones. Without him, our field wouldn’t seem nearly as romantic as it does. Whenever I travel to new projects I always bring at least one, if not all four Indy films with me, because it reminds me of the reasons I got into this job.”
  29. You think Archaeology is Sexy!
  30. Everyone thinks archaeologists are cool!

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Head-butting Dinosaurs


The on-going debate about whether some dinosaurs engaged in the head-butting dominance behavior seen in modern animals got another push this week. A paper published by the Public Library of Science ONE journal suggests that one specific species had a cranial structure that would have allowed it to withstand head-butt blows. The German shepherd-sized dinosaur called a Pachycephalosaurs is the subject of interest.

[Read the article on USAToday: Head-butting dinos that turned on a dime?]

Ancient Global Warming Clues in the Arctic's Svalbard Archipelago


Polar bears are the draw for most visitors to Spitsbergen, the largest island in Norway's Svalbard archipelago. For geoscientist Lee R. Kump of The Pennsylvania State University, however, rocks were the allure. In the summer of 2007 Kump flew to this remote Arctic Ocean island to find rocks that might offer fresh insights about one of Earth's ancient episodes of global warming: the so-called Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum, or PETM. In that event, some 56 million years ago, global temperatures rose 5 degrees Celsius in the course of a few thousand years—a mere instant in geologic time.

[Thanks Scientific American]

Archaeology News and Headlines: June 29, 2011


Ancient Digger brings you the latest archaeology news and headlines everyday of the week!

Shipwreck yields cannon off St. Augustine coast

As one of five boats filled with media and board members circles nearby, archaeologists with the St. Augustine Lighthouse and Museum hoist one of two century's-old cannon on board the research vessel Roper Tuesday afternoon.


Rubbing sticks together really can create fire

Shea is an expert flintknapper — he can manufacture tools like axes and spear tips by using stones to chip at stones, making them flat, pointy or sharp. His work has taken him to archaeological digs throughout Africa and the Middle East in search of ancient stone tools.


2,000-year-old Ossuary Recovered

Scholars from the Israel Antiquities Authority say that a 2,000-year-old ossuary recovered from looters three years ago is genuine. The box is inscribed with the names “Miriam daughter of Yeshua son of Caiaphas, priest of Maaziah from Beth Imri.”


Site Made Famous by Indiana Jones Yields Archaeology Treasure Trove

The site, known as San El-Hagar or Tanis, is one of the most archaeologically rich areas of Egypt's Nile delta. It was famously portrayed as the resting place of the Ark of the Covenant, discovered by Indiana Jones in the film "Raiders of the the Lost Ark."


MSD continues sewer line work as archaeologists check some sites

The Metropolitan Sewer District continues to scrape, drill and blast along a planned sewer line route in southeast Jefferson County, despite concerns raised by state archaeologists that the work may be destroying artifacts representing the range of human occupation since the Ice Age.


A DNA study of coconuts

A DNA study of coconuts shows that there are two distinct groups, one that was first cultivated in the Pacific basin and the other in the Indian Ocean basin. “The big surprise was that there was so much genetic differentiation clearly correlated with geography, even though humans have been moving coconut around for so long,” said plant evolutionary biologist Kenneth Olsen of Washington University in St. Louis.


Spearhead crafting allowed human brain to develop new abilities

Archaeologists at Lund University (Sweden) believe that the advanced crafting of stone spearheads contributed to the development of new ways of human thinking and behaving, leading to the human brain developing new abilities.


Bodies Discovered in Ninth Century Cemetery in Mexico

The remains of 116 people have been uncovered in a ninth-century cemetery in southeastern Mexico. “The 66 burials in urns correspond to individuals belonging to the Mayan elite and the other 50 – placed in different positions around them – to their companions in the afterlife,” said Ricardo Armijo of the National Anthropology and History Institute.


Pennsylvania State Museum to Present Special 'Art of the State' Programs

The State Museum of Pennsylvania, located at 300 North Street, is one of 25 historic sites and museums administered by Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission as part of the Pennsylvania Trails of History®. It is the commonwealth's official museum, holding 4.5 million objects in its collections. The museum's permanent and temporary exhibits cover 100,000 square feet and feature Pennsylvania's social, industrial and economic history, decorative, fine and industrial arts, and archaeology, zoology and paleontology.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Archaeology News and Headlines: June 28, 2011


Ancient Digger brings you the latest archaeology news and headlines everyday of the week!

Life-size T-Rex skeleton at Tokyo exhibit


Life-size T-Rex skeleton at Tokyo exhibit by euronews-en

Bone by bone, a Tyrannosaurus Rex has been brought back to life for a dinosaur exhibition at Tokyo's Nature and Science Museum. The animal has been put in a crouching position, sustaining a new theory that the T-Rex's small forelimbs did actually have a purpose.


One Class, One Day: Reading the Language of the Pharaohs

Using old textbooks is hardly unheard of, but Alejandro Botta’s class took it to an extreme. On a recent morning, his students were reading the Rosetta Stone, written, or rather inscribed, two centuries before Jesus. Discovered in Egypt in 1799, the Stone provided the key to the modern understanding of Egyptian hieroglyphs.


Dig finds treasured tools of leading 18th century scientist

A dig at the Old College site at Scotland’s University of Edinburgh has unearthed laboratory equipment that was probably used by eighteenth-century chemist Joseph Black.


Lake dwellings make world heritage list

The prehistoric lake dwellings of the Alpine region are to be added to the Unesco World Heritage List, as proposed by Switzerland and five other European countries.


Minoan treasures hit the bullseye

'In case you were thinking it’s a load of bull…” says one of our guides pointing up above the ruins of Minoan Knossos at a brightly painted bull fresco behind rich red and black columns, “…it is.”


Human bone fragments discovered in Mississippi River levee

Human bone fragments were revealed in southeast Missouri when a Mississippi River levee was blown up in order to relieve flooding.


Canadian Museum of Civilization returns Inuit Remains and Burial Objects

The Canadian Museum of Civilization will return its collection of Inuit remains and burial objects to the Inuit people living in Nunavut, Canada’s northernmost territory.


World War II RAF Spitfire Removed From Irish Peat Bog

A World War II RAF Spitfire was removed from an Irish peat bog, where it crash landed 70 years ago. Six machine guns and about 1,000 rounds of ammunition were also recovered. “It’s just incredible because it’s just so wet here that the ground just sucked it up and the plane was able to burrow into it and it’s been preserved,” said historian Dan Snow.


Adrian Myers Excavates World War II prisoner of war camp

Adrian Myers of Stanford University is excavating a World War II prisoner of war camp in Canada’s Riding Mountain National Park. The inmates of Whitewater Camp were German soldiers captured in Egypt after the Second Battle of El-Alamein who had rejected Nazism and were thought to be low risk. “I found four guys living who were interned at Whitewater and all four of them said it was awesome,” said Myers.


Chair of Australian archaeology

Australia’s University of Sydney has been left $6.9 million, which will be used to endow a chair of Australian archaeology and the Tom Austen Brown Fund for Prehistory.


Sonar technology Creates 3-D maps of Civil War Vessels

The U.S. Navy and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration are using sonar technology to create 3-D maps of the USS Cumberland and the CSS Florida. Both Civil War vessels sit on the bottom of the James River in Hampton Roads, Virginia.


Avenue of Sphinxes Opens in October

The Avenue of Sphinxes in Luxor will open to tourists in October.

UNESCO Names New World Heritage sites


The United Nations culture body UNESCO has named World Heritage sites at eight locations across Italy dating from the Germanic Lombard people's invasions of the 6th-8th centuries AD, the UN said.

The eight sites dating from 568 - 774 AD are located in Castelseprio and Gorante Olona and Brescia in Italy's northern Lombardy region, in Cividale del Friuli in the northeastern Friuli district, in Spoleto and Perugia in the central Umbria region, and in Benevento and San Michele sul Gargano in the southern Campania and Puglia regions.

The Coffee Cultural Landscape of Colombia, the Archaeological Sites of the Island of Meroe in Sudan, Jordan's Wadi Rum Protected Area and the Fagus Factory in Alfeld, Germany were also named World Heritage sites at a meeting of UNESCO in Paris taking place through Wednesday.

[Thanks ADNKronos]

Museum Exhibits: Largest Exhibit On Blacks In Civil War


The African-American Civil War Museum in Washington has been going through a major revamping as 2011 marks the 150th anniversary of the north and south's bitter battle between 1861-1865. To learn about the museum's grand re-opening, which is scheduled for July, and the history of African-Americans in the Civil War, guest host Tony Cox speaks with the museum's founding director Frank Smith.

The African-American Civil War Museum in Washington, D.C. is gearing up for a major festival to mark the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. The museum's interactive exhibits tell of the sacrifices that African-Americans have made for freedom. Many of us have been taught about the history of the Civil War, including the Union's bloody victory at Antietam in September of 1862.

Read More: Largest Exhibit On Blacks In Civil War @NPR

Monday, June 27, 2011

Archaeology News and Discoveries: June 27, 2011


Ancient Digger brings you the latest archaeological news and headlines everyday of the week!

Archaeologists unearth chapel secrets

St Ebba’s chapel is a 13th century site situated on a rocky promontory at Beadnell. The chapel itself was excavated in the mid-19th century, but remains enigmatic. It is surrounded by a series of mysterious earthworks that could be the remains of an unknown early Christian settlement. In 1994, work was conducted at the site to investigate a strange feature that appears to have been used as a lime kiln. The site is in danger of disappearing into the sea and English Heritage has placed the site on its register of monuments at risk, inviting Time Team to help them unlock its secrets before it’s too late. The long-running series, presented by Tony Robinson, also came to Bamburgh Castle for an episode which aired in April this year.



Civil War submarine rotated to upright position

The H.L. Hunley, a Confederate submarine, sealed its place in history on a February night in 1864 when it became the world's first sub to sink an enemy warship in combat. Then its own fate was sealed when it sank mysteriously to the bottom of the ocean off the coast of Charleston, S.C., killing its crew of eight.



Archaeologists discover slave handcuff on Bunce Island

A team of archaeologists have made an impressive discovery after conducting six weeks of excavation at the ruins of the British Slave Castle at Bunce Island, which was sponsored by the Bunce Island Coalition. The team leader, Professor Christopher Decorse explained that their team made an impressive discovery of intact iron shackle that served as a handcuff or ankle restraint in a test pit they dug to the side of the ancient roadway that extended from the castle’s main gate down to the old jetty where thousands of captives were put aboard the slave ships that anchored nearby.


Prehistoric BBQ Discovered

Leftovers of an aurochs cooked over an open fire and eaten 7,700 years ago have been discovered in the Netherlands. The hunters roasted and ate the marrow from the leg bones and the ribs right away, then probably carried large hunks of meat and the animal’s skin back to their settlement. “The animal was either caught in a pitfall trap and then clubbed on the head, or shot with a bow and arrow with flint point,” added Wietske Prummel of the University of Groningen.


 Limestone Blocks Discovered in Egypt

More than 100 painted limestone blocks have been uncovered in Egypt at the San El-Hagar archaeological site. The building blocks had been reused to construct a retaining wall.


Viking Burial Ground Discovered

In Ireland, construction workers uncovered human bones at what could be a ninth-century Viking burial ground. Archaeologists have been called in to investigate.



Philippine Iron Age Artifacts Discovered

Thousands of artifacts and several burials thought to date to the Philippine Iron Age have been found on the island of Cebu.



UWF Uncovering 1740’s Spanish Mission In Molino

A major archaeological dig is underway this summer in Molino, as evidence of a 1700’s mission and even a 6,000 year old artifact have been uncovered.



Yenikapı metro dig reveals fifth-century shipwreck

Archeological digs at Yenikapı, the site of excavations for an important transfer hub in İstanbul's metro system, the Marmaray project, have revealed yet another marvel: an intact shipwreck believed to be from the fifth century, complete with its load.



Archaeology: New Thracian grave found in northeastern Bulgaria

Ancient Thracian golden and bronze finds have been excavated by archaeologists in the town of Opaka, district Turgovishte, in northeastern Bulgaria, private channel bTV reported on June 23 2011.



Dinosaur teeth tell temperature tale

In the study, the researchers analyzed fossil teeth from three dinosaur species, Giraffatitan, a Diplodocid and Camararsaurus, which date to the late Jurassic, more than 144 million years ago. Because carbon and oxygen atoms combine in different amounts in teeth at different body temperatures, the ratio of the two atoms in the fossils served as a thermometer for the long dead dinosaurs. Past analysis by some researchers had suggested the beasts should have had body temperatures as high as 104.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Monday Ground Up: Dinosaurs in Madagascar


Many children enter a phase one time in their life of being dinosaur fans. The shear size and strength that these creatures held is a fascinating draw that makes researching these creatures, not only educational but fun. While not everyone retains their fascination with Paleontology, those who do are the ones to later be found in the field of Archaeology, putting their love of dinosaurs to practical use.

 

For those dedicated to the fields of Paleontology and Archaeology there is one event that can be an affirmation of the reasons they chose those fields in the first place and that event is the discovery of a new species of dinosaur in Madagascar.

 

Facts About Madagascar

  • Madagascar is the world's fourth largest island after Greenland, New Guinea, and Borneo.
  • Environmental degradation is a major concern as damaging agricultural practices cause deforestation, soil erosion, and desertification.
  • The island of Madagascar broke away from the African continent 165 million years ago.
  • The first settlers of Madagascar were of African and Asian origin, and 18 separate ethnic groups emerged, derived from an African and Malayo-Indonesian mixture.
  • The island of Madagascar is heavily exposed to tropical cyclones.
  • Most of the population depend on subsistence farming, based on rice and cattle, with coffee, vanilla, and seafood being important exports.
  • French colonial rule began in 1896 and Madagascar gained independence in 1960.
  • About 80% of the animals found in Madagascar do not exist anywhere else on Earth.
  • Over 30 different species of lemurs, including aye-ayes, live in Madagascar. They can travel up to 25 feet in one leap!

Dinosaurs in Madagascar

Just when the idea that all of the species of dinosaur had been discovered, a graduate student from Stony Brook University in New York, Kristina Curry Rogers, made a discovery that would unearth more than a fossil in Madagascar. While discovering the bones was excitement in itself, the final revelation after they were sorted was definitely a bonus. The skeleton was that of a young dinosaur that had lived approximately 70 million years ago which was about the time of the height of the last giant dinosaurs’ development.

 

While most Paleontology students consider making a discovery such as this a potential career boosting find, this particular discovery was only the beginning. Dinosaur research in Madagascar has yielded the discovery of several new species of prehistoric animals.

 

David Krause of Stony Brook University and his team have several of these discoveries under their collective belts. Along with the discovery described above, there has been several other species discovered by Krause and his team. Finds such as the Majungasaurus crenatissimus,  Rahonavis, an extinct bird, a Simosuchus or short-bodied crocodile like creature and the Beelzebufo which is a toad that is exactly like the modern day toads, the only difference being they weigh in at a hefty 10 pounds.

The discovery of the Majungasaurus crenatissimus by David Krause was an enormous boost to the field of Paleontology. Majungasaurus crenatissimus was a 70 million-year-old meat-eating theropod dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous period and is a very distant relative of Tyrannosaurus rex. The skull is one of the best-preserved and most complete dinosaur skulls ever found. The replica is approximately 21 feet long and stands about seven feet high.

 

The find was featured on the  Science Magazine cover on May 15, 1998 and allowed Krause and his colleagues to explain new conclusions about the plate tectonic history of the southern super-continent of Gondwana (a composite continent, made up of South America, Africa, Antarctica, India, and Australia, and Madagascar); and that dinosaurs, like many living animals, were cannibals.

On May 17, Stony Brook University celebrated the installation of an exact replica, the only ne in North America, of the fossil skeleton of Majungasaurus crenatissimus.

 

"Majungasaurus was clearly the top predator of its time on Madagascar," said Krause. "Interestingly, numerous bones of Majungasaurus exhibit tooth marks that can be attributed only to Majungasaurus itself. This provides the most conclusive evidence ever discovered for cannibalism in dinosaurs," he said.

Although Krause’s team certainly garnered more than their fair share of new species among the dinosaurs in Madagascar, these were not the only new species that were discovered.

Through their hard work and efforts in dinosaur research in Madagascar, Scott Sampson (a dinosaur paleontologist, evolutionary biologist, and educator who divides his work time between scientific research and a variety of education-related projects) and his colleagues from the University of Utah unearthed the Masiakasaurus. While this particular species might have seemed like somewhat of a featherweight among the dinosaurs so far discovered in Madagascar, this 80 pound fellow proved to be a rather formidable opponent, especially since he was a carnivore.

While the discovery of these dinosaurs in Madagascar are definitely important finds for the Archaeology community, the dinosaurs in Madagascar also help give further credence to the long help theory that all of the lands of Earth were once connected.

The dinosaurs that were found may be new species, however, they share certain specialized characteristics with other known predators from other continents. This is more evidence to the idea of a giant connected land mass.

 

Dinosaur research in Madagascar has helped to yield vital pieces of evidence to support the theory that all of the Earth's land was once one giant land mass. The truly amazing part is that the area of Madagascar has only recently begun to be researched. Considering the wealth of discoveries that have been made so far just imagine the possible discoveries that Madagascar may yet hold.

 

While the dinosaur research in Madagascar is far from over, the discoveries that have been made at this point hold the possibility of opening up new research in other areas of the Paleontology and Archaeology fields. Among those will, of course, be the theories of a giant land mass. although this is the main theory it will certainly not be the only one to be examined.

 

Also check out:

 

Sources

 

Top 10 Posts First Edition: Sunday June 26, 2011


Find out what articles the visitors and loyal readers are sharing every week on Ancient Digger. These posts are the most popular and read articles for the week, starting on Sunday and ending on Saturday.

Of course. I would love to hear what favorites the readers have. Leave me a comment below and I’ll add you’re favorite article, your name, website, and the reason you enjoyed the article (make sure you read it—NO SPAM please!).

Best Graduate Schools, Universities, and Colleges for Archaeology and Anthropology
Monday Ground Up: Early Years of Flight Week
I have compiled several lists in order to help you determine the best archaeology colleges and universities with the best programs for archaeology, as well as the top undergraduate colleges, universities and school programs for anthropology and archaeology.

Best Graduate Schools, Universities, and Colleges for Archaeology and Anthropology

It’s one of the first hangers most visitors at the National Museum of the Air Force start with. You walk in and the feelings of nostalgia take hold, as you gaze upon the gravity defying aircraft that changed history. The delicate contours of the fabric frame the airplane like a painting and you wonder how perfection could ever be rivaled.
Monday Ground Up: 5 Archaeological Sites That Changed The Face of History

To some, archaeology is merely the study of past worlds. Some may say that sifting through broken remains of decimated cities and exploring relics of forgotten peoples only provides us with interesting (and pointless) souvenirs from a time now inconsequential. While these artifacts and architectures are mere glimpses of the past, archeology provides us with a lens into what has been and could be.

5 Archaeological Sites That Changed The Face of History

Monday Ground Up: Greek Architecture

Initially, there was a borrowing of Asian ideals which evoked structures that were both wholly and represented simplicity; moreover, the specific design spread from Sicily to India, making the Greeks cultural exporters.

Greek Architecture
 
Looks like I have more places to visit.
~Magnus


What happened to the U-boats after World War II? Part II

Near the end of World War II, Germany took a direct approach to hide and even completely destroy its fleet of U-boats before their surrender to the allies. Operation Deadlight was the code name for the destruction of more than 121 U-boats in abysmal water off Lisahally, Northern Ireland or Loch Ryan, Scotland in late 1945 and early 1946. The remaining 145 U- boats were surrendered to the allies.

What happened to the U-boats after World War II? Part II

Also check out:

Launching of the German U-boat Fleet


Church Discovered By Archaeologists in Acre, Israel

The Israel Antiquities Authority has had a breakthrough discovery, unearthing a public structure from the time of the Byzantine Empire in the northern Israeli city of Acre.

Church Discovered By Archaeologists in Acre, Israel
Monday Ground Up: The Mystery of the Pyramids Revealed in Coral Castle

Edward charged visitors 10 cents to tour the property, and while he guided them along their journey, allowed them to ask him questions about his Coral Castle. On many occasions, he would tell tourists that his castle was easy to build, if you know how to do it. His answers were vague and his demeanor bizarre, believing that he held the secrets to the pyramids and he would bring them to his deathbed.

The Mystery of the Pyramids

Fossils 101: Caesar’s Creek Ordovician Fossil Hunting

When I was a child growing up in Ohio, my class would take yearly fieldtrips to the Caesar’s Creek Spill off to go fossil hunting. As a child, it was hard to stay focused on the task at hand. We would never read the signs stating we had to leave behind the fossils bigger than our palms, and now that I’m older, I can appreciate why the signs were posted.

Fossils 101: Caesar’s Creek Ordovician Fossil Hunting

Planes used during World War I

During the first world war, the Germans would gain an early edge over most of the Allies as concerned with WWI aircraft. Planes used during World War I became designed around the many German models, which would help the Allies win many later battles of the global war. There are many WWI planes that were important during the war although some played far greater roles than others.

Read more: World War One Aircraft

The Best Schools For Nautical, Maritime, and Underwater Archaeology in the US 


Typically nautical, maritime, and underwater archaeologists study artifacts in ocean or sea environments. However, specialization usually doesn't occur until graduate school after the student has received a BS in Anthropology.

The Best Schools For Nautical, Maritime, and Underwater Archaeology in the US

FAQS

What is the Popular Posts Editions?

Ancient Digger will share what readers and new visitors are most interested for that particular week.

What kind of posts will it include?

Posts with the highest page views, most popular search phrases, traffic and keywords.

Will Ancient Digger publish a Popular Posts Editions every week?

That’s the goal!

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Early Years of Flight Day 5: Flight Accessories and Bombs


Early years of flight weapons and accessories This is the fifth and final day of our Early years of Flight Series.
 
Our week started with the very early years of flight, along with the Schneider Schulgleiter SG 38 and Halberstadt CL IV and the French built Nieuport 28. We continue our tour of flight’s early years by looking at some of the accessories and bombs used by pilots on aerial attacks.

Before our a short tour, I wanted to share some thoughts about the National Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio.

USAF National Museum dates to  around 1923  when the Engineering Division at Dayton's McCook Field first collected technical artifacts for preservation.

In 1927 it moved to then-Wright Field and was housed in a succession of buildings. In 1954 as the Air Force Museum it was housed in its first permanent facility, Building 89 of the former Patterson Field in Fairborn, which had been an engine overhaul hangar, and many of its aircraft were parked outside and exposed to the weather. It remained there until 1971 when the current facility was first opened. Not including its annex on Wright Field proper, the museum has more than tripled in square footage since its inception in 1971.

The museum is completely free, relying on donations from patrons who travel thousands of miles to spend days walking through the history of flight and space. In two days I experienced a fraction of flight’s past, stopping to watch the many videos available, including the Wright Brother’s first flight.

British-Type 20 Pound Cooper Bomb

Bristish type cooper bomb
 
British-Type 20lb Cooper bomb with insignia of 213th Aero Squad. The nose cap was unscrewed from the bomb prior to take off so the small propeller had time to arm the bomb after it was dropped from the airplane.
 

French Roll Map

French metal roll map
This is a French issue metal roll map retrieved from disabled Breguet Bomber, after the plane and pilot were shot down by German planes over Conflans-sur-Jarney, France, September 14, 1918. The pilot was assigned to fly with the Escodrille 131 of French Air Service.

Balloon Attack Authorization

Authorization to attack balloons
 
When scheduled to attack a German Balloon, a United States fighter airplane usually had it’s .30 caliber guns replaced by a .50 caliber gun which fired blunt nose incendiary bullets. This type of dum-dum ammunition violated the rules of humane warfare except for attacking balloons. In this event, the pilot would carry an authorization stating he had illegal ammunition to attack a balloon. The paper would protect the pilot in case he was shot down and captured with the illegal weapons. 
Read the Entire Series:

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Early Years of Flight Day 4: Nieuport 28


Our week started with the very early years of flight, along with the Schneider Schulgleiter SG 38 and Halberstadt CL IV. We continue our tour of flight's early years with the French built Nieuport 28.

 Nieuport 28 early years airplane

The Nieuport 28 was the first fighter airplane flown in combat by pilots of the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) in World War I. The first flight on April 14, 1918 resulted in two victories by  Lts. Alan Winslow and Douglas Campbell of the 94th Aero Squadron. The first victories by an AEF unit in fact.

Nieuport 28

The creativity and super savvy painted body of the the Nieuport 28 was no match for the aircraft’s terrible reputation to shed it’s upper wing fabric on dives.  In 1918, many considered the Nieuport 28 obsolete. Yet, there were many famous pilots who faired quite well in this early years plane.

WWI 26-victory ace Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker flew the Nieuport 28 several times during his career. The Nieuport was soon replaced by a less maneuverable aircraft in March 1918 called the SPAD XIII.

The aircraft on display at the National Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio is a reproduction. Like many of the  planes from the early years hanger, it contains wood and hardware from an original Nieuport 28.
 
The aircraft is painted and marked to represent a Nieuport of the 95th Aero Squadron, Third Flight, as it appeared in July 1918. It was placed on display in May 1994.

Read the Entire Series:

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Early Years of Flight Day 3: Schneider Schulgleiter SG 38


When we think of the fighters and gliders of the early years of flight, we hardly picture a sloped wooden seat, made purposefully to seat a pilot and used by the Luftwaffe for training in the late 1930s and into the 1940s. The SG 38 was appropriately named Schulgleiter or "school glider" and the year it first flew, 1938.

The Germans were facing strict limitations on powered aircraft after World War I therefore they turned to gliders for studying aerodynamics and training pilots. In 1933, the DFS or German Research Institute for Sailplane Flight was forced by the Germans to make all gliding activity in Germany centralized. Training gliders, such as the Schneider Schulgleiter SG 38, were developed for both the Hitler Youth Flyers and Luftwaffe.

The Luftwaffe made its appearance in 1935 after the Nazis began their attempt at a rapid large-scale rearmament program. The expansion created a need for safe gliders used for student pilots in training. The The DFS worked with Edmund Schneider, who had opened a glider factory in 1927 and was producing some of the world's best gliders, to design the Schneider Schulgleiter SG 38.

It would appear that the design of the SG-38 was overtly simply and a bit dangerous looking, however the aircraft had to compensate for inexperienced student pilots. Would you believe that this training glider was actually launched with bungee cords from the hillsides of Mount Wasserkuppe in central Germany? The glider only remained airborne for a short time in order to prevent heavy-handed students from over steering and stalling the glider. Eventually, 9,000 to 10,000 SG 38s were built.

After World War II, Schneider moved to Australia and continued to build gliders. This Schneider Schulgleiter SG 38 came to the USAF National Museum in 2010.

Read the Entire Series:

Related Posts

Planes used during World War I

Although Kitty Hawk North Carolina would become home to the first manned flight of human kind, the Germans would take these physical parameters into a whole new realm. As the skies offered another battlefield in which to kill and mame, countries that did not embrace this new arena were quickly left behind. During the first world war, the Germans would gain an early edge over most of the Allies as concerned with WWI aircraft. Planes used during World War I became designed around the many German models, which would help the Allies win many later battles of the global war. There are many WWI planes that were important during the war although some played far greater roles than others.

Read more: Planes used during World War I

Strategic missiles at The National Museum of the United States Air Force

Tourists fly in from all around the world to visit the National Museum of the United States Air Force and who could blame them. The museum is completely free, only taking donations if you’re willing to spare a cent, and all this for a weeks worth of military history. It took me several days to walk the museum, spending most of my time with the Planes from WWI and aircraft from WW2. One of my favorite hangers in the museum is the space gallery, and the focal point is a round room featuring massive strategic missiles.

Read More: Ballistic Missiles at Wright Patterson Air Force Base

Shoo Shoo Baby: B17G At Wright Patterson Air Force Base

So before I start sharing, I wanted to start off the Wright Patterson Air Force Base Series with the Shoo Shoo Baby B-17G. For those of you plane and aircraft enthusiasts, you already know the B17G Flying Fortress was one of the most famous airplanes ever built. The B17G prototype first flew on June 28, 1935, yet few of the B-17 flying fortresses were flying prior to the United States’ entrance into World War II.

Read more:Shoo Shoo Baby: B17G At Wright Patterson Air Force Base

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Early Years of Flight Day 2: Halberstadt CL IV


Halberstadt CL IV Under lower wing Halberstadt CL IV view under wing

Halberstadt CL IV wheel

The first thing I noticed, and I’m sure you did as well, is the colorful camouflage on the Halberstadt CL IV. Typically this early years WWI plane had a fuselage and wings painted green, mauve, and brown camouflage. Lozenge camouflage was found on the underside of the wings and tail, as you see in the picture above.

Halberstadt CL IV plane Halberstadt CL IV


World War I saw the emergence of the Halberstadt CL IV in combat during the last great German offensive. Pilots aboard the Halberstadt CL IV aided ground troops by utilizing the fixed and flexible machine guns, grenades and small bombs. Unfortunately, the CL IV lacked the armor necessary for protection against ground fire.

Halberstadt CL IV airplaneHalberstadt CL IV airplane 1

The CL IV was a hunted target of Allied pursuit squadrons and decidedly so. It was versatile and highly maneuverable, which made it a contender in dogfights. The Halberstadt CL IV performed as an interceptor against Allied night bombing raids and served as a night bomber against troop concentrations and airfields near the front lines.

Halberstadt CL IV aircraft

The USAF National Museum acquired the Halberstadt CL IV in 1984. The Halberstadt was in dreadful condition and required extensive restoration efforts.  The Museum fur Verkehr und Technik in Berlin, Germany, the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum and the National Museum of the United States Air Force, worked in a joint venture to restore the Halberstadt CL IV to its former glory.

It is marked as the CL IV of the squadron leader of the Schlachtstaffel 21, which is known to have engaged elements of the U.S. Army's 94th and 95th Aero Squadrons in mid-July 1918 during the Chateau Thierry battle.

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Monday, June 20, 2011

Monday Ground Up: Early Years of Flight Week


It’s one of the first hangers most visitors at the National Museum of the Air Force start with. You walk in and the feelings of nostalgia take hold, as you gaze upon the gravity defying aircraft that changed history. The delicate contours of the fabric frame the airplane like a painting and you wonder how perfection could ever be rivaled.

For those of us that weren’t able to experience this time in history, seeing the slew of planes during the early years of flight up close, can be just as inspiring and quite overwhelming.

This week I’ll be featuring some of the world’s earliest airplanes and aircraft. Instead of bombarding your brain with hundreds of fighters, flyers, monoplanes and biplanes, I decided to break it up a bit and let you enjoy all of the early years of flight throughout the week.
 

Wright 1903 Flyer

Wright 1903 Flyer
 
The Wright 1903 Flyer was the first heavier-than-air, manned, and controllable aircraft, which made four successful flights on December 17th, before a gust of wind overturned it and caused extensive damage. Instead of building the same model the Wright Brothers improved upon the design. The 1903 Wright Flyer was sent to the Science Museum in London, England for preservation. After WWII, the Wright Flyer was sent to the United States for permanent exhibition at the Smithsonian Institute.

I was fortunate enough to see a very significant, at least I believe, part of the 1903 Wright Flyer. The fabric preserved by the Wright Family came from the left half of the lower wing. The piece of fabric was presented by the Wright Brother’s Family Members on December 17, 1981, in celebration of their historic flight.
 

Curtiss 1911 Model D

Curtiss 1911 Model D Curtiss 1911 Model D plane
 
It appears it could never fly, built like matchsticks glued together or basal wood used in shop class in high school. This is our perception. In 1911 however the U.S. Army Signal Corps developed the Curtiss Model D Type IV. The Curtiss Model D was based on Glenn Curtiss' aileron using Curtiss Golden Flyer design of 1909, itself derived from his prize winning June Bug of 1908 . A pilot flying the Curtiss Model D operated the ailerons with his shoulders, and the front elevator and rear rudder with the wheel mounted on a column in front of him. Also, rather than sitting next to the pilot, the observer sat behind the pilot.  Like other Curtiss aircraft of the time, the Model D was a pusher, meaning the rear-mounted propeller "pushed" the aircraft. The military used a version which was often transported on Army wagons prior to assemblage.

On April 27, 1911, the Signal Corps Airplane No. 2 was accepted at Fort Same Houston, Texas to be used by the Army. The aircraft on display at the National Air Force Museum is a reproduction, completed in 1987. The original drawings weren’t available therefore details were gathered from an existing factory-built Curtiss pusher and from recent drawings. “Except for the engine, which is made of wood and plastic, all materials used in the reproduction are essentially the same as those used in the original.”
 

Wind Tunnel

Wind Tunnel Wind Tunnel 
Wind Tunnel Airplane wing testerWind Tunnel Airplane wing tester 1
 
Designed at McCook Airfield in 1918, this wind tunnel was designed to recalibrate airspeed instruments and testing airfoils. An item was placed in the choke-throat and the tester would observe through a glass window at the end. Air was drawn into the small area of the wind tunnel and exhausted from the larger area where the fan was located. In the wind tunnel’s 14 inch choke-throat area wind speeds could reach up to 453 miles per hour.
 

Fokker Dr. I Triplane

Fokker Dr. I Fokker Dr. I 2
Fokker Dr. I airplane
Fokker Dr. I plane
The illustrious flying ace of the sky, Fokker Dr. I Triplane, has often been linked with the career of World War I's highest scoring ace, Germany's Rittmeister Manfred von Richthofen (the "Red Baron"). The Fokker Dr. I Triplane was one of the best ”dogfighters” of the war.  The first Fokker Dr. I appeared over the Western Front in August 1917. Pilots, their nature of being competitive, were impressed with the Dr. Is agility, and several scored victories with the highly maneuverable triplane.
Von Richthofen score 19 of his last 21 victories were achieved while he was flying the Dr. I. By May 1918, however, the Dr. I was being replaced by the newer and faster Fokker D. VII. Although Fokker built a total of 320 Dr. Is, none have survived. This reproduction is painted to represent the aircraft flown by Lt. Arthur Rahn in April 1918 when he served with Jagdstaffel 19. Lt. Rahn is credited with six confirmed victories.


Sopwith Camel F-1

Sopwith F-1 Camel
Sopwith Camel F-1
© ksr8s
 
The Sopwith Camel F-1 first went into action in June 1917 with 70 Squadron, Royal Flying Corps, and 4 Squadron, Royal Naval Air Service. The 17th and 148th U.S. Army Air Service squadrons flew the Camel in combat while assigned to British forces in 1918.
 
Such famous U.S. pilots as George Vaughn (America's second-ranking Air Service ace to survive the war), Elliot White Springs, Errol Zistel and Larry Callahan were members of the 17th and 148th. A third U.S. unit, the 185th Aero Squadron, used the Camel as a night fighter on the American Front during the last month of the war. 

The British Sopwith Camel F-1 shot down more enemy aircraft than any other World War I fighter. The Sopwith was difficult to defeat and highly maneuverable, yet it still has substantial drawbacks. More men lost their lives while learning to fly it than died while using it in combat. There are very few Sopwith Camel F-1s in existence today therefore the museum constructed a model from the original WWI factory drawings, completing it in 1974. The aircraft is painted and marked as the Camel flown by Lt. George A. Vaughn Jr., 17th Aero Squadron.

Kettering Aerial Torpedo “Bug”

Kettering Aerial Torpedo “Bug” Kettering Aerial Torpedo “Bug” 1
The Kettering Aerial Torpedo, nicknamed the “Bug”, was invented by Charles F. Kettering of Dayton, Ohio. The “Bug” was launched from a four-wheeled dolly that ran down a portable track. Quite similar to the carnival rollercoasters of today.

The Bug's system of internal pre-set pneumatic and electrical controls stabilized and guided it toward a target. After a predetermined length of time, a control closed an electrical circuit, which shut off the engine.The wings would then be released and the Bug plunged into the earth-- where its 180 pounds of explosive detonated on impact. Although an innovative war weapon, the Bug never saw combat.  The reproduction of the “Bug” on display at the museum went on display in 1964.

G-3 Target Glider

G-3 Glider 
McCook Airfield was not only home to the wind tunnel which was designed to recalibrate airspeed instruments and testing airfoils, but was also the testing site of a series of target gliders in the 1920s like the G-3.   The first model was designed in December 1922 by J.A. Roche, the GL-1, as a target for anti-aircraft gunners of the U.S. Army Coast Artillery. These early targets were the first and only gliders (manned or unmanned) used by the U.S. Army Air Service.
The G-3 operated as “live-fire aerial targets” for fighter and attack aircraft into the early 1930s. Because it could be adjusted to fly a straight, circular or random course, the target glider provided a more effective training tool than the traditional towed target sock. For aerial gunnery training, a pilot carried his target glider aloft. After release, the glider took several minutes to reach the ground. During this time, the pilot could make several gunnery passes against it.


Curtiss P-6E Hawk

Curtiss P-6E Hawk G-3 Target Glider

Curtiss built a long series of fighters starting in 1925. The P-6E remains the best known of the series of fighters carrying the name "Hawk."  Originally designated the Y1P-22, the U.S. Army Air Corps redesignated this aircraft the P-6E because of its similarity to the other P-6s. Curtiss delivered 46 P-6E Hawks, the last biplane fighter built in quantity for the Air Corps.

The Curtiss P-6E Hawk was never used in combat and is considered one of the most beautiful aircraft of the 1930s. The P-6E on display is the only original still in existence. The colors and markings of the airplane assigned to Capt. Ross G. Hoyt, Commanding Officer of the 17th Pursuit Squadron, 1st Pursuit Group, based at Selfridge Field, Mich. in 1933.

Edward S. Perkins of Anniston, Ala., donated it to the museum, and the Department of Aviation Technology at Purdue University restored it in 1963.

Caquot Type R Observation Balloon

Caquot Type R Observation Balloon 1 Caquot Type R Observation Balloon

We’ve seen the balloons at football games or watched video footage of the Hindenburg, but these tethered balloon aircraft used during World War I had a somewhat different purpose.

The Caquot Type R Observation Balloon on display allowed observers to see as far as 40 miles behind enemy lines to spot troop movements, chart trench systems and direct artillery fire. During WWI, American balloon observers directed artillery fire at targets, noted more than 1,000 enemy airplane sightings, 1,000 instances of military traffic on railroads and roads and 400 artillery batteries. Named after French engineer Lt. Albert Caquot and used mostly by Americans, this hydrogen-filled balloon could lift two passengers in its basket to heights of up to 4000 feet on a good weather day.

Nearly 1,000 Caquot balloons were manufactured in the United States in 1918-1919. During World War II, the British produced Caquots but in limited numbers. The Caquot Type R Observation Balloon  displayed at the museum was manufactured in 1944 and is believed to be the only survivor.
The British used it for parachute testing and noncombat aerial observation and photography until 1960. The British Ministry of Defense, Royal Aircraft Establishment, presented the Caquot to the museum after it was located with the aid of American and British WWI balloon veterans in 1975. Assisted by the Goodyear Aerospace Corp. of Akron, Ohio, which had produced these balloons during WWI, museum personnel mended and sealed the balloon fabric and prepared it for inflation. It was placed on display in May 1979.


Boeing P-26A

Boeing P-26ABoeing P-26A
Boeing P-26A 1
The Boeing P-26A Peashooter became the first US Army Air Corps all-metal monoplane in service. Pilots bestowed the name “peashooter” upon the plane which could reach faster speeds in level flight and had a faster landing speed due to the lack of wing flaps. The P-26A Peashooter has an open cockpit, external wing bracing, and fixed landing gear. The Peashooter was the last fighter to have these obsolete features. The first P-26A flew in March 1932. In 1934, Boeing sold an export version to the Chinese who flew it in combat against the Japanese. In 1941, the Philippine government used the P-26 against the Japanese.
 

Douglas O-38F

During World War I, observation aircraft provided ground commanders with vital reconnaissance information, and throughout the interwar years, commanders of U.S. Army ground forces demanded adequate observation support. However, most ground commanders anticipated fighting a static or slow-moving war, and the observation aircraft purchased during the 1920s and early 1930s differed little from those flown over France in 1918.
Douglas O-38F aircraft Douglas O-38F
  
The Douglas O-38F was the last of a series of biplane observation aircraft begun in the early 1920s.  Douglas built 156 O-38s for the Air Corps between 1931-1934, eight of which were O-38Fs. By the 1930’s, the O-38s were obsolete, what with their meager cruising speed of 128mph. Some  remained in service at the time of Pearl Harbor in 1941. The Douglas O-38F on display at the USAF National Museum was the first to land at Ladd Field near Fairbanks, Alaska, in October 1940.
Ladd Field became famous during World War II as the place from where American-built aircraft flew to the Soviet Union under the Lend-Lease program. This aircraft flew various missions until it crashed on June 16, 1941, due to engine failure about 70 miles southeast of Fairbanks. Uninjured, the pilot, Lt. Milton H. Ashkins, and his mechanic, Sgt. R.A. Roberts, hiked to safety after supplies were dropped to them. The abandoned aircraft remained in the Alaskan wilderness until the museum arranged for its recovery by helicopter in June 1968. Despite being exposed to the Alaskan weather for 27 years, the aircraft remained in remarkable condition. Only the wings required extensive restoration.


Martin B-10

Martin B-10
Martin B-10 airplane
The Martin B-10 is the first "modern" all-metal monoplane bomber produced in quantity, featured such innovations as retractable landing gear, a rotating gun turret and enclosed cockpits. The Martin B-10 is powered by two 775-hp Wright R-1820 Cyclone engines, making it 50 percent faster than contemporary biplane bombers and as fast as most of the fighters. The Air Corps ordered 121 B-10s from 1933-1936 making it the “largest procurement of bomber aircraft since World War I”.
Gen. Henry H. "Hap" Arnold, who called the B-10 "the air power wonder of its day," led 10 B-10s on a 8,290-mile flight from Washington, D.C., to Fairbanks, Alaska, and back in 1934. By the late 1930s,  B-17s and B-18s had replaced the Air Corps' B-10s and B-12s, but the Chinese and Dutch air forces flew export versions in combat against Japan at the start of World War II.
This particular Martin B-10 is the last of the B-10 series in existence. It was sold to Argentina in 1938.  In 1970, the Martin B-10 was donated to the U.S. Air Force Museum by the government of Argentina.
 

Northrop A-17A

Northrop A-17A Northrop A-17A plane

Northrop A-17A aircraft
The Northrop A-17A series was a direct descendent of the Northrop "Gamma," made famous by the aerial explorer Lincoln Ellsworth. It was the last of the pre-World War II single-engine attack airplane ordered into production by the Army Air Corps. The A-17 was never fully tested in peacetime exercises or in combat. In 1938 the Army Air Corps determined that all future attack aircraft procured would be multi-engine models therefore its fate was sealed. The A-17's design figured prominently in the success of a distinguished line of Douglas aircraft even considering its handicap. The Northrop was able to carry one ton of bombs on external racks which featured vertical chutes. The chutes held up to 20 30-pound fragmentation bombs. “In addition to the bombs, the A-17A was armed with four forward-firing .30-cal. machine guns for strafing, and one flexible mounted .30-cal. gun in the rear cockpit for self-defense.”

In June 1940, all but 20 A-17As were sold overseas and the remaining Army Air Forces A-17 and A-17As were used as advanced trainers and squadron support aircraft, most ending up as ground maintenance trainers. The last A-17A was written off of Army Air Forces records in early 1945.
The aircraft on display at the USAF National Museum is the only A-17 series aircraft known to exist. It was delivered to the Air Corps and assigned to Barksdale Field, La., on June 25, 1937. Following a brief stay at Kelly Field, San Antonio, Texas, the aircraft was assigned in April 1940 to Bolling Field, Washington, D.C., and also served as a support aircraft for U.S. Military attaches in Honduras, Guatemala and Haiti. The aircraft was dropped from Army Air Forces records in January 1945.

Read the Entire Series:

Also check out:

Although Kitty Hawk North Carolina would become home to the first manned flight of human kind, the Germans would take these physical parameters into a whole new realm. As the skies offered another battlefield in which to kill and mame, countries that did not embrace this new arena were quickly left behind. During the first world war, the Germans would gain an early edge over most of the Allies as concerned with WWI aircraft. Planes used during World War I became designed around the many German models, which would help the Allies win many later battles of the global war. There are many WWI planes that were important during the war although some played far greater roles than others.
Read more: Planes used during World War I

Strategic missiles at The National Museum of the United States Air Force

Tourists fly in from all around the world to visit the National Museum of the United States Air Force and who could blame them. The museum is completely free, only taking donations if you’re willing to spare a cent, and all this for a weeks worth of military history. It took me several days to walk the museum, spending most of my time with the Planes from WWI and aircraft from WW2. One of my favorite hangers in the museum is the space gallery, and the focal point is a round room featuring massive strategic missiles.
Read More: Ballistic Missiles at Wright Patterson Air Force Base

Caesar’s Creek Ordovician Fossil Hunting

When I was a child growing up in Ohio, my class would take yearly fieldtrips to the Caesar’s Creek Spill off to go fossil hunting. As a child, it was hard to stay focused on the task at hand. We would never read the signs stating we had to leave behind the fossils bigger than our palms, and now that I’m older, I can appreciate why the signs were posted.
Read more: Caesar’s Creek Ordovician Fossil Hunting

Shoo Shoo Baby: B17G At Wright Patterson Air Force Base

So before I start sharing, I wanted to start off the Wright Patterson Air Force Base Series with the Shoo Shoo Baby B-17G. For those of you plane and aircraft enthusiasts, you already know the B17G Flying Fortress was one of the most famous airplanes ever built. The B17G prototype first flew on June 28, 1935, yet few of the B-17 flying fortresses were flying prior to the United States’ entrance into World War II.
Read more:Shoo Shoo Baby: B17G At Wright Patterson Air Force Base
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All quotes are courtesy and © of the National Museum of United States Air Force in Dayton, Ohio.

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