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Cobb

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Cobb s Point-Culpeper Rebellion Archaeology Team Member: Donquel Davis Member: Kevin Brodie II Mentor: Dr. Malcolm LeCompte – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cobb


1
Cobbs Point-Culpeper RebellionArchaeology Team
  • Member Donquel Davis
  • Member Kevin Brodie II
  • Mentor Dr. Malcolm LeCompte

2
Members
Donquel Davis
Kevin Brodie II
Dr. Malcolm LeCompte
3
Abstract
  • During the decade of 1670 to 1680, political
    maneuverings were initiated by prominent property
    owners north of Albemarle Sound with the ultimate
    intent of obtaining control of the lucrative
    tobacco trade developing between New England and
    the mother country. These activities, aggravated
    by severe weather and low crop yields, and a
    perception of excessive crown taxation erupted in
    a bloodless rebellion against the laws and
    governance of the crown. The rebellion was
    ultimately resolved peacefully and without
    significant bloodshed. The center of activities
    during these events was the courthouse and
    customs house reported to be located on the
    Pasquotank River at Cobbs Point, South of the
    current center of Elizabeth City. Early maps
    show a building near the shore with another
    rumored to be nearby, not far from the foot of a
    dock at which shipments of tobacco were sent to
    customers. Anecdotal evidence and local
    tradition hold the two buildings to be located
    near or incorporated into structures located on
    the Winslow Farm which was developed into a
    subdivision around 1960. This land has recently
    become available and accessible for an
    exploratory survey to ascertain the location of
    any historically significant structures and to
    determine the extent of any remains that may yet
    exist.

4
Abstract continued
  • Aerial photos of the Elizabeth City area, made
    prior to and just after World War 2, were
    examined to determine the location of the
    original shoreline and any structures that may
    have contained elements of the original colonial
    era buildings. Modern Digital Orthographic
    Quarter Quad (DOQQ) aerial photographs were used
    to provide geo-referencing of the early aerial
    photographs. The geographic coordinates of
    structures formerly occupying the Cobbs Point
    site defined an area that allowed a Ground
    Penetrating Radar (GPR) survey to be made. The
    purpose of the survey was to reveal whether any
    remains of earlier structures are present. The
    area was covered in transects enabling linear
    data to be collected. Transects were made at
    sufficiently small separation to allow computer
    processing aided re-construction of a
    three-dimensional visualization of what lies
    beneath the surface to a depth of about 3 meters.
    The features appear to be present within the
    soil depth probed by GPR, their nature and exact
    location may be determined by a trained
    archaeologist using a probing device to
    physically penetrate the soil at locations
    revealed by the GPR survey. Sufficiently
    interesting results prompted a request to the
    property owners to allow excavation of any
    structural remains that have been discovered.

5
Map of Cobbs Point 1775
Courthouse was the center of the Culpeper
Rebellion
6
Objective
  • Use modern technology to discover remnants of the
    buildings/structures that were critical to these
    historic events.

7
Methodology to the Historical Site Survey
  1. Old maps from 1775, 1850 (UNC Archive)
  2. Aerial photos from 1938 (provided by R.B. Long)
    and 1993 DOQQ (USGS)
  3. Anecdotal Stories confirm and connect the
    structures
  4. 1938 photo and geo-rectified it to 1993 DOQQ
  5. Relayed info back to lead Archaeologist Edward
    Clay Swindell
  6. GPR survey on the site slightly adjacent to our
    original findings led by the lead Archaeologist
  7. Processed data readings from GPR survey
  8. Created a 3D image and analyzed data using RADAN
    6.6 software
  9. Reported results to Edward Clay Swindell for
    further GPR surveys of the surrounding areas and
    future excavation on the site

8
Map of Cobbs Point 1850
9
Actual Aerial images
  • 1938
  • 1993 DOQQ

10
Exelis ENVI 4.7
  • The team then used Exelis ENVI software to find
    common geographic points so they would be
    co-registered and we could begin warping the
    photos.
  • ENVI is the premier commercial software
    solution for processing and analyzing geospatial
    imagery.

11
Geo-Referencing and Warping
  • With the aerial photos now warped and
    co-registered they share geographic coordinates.
  • The team then enhanced the images to increase the
    contrast lighting.

12
Shore line and Structure Overlay
1938
1993 image with 1938 features
13
Field Work
  • After all our images were processed the team then
    visited the site to begin marking with flags
    where the two barns were using the
    geo-coordinates given by ENVI.

14
Change of Plans
  • The team then relayed this information to Edward
    Clay Swindell the Archaeologist that directed
    our data collection.
  • Edward Swindell pointed out a change in surface
    appearance on land adjacent to the location our
    analysis had indicated for the barn-like
    structures.
  • The team followed the archaeologists lead and
    set up a 25x25 m grid. In this area the team
    commenced the GPR survey.

15
New Area of Interest
New area for GPR Survey
16
Ground Penetrating Radar?
17
Set Up for GPR survey
18
GRID


NW
SW
1 meter apart
SE
NE
Tree
19
Actual Shot of the Grid
Infamous bush that gave the team issues
Stopping line
20
Surveying with GPR
21
RADAN 6.6
Monitor
22
GPR Readings
16 meters between subsurface features
16 meters between subsurface features
23
3D Figures
24
Data Readings and Results
chimneys
Possible foundation for chimneys (16 meters
apart)
A typical early colonial home, roughly
contemporary to the courthouse and customs
building at Cobbs Point.
After maximizing the quality of the files, the
team then created a 3D image.
25
Slices
.68 m depth
Shows the chimney foundation persisting almost 2
feet into the ground
1 m depth
1.34 m depth
26
Conclusion
  • All in all, the GPR survey gave the team
    promising results that there were subsurface
    features. It revealed the presence of a structure
    whose identity remains unknown until future work.

27
Future Work
  • Led by Edward Clay Swindell (Archaeologist)
    additional GPR surveys may be taken in areas
    surrounding the original GPR survey grid.
  • Also sonar may be done in the surrounding water
    areas to reveal relics of the dock. (e.g. dock
    pilings or piling holes)
  • Physical probing or excavation may be done of the
    subsurface features revealed by the teams work.

28
Problems Encountered
  • ENVI 4.7 angle of observation, sunlight, and
    shadows caused ground control points uncertainty
  • Field Work with GPR inconsistent lengths of the
    transects, GPS coordinate uncertainty, battery
    failure and rebooting issues
  • RADAN 6.6 graphics card wouldnt allow RADAN to
    be accessed on Mac, incorrect approaches to
    rendering a 3D Display

29
Questions?
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