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Archaeology & The World Trade Center
I am still not sure just how useful archaeologists can be in the aftermath of those unimaginable terrorist acts, but I know that archaeologists can do and say some things that are relevant, and to me, that is comforting. On Sunday, September 16, Professor Tom McGovern, Head of the Bioarchaeology Laboratory at Hunter College in New York City, sent an e-mail to scores of archaeologists. "After hearing of disaster works in lower Manhattan combing through buckets of debris by hand," it began, "Dr. Sophia Perdikaris has contacted the FBI Evidence Recovery Center and offered the help of archaeologically trained sieving teams to speed the work. The FBI is very interest in getting our help, and has asked Dr. Perdikaris to organize teams." Volunteers were needed with experience in supervising screening teams, along with a hard hat, respirator, goggles, work gloves, heavy boots and any available screens. A day and a half later, 600 archaeologists from the Tri-state area (New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania) had volunteered. Archaeologists are often called detectives of the past. That’s right, but the same skills and equipment can be applied to contemporary crimes and, as every archaeologist knows, screening will find many more tiny pieces of evidence than will sifting debris and ash by hand. Another area of special expertise among archaeologists is memorials that have lasted millennia. As an archaeologist, I have learned that most of the longest-lived monuments of the past - from the Great Pyramids of Egypt to the intricate temples of the Classic Maya - were raised as memorials and resting places for the most honored dead. But not all recent memorials can stand the cruel tests of modern times. In 1995, an elegant, rose-colored granite circle was laid in an open space between the two towers. Carved into it were the names of the six people killed by the 1993 terrorist bomb at the World Trade Center. No one knows what shape that monument will be in when it is finally dug out from under the rubble. But a more important question is: What can be done now to suitably mark for the ages the passing of these six victims of terrorism - and the thousands more who have now joined them? Certainly there will be a memorial at the site, and public sentiment seems to require a structure that functions much as the World Trade Center did, something to stand as a symbol that the United States will not be intimidated. But shouldn’t there also be a separate, grand and long-lasting monument that reminds us of the bravery and the suffering of the victims and their families? I believe that one means of honoring these victims is provided by the site the FBI is using to analyze the World Trade Center debris: The Fresh Kills landfill on Staten Island. (The unfortunate name comes from the Dutch word for a small stream: "kill") The World Trade Center was easily visible from Fresh Kills. In fact, the opening photo in a National Geographic story on landfills captured an image of the giant twin towers looming behind a bulldozer spreading refuse at the landfill (May 1991, pages 116-117). And now the victims and Fresh Kills are intimately linked in another way. As uncomfortable as it may make us feel, the shattered remains of many of the terrorists’ victims will likely go with the World Trade Center debris to its final disposal site. This fact makes all the debris very special. It should not be just buried and forgotten. And there is a huge mass of material to dispose of or to use in building a commanding memorial. Based on a standard rule-of-thumb used by demolition contractors, the debris will be in the range of 60 million cubic feet - nearly twice the volume of the Temple of the Sun at the archaeological site of Teotihuacan outside Mexico City. And this doesn’t count family pictures, the diplomas and photos of honor, and the myriad knickknacks, as well as the tens of thousands of desks they rested upon. An inspiring memorial of a vicious and tragic day could be build at Fresh Kills out of these hallowed artifacts. Just as the sunken and untouched USS Arizona represents the victims of Pearl Harbor’s day of infamy, so would the WTC debris represent the victims of terrorism. There is historical precedent from ancient times for such a memorial. In 409 B.C., the Athenians built a great mound out of stones, debris, weapons, armor and the bodies of their fallen soldiers after the battle of Marathon, where an invading Persian army was defeated. That mound literally and visually commemorated the fighting spirit of Athens and its allies.
Some might find a landfill an unfitting place for a memorial. But Fresh Kills enshrines an honorable material legacy, one that represents the "remains of the day" of millions of New Yorkers between 1948 and 2001. This anonymous refuse holds remains of all that New Yorkers did with family and friends, at work and school, at play and at home. It is a fitting place to memorialize the terrorist victims who, until September 11th, 2001, were like you and me, living out their version of the American Dream.
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