- Ernest Volk
Ernest Volk (
August 25 1845 –September 15 1919 ) was a German-born archaeologist. Volk came to the United States in 1867, and worked forFrederic Ward Putnam of thePeabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology for two decades, helping to add to the collection through excavations ofTrenton, New Jersey . In addition to his specimens at the Peabody Museum, Volk's contributions can also be found at theField Museum of Natural History and theAmerican Museum of Natural History , as well as at several universities. Volk was a curator of a collection he compiled at theWorld's Columbian Exposition in 1893.Along with his colleague
Charles Conrad Abbott , Volk is best known for his twenty-two year investigation of early human occupation of theDelaware Valley . Volk analyzed glacial deposits known as the Trenton Gravels, excavating the area using a form ofarchaeological stratigraphy . Volk eventually published his research as "The Archaeology of the Delaware Valley" (1911).Volk died in
Tunkhannock, Pennsylvania on September 17, 1919 in acar accident .Bibliography
*Volk, Ernest. (1911). "The Archaeology of the Delaware Valley." Peabody Museum of American Arcaheology and Ethnology. Papers 5.
References
*Cleary, John J. (1929) [http://trentonhistory.org/His/journalism.htm Journalism and Literature in Trenton] . Chapter XV. "Trenton Historical Society".
*Eggers, H. E. (Jan.-Mar., 1920). Anthropological Notes. "American Anthropologist". New Series, 22:1. pp. 97-99
*Lee Lyman, BR and J. O'Brien, Michael. (2006). "Measuring Time with Artifacts: A History of Methods in American Archaeology". University of Nebraska Press. pp. 211-212. ISBN 0803280521
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