OC Archaeology Field School

Items from a dig site, bricks unearthed from the ground, and asian pottery shards.

Over 3 summer quarters, the Olympic College Archaeology Field School worked on the Yama Project, unearthing the history of Japanese immigrant millworkers and their families at the site of the Nagaya settlement on Bainbridge Island. 

Students in the Field School learned to survey, excavate, conduct laboratory analysis, historical and document research, public outreach, community involvement and publication. 

Thanks to their work, nearly 8000 artifacts were collected and are currently housed at the University of Washington Burke Museum. Approximately 95% of the site has been surveyed, a GIS map of the site was created, a village road location documented along with housing terraces and brick features. In spring of 2018, the Yama and Nagaya village was placed on the national register of historic places.

The Yama Project

Remote video URL

For More Information

For more information regarding Olympic College Anthropology, the Yama Project, or upcoming Archaeology Field School programs, please contact the Project Manager for Yama, and Faculty Advisor for Anthropology, Dr. Caroline Hartse.