The Momentous Discovery
of Avocational Archaeologist David Wasion
Terrence Falk
Editors Note. A discovery by avocational
archaeologist David Wasion is arguably among the most
important findings about the presence of early people
in North America. A news article in The Citizen
Scientist entitled " Credit
Where Credit is Due ” (29 October 2004) described
how Mr. Wasion's name was left out of a news article
about the discovery in the prestigious journal Science.
The article was written by Terrence Falk, a professional
writer who has advised TCS that he included
Mr. Wasion's name in his article, but the editors of
Science deleted it. TCS is grateful
to Mr. Falk for providing us with this article that
provides important details about the momentous discovery
by avocational archaeologist David Wasion.
In the search of ancient man in the
Americas, no find is more important than the one made
by David Wasion in Kenosha, Wisconsin.
Wasion was a construction worker whose
avocation is field archaeology. In 1990, he was working
for the Kenosha Public Museum when he mentioned some
possibilities to staff archaeologist, Dan Joyce. The
nearby Kenosha County Historical Museum was in the process
of major staff changes and was conducting a full inventory
of its holdings. Wasion had heard stories of mammoth
bones being found at various sites around Kenosha going
back to the 1920s, but no one knew what had happened
to the bones.
Wasion poured over old newspaper clippings
and documents at the Historical Museum, but the inventory
showed no such mammoth bones. Finally he got a phone
call from a staff member: “We've just come across a
big wooden box, a crate, in the basement, and it has
some bone in it. Do you want to go take a look?"
In the dusty basement, Wasion lifted
the top of the crate to see bones from known Kenosha
sites: Mud Lake, Fenske, and Schaefer. But Wasion saw
something he never expected: obvious cut marks that
had to be made by human hands.
Wasion immediately called Professor
David Overstreet at Marquette University in Milwaukee.
“Dave, you've got to get down here,
because I just found something wonderful.”
Overstreet told Wasion to contact Joyce,
and the following day all three of them examined the
bones. These marks were clearly human but were not created
by the machines that dug up the bones. These were butchering
marks made by ancient man. Radiocarbon dating would
later reveal that some bones were over 13,000 years
old, at least two thousand years older that the supposed
Bering Straits crossing and Clovis man.
They had a sketch map from the Schaefer
site and decided that is where they would make their
first attempt at finding the rest of a mammoth. Overstreet
was insistent that Wasion should be part of the dig.
After all, Wasion was the one who had discovered the
cut marks on the bones.
But Overstreet also knew Wasion's skills.
He had employed Wasion several times over the years
at various field sites for his company, Great Lakes
Archaeology. Wasion had earned his stripes as a young
man in southern Illinois, joining an amateur archaeology
club that sometimes worked with Northwestern University
at various digs. After coming to Wisconsin, Wasion was
often the site artist for Overstreet. He even trained
others in field techniques, including college students
majoring in archaeology.
But when it came to hiring Wasion under
a government grant, Wasion lacked the appropriate degree.
Joyce and Wasion sat down and wrote up Wasion's resume,
including the various publications in which Wasion's
drawings and work appeared. Finally he received a title
acceptable for the grant: “Avocational Archaeologist
recognized by the state of Wisconsin.”
They began their work in the summer
of 1992. In three days they hit bone. The discovery
of the Schaefer mammoth was monumental. The bones were
stacked, something no animal would do, and stone tools
were found under the pelvis, tools that could not have
migrated from areas above. While other sites claim they
may be older than the Kenosha sites, all have problems
with dating. Here were cut marks directly on the bone,
and material from directly inside the bone could be
carbon dated with no threat of contamination.
While the dig continued at Schaefer,
the farmer from across the street, John Hebior, came
over and stated, “Here, this is from my field,” and
handed the team more mammoth bones.
In the summer of 1994, Overstreet and
Wasion unearthed the Hebior mammoth, considered to be
one of the most complete wooly mammoth skeletons ever
found in the Americas. Over 95% of the bones were retrieved.
Castings were made of the bones to make replicas of
the skeleton. If your local museum had placed on display
a mammoth skeleton within the last ten years, chances
are it was made from the castings of the Hebior mammoth.
So why doesn't David Wasion get the
credit he deserves? In August 2004, I wrote an article
for Milwaukee Magazine
(http://www.milwaukeemagazine.com/042004/bones.html)
concerning the discovery of the Kenosha mammoths. I
included David Wasion's name, although at the time I
did not realize how important he was to the project.
But the editor came back with “too many names” and cut
Wasion's name from the article.
Last summer, internationally known
archaeologist Michael Waters from Texas A & M University
came to Kenosha in search of the oldest known mammoth
at the Mud Lake site. Once again, I wrote an article,
this time for the prestigious journal Science
(Archaeology: Wisconsin Dig Seeks to Confirm Pre-Clovis
Americans,September issue of Science 305, 590
(2004),
(http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/305/5684/590a).
And once again I included the names of Overstreet, Joyce
and Wasion in the article. And once again an editor
came back with “too many names.” All three names were
cut from the final draft.
As I stood in the marshes of Mud Lake
with Michael Waters, I showed him what was to be the
final draft of the article.
Waters responded with, “Where are the
names of Overstreet, Joyce, and Wasion? These guys were
important.”
Waters understood that without their
previous work, he would not be at Mud Lake looking for
this historic find.
Journalists and editors are not people
who want to slight anyone. But sometime in telling a
story, we have trouble listing a string of credits like
one might find at the end of a good movie – who did
the costumes, special effects, and so on. Ultimately
names are dropped. Often the first one cut is the one
who lacks the advanced degree. But one name that should
not be dropped in search for ancient Americans is David
Wasion. 
|