Welcome to Thinking Out Loud, a blog that contains postings from The Tampa Tribune’s Editorial Board and from various Tribune Community Columnists. Unlike the unsigned editorials that represent the newspaper’s institutional voice, the blog postings offer personal perspectives on the issues, personalities and events of Tampa Bay. We invite you to participate by posting your comments. We’ll do our best to respond.

Contributors:
Joe Guidry

Joe Guidry is the deputy editorial page editor of The Tampa Tribune. He is a Tampa native and a graduate of the University of South Florida. He is married and has an adult son.


Jeff Stidham

Jeff Stidham grew up and lives in Bartow. He has been with the Tribune for nearly 22 years, the last 10 on the editorial board.


William Yelverton

William Yelverton is a Tribune editorial writer who has worked for the paper nearly 22 years. He lives in the Dade City area.


Jim Beamguard

Jim Beamguard is a Tribune editorial writer. He is a native of North Carolina and a graduate of Davidson College. He and his family live in Brandon.


Jackie Papandrew:

Jackie Papandrew is a freelance writer and editor. Her syndicated humor column appears in publications in the United States, Canada and India. She lives in Largo with her husband and children. Visit her website at www.jackiepapandrew.com.


Camille Beredjick

Camille Beredjick is a senior at Chamberlain High School, an avid musician and a scribbler with a quirky sense of humor. In the fall, she will be attending Northwestern University to study journalism, political science and music, and she plans to pursue a career in journalism.


Jim Harnish

Jim Harnish is in his 17th year as Senior Pastor at Hyde Park United Methodist Church in Tampa. He and his wife, Marsha, have two daughters and two grandchildren. He is a graduate of Asbury Theological Seminary and received the honorary Doctor of Divinity degree from Bethune-Cookman University. He is the author of six books and numerous articles and studies. He enjoys playing with his grandchildren and cheering for the Florida Gators.


Angela Hunt

Angela Hunt is a novelist living in Pinellas County with her husband and two 220-pound mastiffs.


Sheryl Young

Sheryl Young was a Tampa Tribune Community Columnist in 2005-2006. A freelance writer since 1997, including the Tampa Bay Business Journal, Tampa Style Magazines, St. Pete Times and nationally in Better Nutrition, Today’s Christian Woman and more. She’s received a First Place Amy Foundation national "Roaring Lambs" Writing Award, and has lived in Tampa Bay with her family for over 20 years.


Christie Gold

Christie Gold teaches English and journalism at Freedom High School in Tampa where she advises Revolution, the school newspaper. She has been both the Hillsborough County Teacher of the Year and Florida Journalism Teacher of the Year. She lives on a small farm in Wesley Chapel where she trains as a competitive equestrian.


Natalie D. Preston

Natalie D. Preston is a karaoke singing, only-child pouting, Seminole Tomahawk waving, newlywed bride blushing, 50-state traveling, girlie girl who loves to shop, read, run and jump up and down on her soapbox.


Fernando Figueroa

Fernando Figueroa is a researcher, educator and lives in Riverview.


Gary Beemer

Interests include humor, politics, economics, community and world affairs, finance, people, religion, music, sports, current events, the arts and education.


Nicole Yunger Halpern

Nicole Yunger Halpern is an undergraduate at Dartmouth College, where she studies everything she can get her nerdy little hands on. Desired major: life. No, not necessarily biology. Life.


Kris DiGiovanni

Kris DiGiovanni is a Tribune Community Columnist, Huffington Post contributor, Daily Kos diarist, and teacher, who recently moved from NW Hillsborough to another planet - a small beach community in Pinellas County. She also blogs at www.sandscript.wordpress.com


H. David Braswell Jr.

H. David Braswell Jr. is an Information Systems Professional. He is a native New Yorker and a lifelong NY Giants fan. He attended college in California (Cal State Northridge) and moved to Tampa in 1998.


Sean Marcus

Sean Marcus teaches creative writing, journalism and reading at Chamberlain High School. He has one son and is expecting a daughter in early March. He can be reached at wuizabug@gmail.com


Related links
'; ?> <?php echo $s_category_name; ?>: The Physicist and the Archaeological Dig - from TBO Blogs Thinking Out Loud
WFLA News Channel 8 The Tampa Tribune CentroTampa.com

TBO.com - Tampa Bay Online

'; } } ?>

The Physicist and the Archaeological Dig

Posted Jun 26, 2010 by Nicole Yunger Halpern

Updated Jun 26, 2010 at 09:44 AM

“Hi, I’m Nicole.”
“I’m [insert name here].”
“What’s your major, [insert name here]?”
“Archaeology. Yours?”
“Physics, more or less.”
“…What are you doing here?”


I’ve had that conversation countless times during the past two weeks. For the past two weeks, I’ve worked at an archaeological dig at Megiddo in Israel. Run by Tel Aviv and George Washington Universities, the dig allows archaeology students to practice techniques they’ve studied. Classics students, too. And anthropology. And the odd history major. But physics?


“Oh, I’ve heard of you!” one administrator exclaimed after I mentioned my major. “You’re the scientist!”


And scientists have no business butting into the social sciences, apparently.


“Are you here to study radiocarbon dating?” some ask me.


Not particularly. I’m here to study archaeology.


Archaeology intrigues me; most subjects do. During my first two years of college, I studied as many subjects as I could. Alas, one can’t major in “a bit of this and a bit of that,” and one can’t graduate without a major. I concocted a compromise, an interdisciplinary approach to physics. My major consists of six physics classes, one math class, one philosophy class, two history classes, and cartloads of prerequisites. Since the major leaves me little time to study subjects other than physics, I resolved to explore archaeology this summer.


Why shouldn’t I? Why must I burrow into a laboratory or into calculations during vacation? Why shouldn’t I explore new environments, experience a new lifestyle, study new perspectives, use other vague but positive-sounding words?


This summer, I trade my pencil for a pickax. Notwithstanding my ability to mathematically describe the damage that pickax does.


(0) Read Comments


 

ADVERTISEMENT

IYP and SEO vendors: SEO by eLocalListing | Advertiser profiles