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PHOTOS: Historic Human Remains

Smithsonian expert says bones found on Q Street likely belonged to an adult male, aged approximately 35 years.

 
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This image shows the upper portion of the burial. Damage to the cranium and to the left hip is visible from when the initial exposure took place by the construction crew. The hands are over the groin region. Some of the wood from the coffin lid is still in place over the chest of the person. You can somewhat see the octagonal shape of the coffin. Dr. Dave Hunt
Photos (6)

Photos

This image shows the upper portion of the burial. Damage to the cranium and to the left hip is visible from when the initial exposure took place by the construction crew. The hands are over the groin region. Some of the wood from the coffin lid is still in place over the chest of the person. You can somewhat see the octagonal shape of the coffin.
This image shows the team excavating the body.  Dr. Ruth Trocolli is the DC Historic Preservation Office (HPO) Archeologist and was called in to document and help excavate the burial site for their records.  She is accompanied by Michael McGinnes an archeologist who volunteered to help in the excavation.
This image shows the skeleton with the legs going into the wall and crawlspace of the building.
Additional excavating. Ruth Trocolli is working on the legs and Charde Reid is cleaning around the head. Charde is an Assistant City Archeologist in the HPO.
This image shows one of the three buttons found around the waist area of the body,  probably buttons from the pants of the individual. They will be cleaned to make further identification and to determine a possible time period.
This image shows the 5 nails along the edge of the excavation level and under the left upper arm. These nails to the bottom of the coffin are quite corroded.

During routine construction to dig a driveway last week, contractors accidentally discovered a human skeleton buried about five feet below the foundation of a Georgetown home on the 3300 block of Q Street, NW.

Dr. David Hunt, a museum specialist in physical anthropology in the Department of Anthropology at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History, told Patch that the bones were "obviously historic in nature."

The mostly-deteriorated wooden coffin, the rust and corrosion on nails found near the body and the initial evaluation of the state of the bones, suggest the individual had been buried for possibly 150 years, he explained.

Though Hunt had not been able to perform a full biological profile on the bones to determine the full ancestry, he said his initial evaluation revealed the body of a 35 to 40-year-old male.

He will be examining the remains this week and working on the biological profile to help identify more information about this individual.

The images included in this piece were provided by Hunt as was much of the content of the captions.

Related Topics: 3333 Q st nw, Body found in Georgetown, Dr. David Hunt, Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History, bones found in georgetown, and human remains found in georgetown

Cortney

6:09 pm on Thursday, September 27, 2012

My boyfriend is the one who dug into him. They found more bodies since then. Creepy.

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