Founded in 1594, the garrison town of Tara was one of the first Russian settlements in Siberia. Archaeologists led by Tomsk State University’s Maria Chernaya are now discovering what life was like there for the earliest Russian pioneers. In addition to wooden fortifications, the team has unearthed the remains of burned log houses that held toys, chess pieces, leather shoes, and knitted stockings that show that life on the Siberian frontier wasn’t as austere as some might imagine. Chernaya says the most unexpected discovery was a clay pot containing a charred turnip. “It was likely part of the winter stocks, so the house probably burned in the winter or spring.” She thinks the fire must have started just as someone was preparing to cook the root vegetable for a meal.
Squeezing History from a Turnip
SHARE:
Recommended Articles
Digs & Discoveries May/June 2022
Membership Has Its Privileges
Digs & Discoveries January/February 2021
Face Off
(Photograph © The State Hermitage Museum/Photo by Vladimir Terebenin)
Digs & Discoveries September/October 2020
Siberian Island Enigma
(Andrei Panin)
Digs & Discoveries September/October 2020
Reindeer Training
(Robert Losey)
-
Features May/June 2017
The Blackener’s Cave
Viking Age outlaws, taboo, and ritual in Iceland’s lava fields
(Photo: Samir S. Patel) -
Features May/June 2017
After the Battle
The defeat of a Scottish army at the 1650 Battle of Dunbar was just the beginning of an epic ordeal for the survivors
(Mary Evans Picture Library / Alamy Stock Photo) -
Letter from Greenland May/June 2017
The Ghosts of Kangeq
The race to save Greenland’s Arctic coastal heritage from a shifting climate
(Photo: R. Fortuna, National Museum of Denmark 2016) -
Artifacts May/June 2017
Maya Jade Pectoral
(Courtesy Toledo Regional Archaeological Project, UCSD)