Maritime Trails

Documenting Shipwrecks

Three Phases of Field Research

1 - Site Reconnaissance  Site Reconnaissance
2 - Evaluation & Predisturbance  Evaluation & Predisturbance
3 - Excavation  Excavation

Several different methods can be used to document a shipwreck site. In fact, field archaeologists may spend their entire careers learning and improving their skills in site survey, documentation, and excavation. When developing an approach, or method, for documenting a shipwreck, careful consideration must be given to the site environment, site type and condition, project funding, allotted field time, and the experience of field personnel.

When choosing a methodology for site documentation, the first question that must be asked is "what is the purpose of this work?"
In other words, what questions need to be answered? Because the purpose of a field project might be as broad as locating several
shipwrecks along a ten mile stretch of shoreline, or as specific as
seeking to determine how a specific ship was built, archaeology is
generally divided up into three phases of field work. 

Mooring Buoy Wisconsin Historical Society Sea Grant University of Wisconsin Wisconsin Coastal Management Program NOAA GLIN Great Lakes Information Network