University of South Carolina archaeologist Chester DePratter along with Victor Thompson, an anthropologist from the University of Georgia, have conducted research at Santa Elena since 2014 to find the fort that was founded in 1577 by Pedro Menedez Marquez, the governor of Spanish La Florida.
Their discovery, which will be published this week in the “Journal of Archeology Science Reports,” sheds new light on the oldest, most northern Spanish settlement in the Americas, built to thwart French exploration into the New World.
Marquez arrived in October 1577 at the abandoned town of Santa Elena with two ships carrying pre-fabricated posts and heavy planking. He erected fort San Marcos in six days in defense against a Native American attack such as the one that forced the abandonment of the town a year earlier. The town had flourished, nearing 400 residents, since its establishment more than a decade earlier in 1566 by Pedro Menendez de Aviles who had founded La Florida and St. Augustine the year before. In 1571 it became the capital of Spanish Florida.
“I have been looking for San Marcos since 1993, and new techniques and technologies allowed for a fresh search,” says DePratter who conducts research through the university’s South Carolina Institute for Archaeology and Anthropology (SCIAA) in the College of Arts and Sciences. “Pedro Menendez didn’t leave us with a map of Santa Elena, so remote sensing is allowing us to create a town plan that will be important to interpreting what happened here 450 years ago and for planning future research.”
DePratter says the general location of fort San Marcos has been known for decades from documentary sources, which included a written description and drawing of the fort that are part of the Archive of the Indies in Seville, Spain. Several early attempts to find the fort through excavation failed.
In early June DePratter and Thompson returned to Santa Elena to employ a suite of new remote sensing technologies to look below the surface of the ground without actually digging. Using ground penetrating radar, soil resistivity and magnetometers, they sent pulses, electric currents and magnetic waves into the ground and measured differences in local magnetic fields in order to find the missing fort and map the lost 15-acre landscape of Santa Elena and the buildings – a church, courts, shops, taverns and farms – that brought life to the early settlement.
“Santa Elena is providing once again an unprecedented view of the 16th-century landscape. This is one of the best sites for remote sensing that I’ve ever had the privilege to work on,” says Thompson who directs UGA’s Center for Archaeological Sciences.”
DePratter says Santa Elena is the best preserved 16th century town in the country, in part because of its location, which is underneath a former military golf course that has no standing structures on it.
“The Santa Elena site is part of the Charlesfort/Santa Elena National Historic Landmark. Its remarkable state of preservation is a tribute to the stewardship of the U.S. Marine Corps who have owned Parris Island since 1915,” DePratter says.
Among the vast array of possible wells, houses, posts and ditches in the images produced from the survey, DePratter and Thompson located the elusive Spanish fort. Fort San Marcos was a wooden fort with a central building containing storerooms and barracks with a large triangular gun platform on one end. It had 11 mounted cannons, the largest weighing more than 5,400 pounds. After five years, the wooden posts surrounding the fort rotted, and a new fort, also called San Marcos was built on the nearby shoreline and remained until its final abandonment in 1587 when the Spanish government decided to consolidate its resources in St. Augustine.
“This work will allow us to tell the story of the land that would eventually become the United States. Santa Elena is an important part of this history that lends insight into how colonial powers in Europe vided for control over this corner of the New World,” Thompson says.
SCIAA archaeologist Stanley South, who died in March at age 88, found the remains of Santa Elena in 1979, with DePratter later joining the project in 1989. Archaeological excavations ended in 2008.
The Charlestonfort/Santa Elena National Historic Landmark is located on the Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island. The current remote sensing work is funded by the Santa Elena Foundation and SCIAA’s Archaeological Research Trust and supported by the University of Georgia’s anthropology department.
In April the Santa Elena Foundation and SCIAA celebrated the 450th anniversary of Santa Elena’s founding with a symposium and an exhibition curated by DePratter. Thousands of artifacts have been unearthed from the site over the past four decades.
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Note to editors: The article, titled “A preliminary exploration of Santa Elena's sixteenth century colonial landscape through shallow geophysics,” will be published in the “Journal of Archeology Science Reports” the week of July 25. Both researchers are available for interviews.
About Chester DePratter: Chester DePratter is a research professor at the South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology in the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of South Carolina. He was worked on a variety of Native American sites, primarily in South Carolina and Georgia, and written numerous articles on prehistoric archaeology, exploration of routes of Spanish explores and the early European presence in the southeastern United States. Since 1989 he has focused on 16th-century Spanish site of Santa Elena and the search for the French site of Charlesfort and on the archaeology of Yamasee sites in South Carolina. He is curator of the exhibit, “Santa Elena: America’s Untold Story at the Santa Elena History Center in Beaufort, South Carolina. About Victor Thompson: Victor Thompson is an associate professor of anthropology and the director of the Center for Archaeological Sciences at the University of Georgia. His research focuses on applications of archaeological science to the study of colonialism, socio-political complexity and the historical ecology of wetland and coastal environments. He uses a number of specialized methods in his research, including the analysis of monumental architecture, shell midden archaeology, stable istopes, remote sensing and geographic information systems (GIS). His research includes field and museum-based work in Mexico, France, the Caribbean and the Midwest and Southeast of the United States.
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