Archaeologists can dig up artifacts pretty much anywhere, although in practice where they chose to dig will be affected by several factors. Archaeologists will conduct excavations only in places where they find evidence of past human activity and the excavation of the site will provide useful information. Excavations are planned and not conducted at random.
This is typically referred to as a "dig site".
archaeologist dig up things from the past like bones and they can see what there diet was by bones.
Trowels, toothbrushes, paintbrushes, dental picks, dustpans, buckets and sieves are the tools used to dig with.
they would get killed
One of the most important was at a dig or an archaeologist site ,located in southwestern Pennsylvania.
Give the Archaeologist a map then type a shovel and dig under the building first the skull then the cheek then the shoulder the the foot then give the Archaeologist gum Hope it helps :)
The volunteer team, consisting of five students and two professors, were left to dig at the archaeology site over the holidays.
because they have to dig and find the things and work like detective and find what happened in past
The public is restricted from digging for fossils at Ant Hill in Kern County, California. You must be with a licensed archaeologist to participate in the dig.
Dig in the ground looking for ancient civilization artifacts that have been left behind. Much of what we know about history was found by archaeologists.
Archaeologist, paleontologist, or possibly Egyptologist (but I wouldn't trust that last one.)
Either the Pathologist in the case of the fairly recently deceased OR the Archaeologist when the remains were found in a 'historic dig.'