Each year since 1993, students from Towson University's Archaeological Field School uncover and analyze artifacts from a site that dates to 10,000 B.C.
Through a partnership with the Archaeological Society of Maryland, Towson University professor Robert Wall takes six to 12 students to work with professional archaeologists at a piece of land that sits on an Ice Age river bed adjacent to the Potomac River.
Towson students have uncovered extraordinary finds, such as an Early Archaic projectile point that's been dated to circa 6,000 – 7,000 B.C. It gives them a chance to prepare for their futures — while contributing to the rewriting of prehistory.

