Time Team America

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Time Team America
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 9
Production
Executive producer(s)
Running time 60 minutes
Distributor PBS
Release
Original release July 8 (2009-07-08) –
August 5, 2009 (2009-08-05)
Chronology
Related shows
External links
Website

Time Team America is an American television series that airs on PBS. It premiered on July 8, 2009. It is an Oregon Public Broadcasting adaptation of the British show Time Team, produced in collaboration with Channel 4 which commissioned the original show,[1] in which a team of archeologists and other experts are given 72 hours to excavate an historic site.[2]

The U.S. version features "freelance and university-affiliated experts [who] mostly join existing excavations...[and] arrive with resources that the archaeologists already on the case usually can’t afford and specific questions that, if answered, will advance the understanding of the site."[3]

A second season was announced on October 18, 2011, scheduled to shoot during the summer of 2012 and to air in 2013.[4][5] On December 20, 2011 it was announced that Justine Shapiro would host the second season.[6]

Episodes

When PBS introduced a video player on its website in mid-April 2009, an episode of Time Team America became the most viewed.[3] Original air dates are as announced by PBS, but may vary by PBS station.

# Episode Location[7] Original airdate[8]
1 "Fort Raleigh, North Carolina" Roanoke Island, NC July 8, 2009 (2009-07-08)
The team travels to Roanoke Island to look for evidence of the Lost Colony of Fort Raleigh and learn what life might have been like for the first English colonists.[9]
2 "Topper, South Carolina" Topper, SC July 15, 2009 (2009-07-15)
Time Team America goes to the woodlands near the Savannah River in South Carolina to help with the excavation of the Topper site. One part of the team will dig a Clovis quarry, while the other will investigate a controversial cultural layer claimed to be pre-Clovis.[10]
3 "New Philadelphia, Illinois" New Philadelphia, IL July 22, 2009 (2009-07-22)
New Philadelphia was the first town in the United States platted and registered by an African American, Free Frank McWorter, some 30 years before the Civil War. Time Team America joins the ongoing research of New Philadelphia to help search for the town's schoolhouse.[11]
4 "Range Creek, Utah" Range Creek, UT July 29, 2009 (2009-07-29)
Time Team America was invited to Range Creek in the Book Cliffs in Utah to help with the research into the extraordinary well-preserved pit-houses and granaries of Fremont people.[12]
5 "Fort James, South Dakota" Fort James, Hanson County, SD August 5, 2009 (2009-08-05)
Fort James in South Dakota was one of the few stone forts on the American frontier, and it was abandoned only a few years after it was built in the 1860s. The team goes on a mission to find out how big the fort was to protect its archaeology for future research.[13]

Series 2

After a four-year gap, Videotext Communications/PBS produced the second season.

# Episode Location[7] Original airdate[8]
1 "The Search for Josiah Henson" Maryland June 16, 2014 (2014-06-16)
2 "The Bones of Badger Hole" Oklahoma June 23, 2014 (2014-06-23)
3 "Lost Civil War Prison" Georgia June 30, 2014 (2014-06-30)
4 "The Lost Pueblo Village" Colorado July 7, 2014 (2014-07-07)

Reviews

A Newsday review said "Time Team America at moments, employs [an] approach much in favor at PBS, which worries — needlessly, I think — that the only way to make serious subjects appealing to the attention-deficit-disordered youth of our TV nation is to throw in plenty of zing, zest and zip.... But don't hold any of this against the show, because it's engaging, thoughtful, smart, nicely produced and really, really interesting."[14]

DVD

All the 5 episodes of the first season have been released on separate DVDs.[15]

See also

References

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  3. 3.0 3.1 Digging (Against the Clock) for History, a May 29, 2009 article from The New York Times
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  7. 7.0 7.1 Site Reports, from the show's website
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  14. Time Team America, archaeology on PBS, a July 8, 2009 Newsday review
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Bibliography

Feinman, G. (April 1, 2010). Science and Public Debate: A Role for Archaeology in Today's News Media. Anthropology News, 51, 4, 12-13.

External links