The CNN article has the mandatory Indiana Jones reference, which pops up whenever anyone talks about archaeology in the media. FYI CNN, while I love Indiana just as much as the next person, he was an old school archaeologist (read: treasure hunter). This kind of behavior is not exactly what we are taught in schools, in fact my professor would probably frown on me accidentally blowing up sites, causing cave ins, and giant rock balls to crush important ceremonial rooms.
Military looks for WWII dead in South Pacific
- As many as 450 U.S. Marines may be buried on Tarawa atoll
- A joint civilian-military team hopes to find, return their remains
- More than 1,000 U.S. men died in the November 20, 1943, battle
- If remains are found, specialists will match them to troops missing in action
Betio, Tarawa Atoll (CNN) -- Archaeologist Gregory Fox is the U.S. military's version of Indiana Jones, but looks more like Jerry Garcia than Harrison Ford.
Fox travels the world digging for his version of treasure -- the remains of missing U.S. service personnel who died in battle.
"One month you're freezing your butt off on a mountain worried about altitude sickness, then you're somewhere wishing you had air conditioning," Fox says, shovel in hand, next to a fresh hole he and a team of Marines are digging in the South Pacific.
"It's basically a promise by the U.S. government that they will do everything in their power to bring their fallen warriors home, and that's the way we roll."
Fox is part of the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command, or JPAC, a unique team of nearly 400 civilian and military personnel. The unit is two-thirds military and one-third civilian, with each branch of the military represented. While search teams comb the world for remains, specialists back at JPAC headquarters in Honolulu, Hawaii, make matches between bones and soldiers listed as missing in action.
"It's basically CSI, but much slower," Fox says. "We can't make a match in 45 minutes."
Tarawa, a South Pacific atoll, was the site of one the bloodiest battles in Marine Corps history. Starting on the morning of November 20, 1943, more than 1,000 American men were killed in roughly 72 hours of fighting with the Japanese. Hundreds of Marines were gunned down in the water trying to make it to shore.
Tarawa was before Iwo Jima. For Marines, the battle is both a source of pride and a lesson learned. The high casualties were blamed in part to poor planning. The attack was launched during low tide, which left a lot of the landing craft stuck on coral.
The Japanese were sitting in fortified bunkers along the shoreline, shooting Marines at close range as they attempted to make it to the beach. In the end, the Marines took the beach and won the battle. An estimated 4,000 Japanese soldiers died in the fighting, over what was considered at the time a strategic airstrip in the Pacific.
Alexander "Sandy" Bonnyman was posthumously awarded a Congressional Medal of Honor for his heroics at Tarawa.
"I spent my childhood idolizing him, even though he died 18 years before I was born," says his grandson, Clay Bonnyman Evans. Evans made the long trip from his home in Boulder, Colorado, to Tarawa to be here while JPAC is digging for remains.
He retraced his grandfather's steps at Tarawa, wading through the water onshore, then climbing to the top of a bunker referred to as "Bonnyman's Bunker."
Now overgrown and filled with trash, the bunker was a Japanese stronghold during the battle. Bonnyman, according to his fellow Marines, led a charge to the top of the bunker, flushing out more than 100 Japanese soldiers that had been killing Marines on the beach.
"Frankly, most of my life I knew a lot of the story, and I know a lot more now," Evans says from the bunker where his grandfather was ultimately killed.
After the battle, Bonnyman and the other Marines who died were originally buried in several areas around Tarawa. But there were so many bodies, including the thousands of Japanese soldiers, that the U.S. Navy eventually bulldozed the site. After the war, the U.S. government returned to retrieve the bodies, but couldn't find them all.
It's estimated that as many as 450 Marines remain buried on Tarawa. Over the years, several bodies have been unearthed by construction workers and others. On Wednesday, local officials handed over a set of remains to the JPAC team in a ceremony conducted by Marine Capt. Todd Nordman.
Nordman says he volunteered for this mission because of the Marine Corps history here. While JPAC may be made up of all branches of the military, for this mission it's almost all Marines. "Tarawa holds a soft spot in Marine Corps hearts, so it's important that we bring a large contingency from the Marine Corps," he says.
The mission calls for JPAC to dig at six sites, which if the research is correct, could yield more than 100 missing Marines. Finding where to dig took years of research, and several trips to Tarawa with ground-penetrating radar. That work was done by the nonprofit group History Flight and its founder Mark Noah, who has dedicated most of his life over recent years trying to bring the Marines of Tarawa home.
"It's our mission to affect a positive solution to the mystery of what happened to the lost graves of Tarawa," says Noah.
JPAC is using his research as a playbook for the mission. "it was a great first step," says Fox.
The current JPAC mission scheduled to last more than a month. If a mass grave is found, more archaeologists are on standby in Hawaii to come help Fox.
4 comments:
Please look in Fiji before you get to Suva right off the Queen Road. Graves are exposed from erosion and they are reportedly graves of the American forces.
Thanks for your comment! Hopefully, JPAC or similar groups have checked out Fiji. If you have seen this kind of erosion, you can report it to them, I believe.
If they are not American graves, it is possible that they are prehistoric Fijians. A huge problem in island archaeology is the natural sand movement, accompanied by human beach development, which speeds up the loss of beaches. This has caused the exposure and loss of thousands of burials and artifacts in the Caribbean alone.
Hey, where did you go?? I just came across your blog and find it really interesting, but no newer posts than 2010? The people need more of your story/ your thoughts. I'm very interested in the kind of work you do (or were doing? Did you get your degree? Did you leave the field? Do tell!), and I really enjoy your particular 'voice'. I got here via a google search on cusp of Carabelli, after *also* clicking on the stormfront link, seeing the misinformation and the chest-banging ... Thought about reading other threads there; decided to give my blood pressure a happy Saturday. Found your page instead. Happy ending!
MC
Thank you for your comment, MC! It was a blast from the past to receive an email notification from a new comment left on my old blog. And I appreciate your internet journey down the rabbit hole, haha - you go looking for some info on a tooth trait and you somehow you end up on a racist website and then onto random blogs. I learn a lot of weird facts about life that way. My mother always said nothing good happens after 12 midnight, but on the internet that seems like the best time to watch a clip of the King and I and then read the Wiki on the life history of Yul Brynner.
As to your questions - I'm still in the same field, graduated with my masters (when I was writing the blog) and am now working on my PhD in a different state. I've also been able to work with JPAC through a graduate fellowship, which was amazing and allowed me to travel to Vietnam on a military mission to participate in a dig.
Thank you again for your kind message, I think I'll update at least on my experiences with JPAC and then maybe see if this takes off again. Hope to see you back : )
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