Michigan State University announced the the discovery of a 142-year-old observatory that was buried on campus.Photo:Michigan State University Communications

Michigan State Students Uncover Observatory Buried on Campus From 1881

Michigan State University Communications

Michigan State University (MSU) students didn’t have to travel far and wide to experience a major archaeological discovery as part of their coursework.

Earlier this month, MSUannouncedthat the foundation of what was once the school’s first observatory, built in 1881, was discovered this summer.

At the time, workers from MSU’s infrastructure division were installing hammock posts near the students' residence halls when they hit upon a very hard surface under the ground. It prompted them to contact CAP.

Upon further surveying and research on the site, CAP confirmed that it was indeed the observatory’s foundation that the infrastructure division encountered.

“It gives us a sense of what early campus looked like in the late 19th century,”  Ben Akey, an MSU campus archaeologist and anthropology doctoral student, said in a news release. “The original campus observatory was built and used at a time when Michigan Agricultural College — what would become MSU — was a radically different institution with only a handful of professors and a relatively small student body.”

The late Professor Rolla Carpenter, an alum of Michigan State Agricultural College who returned to the school to teach astronomy and other subjects, constructed the observatory 142 years ago, per the university.

“In the early days of MSU’s astronomy program, Carpenter would take students to the roof of College Hall and have them observe from there, but he didn’t find it a sufficient solution for getting students experience in astronomical observation,” said Akey, per the news release. “When MSU acquired a telescope, Carpenter successfully argued for funding for a place to mount it: the first campus observatory.”

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Akey also toldThe Washington Postthat the old observatory, where a telescope was housed and astronomy classes were conducted, was probably demolished sometime in the 1920s. Michigan State’s current observatory, constructed in 1969, is located south of the campus at the intersection of Forest and College roads.

Next summer, the site will be open as a dig for MSU’s undergraduate students to earn course credit and for them to gain experience in excavation. “We anticipate having 18 to 20 students work on the project and get great experience doing archaeology,” said Camp in the news release, adding: “I love watching students connect with artifacts and try to tell a bigger story about humankind with those objects.”

Both Akey and Camp told thePostthat the site’s additional excavation could further enlighten people about MSU’s astronomy studies and early campus life from that era.

“I think it really demonstrates our very humble beginnings,” Camp said. “And how we’ve now come so far, where we have all kinds of amazing scientists here on campus and a planetarium.”

source: people.com