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Virgin Islands Archaeology Field School 2026

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Virgin Gorda is the second most populace island in the British Virgin Islands (BVI) archipelago with a small community that takes great pride in a huge history. Once home to a thriving Amerindian population, the island was briefly occupied by the Spanish in the early sixteenth century who were mining copper, then abandoned until the late seventeenth century when planters and pardoned pirates began to settle. Small marginal cotton, tobacco, indigo, and sugar estates operated on Virgin Gorda and its satellite islands until the early nineteenth-century, when the plantation industry collapsed. A copper mine operated by Cornish miners provided limited economic respite in the mid-nineteenth century, until tourism emerged in the 1960’s and the island became a playground for the wealthy and famous.

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The National Parks Trust of the Virgin Islands in partnership with the Royal Agricultural University in Cirencester England, would like to invite you to participate in the 2026 Virgin Islands Archaeology Field School focusing on three protected national parks, each of which presents exciting and unique archaeological opportunities. 

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SITE 1 COPPER MINE POINT

During the 1840’s and 1860’s, a copper mine identical to those operating along the Cornish coastline of England (made famous by the television series ‘Poldark’) was constructed on the south-east tip of Virgin Gorda. Entire families from Cornwall relocated to Virgin Gorda and with the local population operated a lucrative mine until production costs exceeded profit. The objective at this site is to survey the industrial facility, locate and record the settlement where the Cornish miners and their families resided, and record thoroughly the beam of the mine engine still abandoned on the shoreline with the intention of recovering the artefact for future preservation and display.

site 2 Fort George

During the eighteenth and early nineteenth-century European conflicts that spilled into the Caribbean, a network of fortifications was erected in the BVI designed to protect the colony from invasion. Fort George (Little Fort) was the primary fortification on Virgin Gorda which protected the main anchorage of St. Thomas Bay and was possibly the site of a Spanish emplacement in the early sixteenth century. The objective for this site is to survey and drone map the eighteenth-century fortification and magazine, whilst also applying archaeological techniques to reveal any evidence of an early Spanish occupation

SITE 3 Prickly Pear Cotton Plantation

This virgin site has never been disturbed apart from the occasional adventurous hiker and presents a unique opportunity to study a small island marginal plantation producing cotton and provision crops. Located on a small satellite island in an area known as North Sound adjacent to Virgin Gorda, the objective on Prickly Pear is to survey and drone map the remaining features; record, collect, identify, catalogue and document the multiple remaining surface artefacts, and pollen sample specific areas to identify where the cotton plantation was located on the island and what provision crops were being grown.

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registration

Season dates 2026
29th June-12th July

Session Dates
30th June-11th July

Application deadline
June 15th, 2026

Project Size
15 Participants

transcript Credit

Transcript Credit: A Certificate of Participation will be issued outlining the various techniques practiced and lectures attended, verified by the project leaders.

Affiliation

National Parks Trust of the Virgin Islands , Royal Agricultural University, Cirencester, England.

Drone

Field School Techniques Employed

  • Drone mapping

  • GIS surveying

  • Shovel and test pitting

  • Archaeological excavation

  • Artifact mapping and recovery

  • Pollen Sampling

Archaeologist Excavating Site

Lab Work Techniques Employed

  • GIS data processing and interpretation

  • Drone map survey data processing and interpretation

  • Artefact cleaning, recording, cataloguing, and identification

Classroom

Academic Lectures

  • Archaeological technique and practice

  • Artefact cleaning, recording, and cataloguing

  • Ceramic sequence and identification

  • Site histories and previous studies

  • Virgin Gorda ecology and habitats

  • Virgin Islands archaeological past projects

  • Prof. Mark Horton-international archaeological projects

Team BIOGRAPHY

Room and Board

Accommodation will be located at the spectacular Guavaberry Spring Bay Resort on Virgin Gorda, nestled among huge granite boulders just minutes away from Spring Bay beach. Participants will be in houses with shared rooms that have their own individual bathrooms and will be gender separated. Each house has Wi-Fi, housekeeping, a full kitchen, linen, beach towels, and an in room safe.  

Basic breakfast and lunch food and drinks will be provided. Evening meals will alternately include beach BBQ’s and local restaurants. Any additional food or drink requirements may be purchased from local stores. 

INSURANCE

Both medical and travel insurance are the responsibility of the participant. A copy of medical insurance coverage must be provided before travelling to the BVI.

COST

The cost of the 2026 field school is $5000. This includes. travel connections to and from Virgin Gorda, accommodation, transport too and from the sites, breakfast, lunch and dinner daily, equipment, tuition, and an excursion to ‘The Baths.’ A deposit of $500 is required to secure participation due by March 30th.

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CONTACT US

National Parks Trust of The Virgin Islands
P.O. Box 860
Road Town, Tortola
Virgin Islands, VG1110
Email bvinpt@bvinpt.org  

Tortola location
#57 Main Street, 2nd Floor
Road Town, Tortola
Virgin Islands VG1110

Telephone
1 284 393 9284

 
Virgin Gorda location

The Baths, Virgin Gorda
Virgin Islands VG1110

Telephone +1 284 541 2420

CONSERVING NATURE'S LITTLE SECRETS SINCE 1961

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