Friday, 17 Jan 2025

Archaeologists uncover centuries-old toilets, artifacts beneath future highway

As construction workers prepared to build a new highway in Syracuse, New York, a team of archaeologists uncovered 11 privies - finding artifacts belonging to people in the 1800s.


Archaeologists uncover centuries-old toilets, artifacts beneath future highway
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Construction workers are breaking ground for a new highway in Syracuse, New York, while archaeologists follow not far behind.

A team discovered 11 toilets likely dating back to the mid-1800s, local news outlet Syracuse.com reported.

Crews had sifted through composted human waste to find items that residents had apparently tossed into the toilets. 

They also found large chunks of broken plates and a jug handle.

"These are all of the things that they held, and they used and this tells you about how they lived their lives. It's a very personal thing. So whenever we get artifacts like this, we treat them with great respect," said Seib.

Waste workers called "night soil men" would remove feces "from privies under the cloak of darkness so that polite society would be spared from confronting its own feces," according to Waste360, a New York-headquartered company that offers sustainable waste management solutions.

Fox News Digital reached out to the New York State Museum for comment.

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