Current:Home > InvestMichigan State University workers stumble across buried, 142-year-old campus observatory -WealthStream
Michigan State University workers stumble across buried, 142-year-old campus observatory
View
Date:2025-04-27 12:33:46
EAST LANSING, MI — What began as a simple hammock installation led Michigan State University workers to uncover a more-than-century-old part of the university's history.
Employees with the school's Infrastructure Planning and Facilities Department were digging holes close to student residence halls near West Circle Drive in June when they encountered a "hard, impenetrable surface under the ground," MSU said in a release Wednesday.
Workers initially thought they had uncovered a large rock or old building foundation. Workers contacted MSU's Campus Archaeology Program, and staff referred back to old maps to determine what workers had dug to was the foundation of the university's first observatory which was constructed in 1881.
Historic Lahaina suffers in wildfires:Historic Maria Lanakila Catholic Church still stands after fires in Lahaina, Maui
The observatory was built by then-professor Rolla Carpenter and is located behind the current-day Wills House. Carpenter graduated from Michigan State Agricultural College in 1873 and taught math, astronomy, French and civil engineering, according to the release. It was built in 1927 for the U.S. Weather Bureau but donated to the university in the 1940s and named after H. Merrill Wills, the U.S. Weather Bureau meteorologist who lived there, according to MSU's website.
The Wills House once held MSU's meteorology department, but extensive renovations of more than $970,000 were undertaken beginning in 2015. Plans for the building included office space for several MSU officials.
Ben Akey, a university archaeology and anthropology doctoral student, said in the release the discovery gave a look into what the campus looked like then.
“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,” Akey said. “When MSU acquired a telescope, Carpenter successfully argued for funding for a place to mount it: the first campus observatory.”
Akey said the observatory was for just a handful of professors and a small student population when the university was called Michigan Agricultural College and the university's archives and Horace Smith's "Stars Over the Red Cedar" book were used to confirm the discovery.
“The campus archaeology program is designed to protect and mitigate our below ground heritage here at MSU,” Stacey Camp, director of CAP and associate professor of anthropology at MSU, said in the release. “We collaborate with IPF on construction projects and we are involved in preplanning stages to ensure that if they potentially hit an archaeological site, we can protect it in some manner.”
Titanic wreckage:Where is the Titanic wreckage? Here's where the ship is located and how deep it is.
MSU's current observatory is located at the intersection of Forest and College roads.
MSU spokesperson Alex Tekip did not immediately know how MSU planned to proceed but said a ground penetrating radar would be used at the site on Aug. 9 to learn more.
Contact reporter Krystal Nurse at 517-267-1344 or [email protected]. Follow her on Twitter @KrystalRNurse.
veryGood! (8892)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- As Climate Change Threatens Midwest’s Cultural Identity, Cities Test Ways to Adapt
- Women are returning their period blood to the Earth. Why?
- California’s Low-Carbon Fuel Rule Is Working, Study Says, but Threats Loom
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta other tech firms agree to AI safeguards set by White House
- Assault suspect who allegedly wrote So I raped you on Facebook still on the run 2 years after charges were filed
- Watch this student burst into tears when her military dad walks into the classroom
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- We asked, you answered: What's your secret to staying optimistic in gloomy times?
Ranking
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Unlikely Firms Bring Clout and Cash to Clean Energy Lobbying Effort
- Damaged section of Interstate 95 to partially reopen earlier than expected following bridge collapse
- Accidental shootings by children keep happening. How toddlers are able to fire guns.
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Bama Rush Deep-Dives Into Sorority Culture: Here's Everything We Learned
- Golnesa GG Gharachedaghi Shares Why She Doesn't Hide Using Ozempic for Weight Loss
- Does sex get better with age? This senior sex therapist thinks so
Recommendation
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
Electric Cars Have a Dirty Little Secret
Cause of Keystone Pipeline Spill Worries South Dakota Officials as Oil Flow Restarts
CDC to stop reporting new COVID infections as public health emergency winds down
How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
Looking for a refreshing boost this summer? Try lemon water.
Blake Shelton Gets in One Last Dig at Adam Levine Before Exiting The Voice
Biden’s $2 Trillion Climate Plan Promotes Union Jobs, Electric Cars and Carbon-Free Power