Over the decades since the abandonment of the rural community of Kane, Wyoming, grave markers
in the old Kane Cemetery have been lost. Geophysical exploration can sometimes locate the unmarked
interments. Three survey techniques that might be best suited for this search are magnetic gradient,
ground conductivity, and ground-penetrating radar. A magnetic gradient survey may detect buried iron
associated with the burial or with the coffin furniture, as well as disturbed soil in the grave. A ground
conductivity survey should detect the disturbed soil of the grave. A ground-penetrating radar survey has
the capability to identify the depth and the shape of the burial shaft, and possibly buried objects. While
these surveys have their limitations, they can provide the most efficient application of time and labor
without the cost of full-scale excavations. The overall success of such surveys for the identification of
graves have varied widely from excellent to poor; however, they are capable of defining boundaries of
disturbed soil associated with graves.
In May 2000, a team working for the Midwest Archeological Center and the Bighorn National Recreation
Area conducted a geophysical investigation of the Kane Cemetery, 48BH3104, in Bighorn County,
Wyoming. A surface area of 5,180 m2 was examined with a conductivity meter, while a slightly smaller
area (62 percent of the survey area) was examined with ground-penetrating radar. The data from the conductivity
survey indicated the location of several graves; however, the results were the effect of the metal
grave markers rather than the disturbed soils associated with the graves. The ground-penetrating radar
survey was more successful in the identification of the actual grave locations. In addition to these two
geophysical survey methods, a resistivity sounding was conducted along with a review of the Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation Service's 1938 and United States Geological Survey's 1994 aerial photographs.
The geophysical investigations of the cemetery indicated the presence of graves at the marked
grave locations, as well as a lack of graves in the unmarked portions of the cemetery.
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