Leisurely archaeologists and other explorers

As chronicled in your researcher's journal as I researched my history of early lifestyles in South Asia...

I like the leisurely writing style of some old guys. Ram Chandra Kak wrote of work in Kashmir in the 1930s, "It was on a brilliant afternoon that the site was first surveyed. The hill-side along which the water conduit runs was waving with long-stalked Indian corn. But amid all those fields of luxuriant corn there existed a square flat patch which was covered only with thin turf, and in which there grew a solitary stunted plane tree. This plot of land, by reason of its apparent unproductiveness, immediately attracted attention. On enquiry from the neat-herd who was watering his cattle in the brook near by, it was ascertained that this barren field owned the significant name of Kitur-i-Daj (field of potsherds), because the entire field consisted of thickly packed sherds - whence its barrenness. The question that naturally arose was how such an abundance of potsherds could occur so high up the hill-side and so far from the present inhabited areas. The only explanation (which eventually turned out to be correct) was that in ancient times there had been dwellings here - dwellings the nature of which could be ascertained only by excavation."
Current time travel apparatus location: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada