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  • This fortnight, we realized it had been a while since we, your faithful hosts, told you what we'd been up to. Turns out, it's just like riding a bicycle. Initially running over 6.5 hours and 3.5 bottles of Courvoisier, Emanuel has trimmed this down to manageable proportions. Tune in for an all Ken and Gabe episode of the New Brunswick Archaeology Podcast to hear about the research projects we've been working on!

    Show Notes:

    Hrynick, M.G., K.R. Holyoke, and M.W. Betts. (2024) Papers in Honour of David Black, Northeast Anthropology Special Volume 93–94(Spring/Fall 2024)

    Articles:

    Introducing Paper in Honour or David Black – M. Gabriel Hrynick, K, R. Holyoke, and Matthew W. Betts (pp. 1–7)

    Provenienced Single Component Evidence for Paleoindian for Paleoindian Habitation in New Brunswick, Canada: Introducing Site BgDq-38 – Darcy .J Dignam, Susan E. Blair, and Christopher R. Blair (pp. 8–42)

    Offshore Artifacts: Paleoindian and Archaic Use of the Gulf of Maine – Arthur Spies and Franklin Price (pp. 43–72)

    The Stevens Site: A Late Archaic Quarry Related Occupation in the Northern Interior of Maine - Heather M. Rockwell, Nathaniel R. Kitchel, and Heather McKee (pp. 73- 92)

    The Archaic Period in the Quoddy Region Through Early Collections - Arthur W Anderson, Joshua A. Cummings, and M. Gabriel Hrynick (pp. 93- 121

    Evaluating the Timing and Duration of Shell-Bearing Deposits at the Reversing Falls Site, Maine - A. Katherine Patton and Arthur W. Anderson (pp. 122- 148)

    Indigenous Human Images from the Maritime Peninsula: Pre-Contact to 1850 - Michael Deal and Bryn Tapper (pp. 149- 175)

    Pieces of a Persistent Place: Circulation of Washademoak Chert and Portable Place-Making on the Maritime Peninsula, Eastern Canada - Kenneth R. Holyoke (pp. 176- 206)

    George Frederic Matthew, Henry David Thoreau, and Nineteenth Century Natural History Archaeology Narratives - M Gabriel Hrynick (pp. 207- 235)

    Credits:

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth Faculty of Arts & Science

    Producer: Emanuel Akel LinkedIn

  • Apologies for the later than usual show, but we're back after a mid-season pause this fortnight-and-a-half and this one, listener, is a record breaking tight 31 minutes of content the likes the NB Archaeology Podcast has never seen. We touch base with Gabe while he's in New Hampshire and Ken is in New Brunswick, to recap the Eastern States Archeological Federation Annual Meeting at Salve Regina University in Newport, Rhode Island.

    On this show, you’ll hear from Zac Singer (State of Maryland), Trevor Dow (UNB), Deirdre McGrath (UMaine), Nathaniel Kitchel (Salve Regina), Jon Alperstein (Dartmouth), Heather Rockwell (Salve Regina), and John Kelly (PAL). (Apologies to a few interviewees to whom Gabe should have held the mic closer—we’ll try again next meeting.) Thanks to everyone who participated and we'll be back with our regularly scheduled content next episode!

    Credits:

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth Faculty of Arts & Science

    Producer: Emanuel Akel LinkedIn

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  • This fortnight, we're back with a real Vaubanarama of a Great Site from the Maritimes, taking a trip across the Bay of Fundy thanks to a listener request. We're headed to Annapolis Royal and Port-Royal, no wait, Charles Fort, no wait, the fort at Port-Royal, no wait, Fort Anne! with Becki Dunham, Parks Canada Terrestrial Archaeologist. We talk about the Mi'kmaq presence in Annapolis River area, the various iterations of the fort, public archaeology at Fort Anne, and robotic lawnmowers. We also suggest opening the Mappanapolis splash for a visual queue to fully immerse yourself in this installment of the Great Sites series.

    Great Citations

    1702 Plan du fort du Port Royal à La Cadie [et] Cours de la Riviere du Dauphin, autrement dite le Port Royal http://anom.archivesnationales.culture.gouv.fr/ulysse/notice?q=&coverage=Acadie&date=&from=&to=&type=Carte+ou+plan&mode=list&page=3&hpp=10&id=FR_ANOM_03DFC60B. Deal, M., Campbell, J., & Tapper, B. (2022). Archaeology and the Meanderings of the Annapolis River: A View from the Boswell Site. Canadian Journal of Archaeology, 46(1), 52–99. https://doi.org/10.51270/46.1.52Dunn, Barbara (2009). History of Port Royal/Annapolis Royal 1605–1800. Nimbus Publishing, Halifax.Parks Canada's Fort Anne Visitor GuideFry, Bruce W. (1984). ‘An appearance of strength’: the Fortifications of Louisbourg – Volumes 1 and 2. Ottawa, Parks Canada. Vol. 1 (text); Vol. 2 (maps/images)Goldthwait, J.W. (1924). Physiography of Nova Scotia. Canada Department of Mines, Geological Survey Memoir 140, No. 122, Geological Series. Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty, Ottawa.Griffiths, N. E. S., & Reid, J. G. (1992). New Evidence on New Scotland, 1629. The William and Mary Quarterly, 49(3), 492–508. https://doi.org/10.2307/2947108Mapannapolis – https://www.mapannapolis.ca/Rudolph R. Stea and Robert J. Mott (1998). Deglaciation of Nova Scotia: Stratigraphy and chronology of lake sediment cores and buried organic sections. Géographie physique et Quaternaire, vol. 52(1):1–19

    Credits:

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel LinkedIn

  • This fortnight, Ken and Gabe have a chat with Dimity Hammon, Vice President of the Tubac Historical Society--who, while in warmer settings of the southwest today, cut her teeth in the cooler (and at times inhospitably wet) climes of New Brunswick. We talk to Dimity about her thesis work on the Holt's Point site and the famous engraved pebbles, the early days of archaeology at UNB, The Computer, and a dolphin out-of-water in the Passamaquoddy Bay. Not to mention, some Historic archaeology from the southwest!

    Show Notes:

    Hammon, D. J. 1984 A Ceramic Period Coastal Adaptation at Holt’s Point, New Brunswick. Master's, Anthropology, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton.

    Tubac Historical Society: https://ths-tubac.org/

    Whalen Farm Archaeological Site, BC: https://loa-archives.anth.ubc.ca/index.php/whalen-farm

    Fitzhugh, William W. 1985. The Nulliak Pendants and Their Relation to Spiritual Traditions in Northeast Prehistory. Arctic Anthropology 22(2):87-109.

    Hit Pieces

    Behne, C. Ted, and James W. Wheaton (2024) Tappan Adney: From Birchbark Canoes to Indigenous Rights. Goose Lane Press, Chapel Street Editions.

    Chapdelaine, Claude. 2024. Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene Shoulderless Stemmed Points: A Far Northeast Perspective. PaleoAmerica:1-20. https://doi.org/10.1080/20555563.2024.2403888

    Credits:

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel LinkedIn

  • This fortnight we’re joined by Dr. Mary McCarthy-Brandt to discuss New Brunswick’s segregated cemeteries, and her work with “REACH in New Brunswick” to locate, document, and preserve Black cemeteries in New Brunswick. She also shares some information about forthcoming publications and an art exhibit about that work.

    Show Notes

    Edward Mitchell Bannister: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Mitchell_Bannister

    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/real-estate/article-1850s-st-andrews-home-has-connection-to-celebrated-black-artist/

    REACH (Remembering Each African Cemetery's History) in NB: https://www.reachnb.com/

    Interview with Thandiwe McCarthy: https://www.cbc.ca/player/play/video/9.6488031

    Mary's PhD Thesis: https://tspace.library.utoronto.ca/bitstream/1807/128414/4/McCarthy_Mary__Louise_202106_PhD_thesis.pdf

    Hit Pieces:

    McAlpine, Donald F., Howard M. Huynh, and Scott A. Pavey (2024). The extinct sea mink, Google macrodon: a putative specimen in the New Brunswick Museum, Canada. Archives of Natural History 51(1):171-188. Newsom, B. D. (2024). The Past is Exactly How It Should Be: Lessons in Indigenous Archaeology from a Birch Bark Biter. In G. Nicholas & J. Watkins (Eds.), Working as Indigenous Archaeologists : Reckoning New Paths Between Past and Present Lives (pp. 319-328). Routledge.https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003183853-31

    Credits:

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel LinkedIn

  • This fortnight we’re chatting about Ken’s field trip back east! So tune in to hear us interview Mi’kmaq basket weaver and expert oyster harvester, Katrina Sock, and Sharon Cunningham of the Saint John River Society. You can also listen live while we learn that multiple summers of CRM did not result in Route 11 being fully twinned. Finally, congrats to Laura and Taylor who won the Quest for 10k listener prizes!

    Katrina Sock (Aunty Kat’s Stitchery):

    https://www.jedinbdirectory.com/businesses/aunty-kats-stitcheryhttps://www.facebook.com/HauntyKat

    SJ River Society Wharves: https://www.stjohnriver.org/wharves

    Pleasant-View Inn (Sharon’s Inn): https://www.pleasant-view.ca/

    Vermont Creemees: https://www.sevendaysvt.com/food-drink/creemee-confidential-what-it-takes-to-create-vermonts-treasured-summer-treat-41391869

    Thomas Henry Barclay: https://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/barclay_thomas_henry_6E.html

    https://www.loc.gov/item/12030527/

    Hit Piece:

    McLeester, Madeleine, and Jesse Casana (eds.). 2024. Finding Fields: the Archaeology of Agricultural Landscapes. Archaeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association 35(1).

    Credits:

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel LinkedIn

  • Welcome to this all hit piece episode of the New Brunswick Archaeology Podcast where we have a show about a book about 640 pieces of published New Brunswick Archaeology. Tonight we’re not just podcasters, we’re co-authors, with the illustrious Trevor Dow who joins us in conversation about the Bibliography of New Brunswick Archaeology: Works to 2022. And that’s not all, listener. We have a special prize for the 10,000th listener! You just need to share a picture of yourself listening to the podcast between now and Sept. 10 (to our Instagram, LinkedIn, Email, or taped to a bottle of Balvenie Scotch and mailed to us) and you’ll be entered to win a great selection of books and other prizes.

    Buy our book!

    Gaspereau Press http://www.gaspereau.com/bookInfo.php?AID=224&AISBN=0Chapters/Indigo: https://www.indigo.ca/en-ca/bibliography-of-new-brunswick-archaeology-works-to-2022/9781554472673.html

    Quest for 10K Contest:

    Email: [email protected]

    Socials: @https://www.instagram.com/new_brunswick_archaeology/

    @https://www.instagram.com/mgabesie/?hl=en

    @https://www.instagram.com/k_holysmokes/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/hrynick/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/kenneth-holyoke/

    Recent NB Arch Pod Media:

    Podcasters dig into N.B. history (CBC New Brunswick News): https://www.cbc.ca/player/play/video/9.6480441

    Podcast looks to uncover 13,000 years of New Brunswick history: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/archaeology-podcast-new-brunswick-1.7294425

    Hammon, D. J.

    1984 A Ceramic Period Coastal Adaptation at Holt’s Point, New Brunswick. Master's, Anthropology, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton.

    https://themanatee.net/sisson-mine-arrowhead-turns-out-to-be-just-a-pointy-rock/

    Credits:

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel LinkedIn

  • Welcome to Season 3 Listeners!!

    Ken and Gabe are both in New Brunswick this fortnight, and although they’ve stepped into place they’ve stepped out of time again. They’re joined this episode by Margarita de Guzman, the Managing Director and CEO of Circle CRM and the founding director of The Fair Field Foundation. We discuss The Fair Field Foundation’s initiatives around bolstering women in archaeology through mentorship and advocacy, and some of the issues faced by female archaeologists. We also chat about the state of CRM and a public archaeology program in St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

    The Fair Field Foundation: https://thefairfieldfoundation.com/

    Circle Consulting: https://www.circleconsulting.ca/

    (also, for kicks: archaeology.ca)

    SVG Public Archaeology Program: https://www.searchlight.vc/news/2011/02/01/public-archaeology-programme-comes-to-svg/

    Magyari, E.K., Chapman, J., Fairbairn, A.S., Francis, M. and de Guzman, M., 2012. Neolithic human impact on the landscapes of North-East Hungary inferred from pollen and settlement records. Vegetation history and archaeobotany 21:279-302.

    Bezzi, L., Bezzi, A., Boscaro, C., Feistmantl, K., Gietl, R., Naponiello, G., Ottati, F. and de Guzman, M., 2018. Commercial archaeology and 3D web technologies. Journal of Field Archaeology 43:S45-S59.

  • This fortnight, we’re putting on our best Boston accent and becoming the New Brunswick Auk-aeology Podcast. That’s right, listener, all good things must come to an end. Like Season 2 of the New Brunswick Archaeology Podcast and the Great Auk. There's no cliffhangers here, we're not even burying the lede, but we’re joined for our season finale by Lucia Snyderman, who is researching the Great Auk and its extinction using data from archaeological contexts in the Far Northeast and further afield. The Great Auk couldn’t soar, but this topic does, and if you listen closely, you might even hear its dulcet tones echoing through your earphones. We’ll be back soon with Season III!

    Thanks to you, listeners, to Emanuel, and to APANB and ULeth SSHRC Exchange for sponsorship.

    Show Notes:

    Lucia Snyderman: ResearchGate and LinkedIn

    Garefowl: garefowl.co.uk/music

    Lucia Snyderman, “Bone, Skin, and story: Fragments of Great Auk Extinction. https://science4sustainability.wordpress.com/2024/03/04/bone-skin-and-story-fragments-of-great-auk-extinction/

    Recreated great auk sound: https://www.thewire.co.uk/audio/tracks/p=14851

    Thomas et. al. 2019. Demographic reconstructions from ancient DNA supports rapid extinction of the great auk. Evolutionary Biology, Genetics and Genomics. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.47509

    Hit Piece:

    Spahr, Tim. 2024. Island Archaeology in Cape Porpoise, Maine. Archaeology Now:

    https://www.eaglehill.us/anow-pdfs/anow-002-Spahr.pdf

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel LinkedIn

  • This fortnight (with proper audio now), Gabe is still in tiki gear two weeks later and Ken is still freezing despite the current heat wave and we're joined by Dr. Emma Yasui, the multi-talented archaeobotanist, podcaster, cultural consultant, and gaming guru. On our way through a conversation covering everything from representation in ttRPGs to Japanese kitchen gardens, Gabe learns about discord and how an RPG works, and Ken reminisces about his pals on subaruforester.com. If you're interested in Jomon and Nikkei archaeology, or wondering what to cook with your yamaimo, this is the episode you've been waiting for!

    Show Notes

    Find Emma on LinkedIn and Twitter/X @starchaeologist

    • How fuki still grows at a former imprisonment camp in BC

    • Tonari Gumi cookbooks (on kitchen gardens)

    • Nikkei in Canada

    • Nikkei archaeology in Canada (Bob Muckle)

    • Asians Represent! https://aznsrepresent.carrd.co/# (link to join the discord server is under “contact”)

    • Some of Emma's consulting work: https://www.kidstablebg.com/makimaster

    Hodgetts, L., Supernant, K., Lyons, N., & Welch, J. R. (2020). Broadening #MeToo: Tracking Dynamics in Canadian Archaeology Through a Survey on Experiences Within the Discipline. Can. J. Arch., 44(1), 20.

    Yasui, E. (2022). Processing it all: Starch residues on Jomon Period ground stone from southern Hokkaido, Japan. J. Arch. Sci. Rpts, 45, 103597. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2022.103597

    Banning, E. B., Hitchings, P., Rhodes, S., Yasui, E., Gibbon, E., Handziuk, N., Glasser, A., Ullah, I., & Abu Jayyab, K. (2018). Jawafat Shaban and the Late Neolithic in Wâdî al-Bîr, Northern Jordan. Paléorient, 44(1), 57-74.

    Hit Pieces

    Patton, K., C. Hernandez, and K. Maxwell. 2024. A Decolonial Reflection on Archaeological Pedagogy and Practice. The SAA Archaeological Record 24(3):24-27.

    Peace, T. (2023). The Slow Rush of Colonization: Spaces of Power in the Maritime Peninsula, 1680-1790. UBC Press. (Winner of the 2024 Canadian Historical Association’s Clio prize for Atlantic Region)

    Credits:

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel LinkedIn

  • This fortnight, the Northeast is engulfed in a heat wave and Alberta has returned to periglacial conditions. Gabe is therefore on assignment poolside while Ken stokes the fire and says a prayer for his tomatillos. Whether you’re in a daiquiri or a hot toddy setting today, get ready to change latitude and change attitude as the NB Archaeology Podcast goes south of the border. In the latest installment of our Great Sites series, we’re joined by Arthur Anderson of the University of New England to tell us all about Maine site 5.06 or the village of Chouacoët. 5.06 is the so-called village described by Champlain in 1605, but Arthur’s recent work there suggests some 2000 years of Indigenous occupation at the site, and complicates archaeological understanding about what a village should look like.

    Great Citations:

    Anderson, Arthur W. 2022. The village of Chouacoët and the ceramic and protohistoric periods on Saco Bay, Maine. In The Far Northeast: 3000 BP to Present (pp.507-521). Canadian Museum of History Mercury Series, eds. Kenneth R. Holyoke and M. Gabriel Hrynick. Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press.

    Baker, Emerson W. 2004. Finding the Almouchiquois: Native American families, territories, and land sales in southern Maine. Ethnohistory 51(1):73-100.

    Leveillee, Alan, Joseph N. Waller Jr., and Donna Ingham. 2006 Dispersed Villages in Late Woodland Period South-Coastal Rhode Island. Archaeology of Eastern North America 34:71-89.

    Lore, Robert J. 2006. Adaptations in the Edge Environment: Faunal Analysis of an Armouchiquois Indian Village. Maine Archaeological Society Bulletin 46(1):1-22.

    Spahr, Tim. 2019. Northeast Algonquin Weir Remains at Redin Island: Comparing Local Features to Historic Illustrations. Maine Archaeological Society Bulletin 59(1):1-20.

    And check out:

    Holyoke, K.R., and M.G. Hrynick. 2024. Podcasting and Public Archaeology: the New Brunswick Archaeology Podcast. The SAA Archaeological Record 24(3):11–17.

    Credits:

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel LinkedIn; Noize &Freeze Files

  • Content Warning: this episode deals with sensitive topics like drug use and sexual harassment.

    Archaeology is a lot of fun, and it’s even more fun when you aren’t on the business end of a bear bluff charge. In this episode, we are joined by Greer Vanderbyl (22:37), Carol Colaninno (59:53), and Nadine Byers (1:22:43) for big picture advice about field safety. Greer discusses building a culture of safety among your field crew, Carol provides advice for field directors to help combat sexual harassment in the field, and Nadine explains why archaeologists should consider adding Naloxone to their first aid kits. Also - are you a musician or podcaster in need of audio editing and producing? Our incomparable producer, Emanuel Akel (13:36), is looking to expand his portfolio (see details in credits, below).

    Byers, Nadine, and Gabe Hrynick. 2023. “A Lifesaving Part of An Archaeologist's First Aid Kit: Naloxone”

    Colaninno, Carol E, Shawn P Lambert, Emily L Beahm, Morgan D Tallman, Carl G Drexler, and Clark H Sturdevant. 2024. Cultivating inclusivity: strategies field school directors use to promote safe and supportive field schools. Southeastern Archaeology:1-17.

    Greer Vanderbyl Carol ColaninnoSHARPResources for US-Based ArchaeologistsResources for Canadian Based ArchaeologistsNadine Byers

    Hit Pieces:

    A paid research opportunity! The Saint John River Society is conducting a research project Pairing Indigenous and non-Indigenous Perspectives to Support Sustainable Flow Management of the Wolastoq Phase 2. For more information CONTACT Sharon Cunningham [email protected] and check out the Saint John River Society ELOHA Project

    Credits:

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel LinkedIn; Noize &Freeze Files

  • We're back a demi-fortnight later than usual to bring you this sonic and gastronomic journey through the Paris of the Prairies. The Award-Winning NB Archaeology Pod travelled to the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association in Saskatoon, SK earlier this month an caught up with friends, met new colleagues, and encountered a Peppa Pig singing robot at the Number 1 Noodle House.

    We also took home the Public Communications Award (Institutional/Professional) for the CAA this year! So thank you listeners!

    Show Notes

    Featured interviews:

    Alvina Tam (Senior Archaeologist, Toronto and Region Conservation Authority) and Tommy Ng (Partner and Senior Project Archaeologist, Bison Historical Services)Scott Neilsen (Associate Professor, Labrador Institute of Memorial University of Newfoundland)Lindsay Amundsen-Meyer (Assistant Professor, University of Calgary) and Matthew Munro (Senior Archaeologist, Independent/Stantec Consulting)Tammi Mills (PhD Candidate, University of Lethbridge)Richard Grubb (American Cultural Resources Association/Vice-President, Richard Grubb & Associates) and Sara Beanlands (Principal/Senior Archaeologist, Boreas Heritage Consulting)

    Credits

    Sponsors: APANB and ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel

  • This fortnight we learned you can take the Loyalist out of the states, but maybe you can’t take the states out of the Loyalist. You certainly can’t take the cannon out of the dooryard. Tune in to hear Dr. David Black tell us about Sam Bliss, the well armed shopkeeper turned soldier turned well-armed Quoddy Region farmer. And it’s not just weapons, Dave will also tell you about what the Blisses ate and raised on his Island. If you’re interested in Loyalists in New Brunswick, this is an important part of the archaeological record, and our second installment of the “Great Sites” series.

    Show Notes:

    Ashley, Elihu. 2007. Romance, remedies, and revolution : the journal of Dr. Elihu Ashley of Deerfield, Massachusetts, 1773-1775. University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst.

    Craig, Calvin Lee. 2003. Early families of "the Mackadavy" : settlers before, during, and following the Loyalist period, Magaguadavic Valley, Parish of St. George, Southwestern New Brunswick, Canada. Self published, but there’s a copy at the UNB library: https://unb.on.worldcat.org/oclc/54415977

    “The Colonial Flip, George Washington’s Favorite Drink” The Colonial Flip, George Washington's Favorite Drink (youtube.com)

    Obituary and bibliography for John Carl Medcof https://shellfish.memberclicks.net/assets/docs/in%20memoriam%20john%20medcof%20191.pdf

    Perley, Moses. 1850. Report on the sea and river fisheries of New Brunswick, within the Gulf of Saint Lawrence and Bay of Chaleur. Fredericton, J. Simpson.

    Great Cites:

    Black, David W., and Christopher R. Blair. 2000. Faunal Remains from the Loyalist Occupation of the Bliss Islands, Quoddy Region, New Brunswick. Ontario Archaeology 69:39-54.

    Blair, Christopher. 2013. Looking For Bliss: An Early Loyalist Family in Passamaquoddy Bay. In Underground New Brunswick: Stories of Archaeology, edited by P. Erickson, and J. Fowler, pp. 107-116. Nimbus Publishing, Halifax

    Hit Pieces:

    Mack, Karen. 2023. The Rumford Falls Ceramic Assemblage and Maine Ceramic Period 2 (CP2) Pottery. Maine Archaeological Society Bulletin 63(2):1-42.

    Will, Richard, and Karen Mack. 2023. Rumford Falls and Beyond: A Comparative Analysis of Archaic period and Ceramic Period LIthic Debitage Assemblages. Maine Archaeological Society Bulletin 63(2):43-60.

    Credits

    Sponsors: APANB and ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel

  • Do you like art? Do you like rocks? Well have we got the show for you! This fortnight your hosts Ken and Gabe are joined by Bryn Tapper (Memorial University) to discuss Indigenous pictographs and petroglyphs from Maine and the Maritimes. Bryn also discusses the importance of rock art sites for understanding Indigenous landscapes, ontologies, and shamanistic practices.

    Show Notes

    Bragdon, K. J. (2002). The interstices of literacy: Books and writings and their use in Native American southern New England. In W. L. Merrill and I. Goddard (Eds.). Anthropology, History, and American History: Essays in Honor of William Curtis Sturtevant (pp. 121–130). Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press.

    Hedden, Mark H. (2004) Passamaquoddy Shamanism and Rock Art in Machias Bay, Maine. In Rock Art of Eastern North America, edited by C. Diaz-Grandos, and J.R. Duncan, pp. 319-343. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.

    Mallory, Garrick (1894) Picture Writing of the American Indian. Smithsonian Institution–Bureau of Ethnology, Washington.

    Molyneaux, Brian L. (1989) Concepts of humans and animals in Post-Contact Micmac rock art. In Animals into Art, edited by H. Morphy, pp. 193-214. One World Archaeology, Vol. 7. Unwin Hyman, Ltd., London.

    Robinson, Brian S., and A. Sky Heller (2017) Maritime Culture Patterns and Animal Symbolism in Eastern Maine. Journal of the North Atlantic Special Volume 10:90-104.

    Tapper, Bryn (2020) Exploring Relationality: Perspectives on the Research Narratives of the Rock Art of the Algonquian-Speaking Peoples of Central and Eastern Canada. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 27(3):723-744.

    Tapper, Bryn, Oscar Moro Abadía, and Dagmara Zawadzka (2020) Representation and meaning in rock art: the case of Algonquian rock images. World Archaeology 52(3):449-462.

    Hit Pieces

    Newfoundland and Labrador “Provincial Archaeology Office Annual Review 2023” volume 22, https://www.gov.nl.ca/tcar/files/PAO-Review-Vol-22-2023.pdf

    And, CRM folks, keep your eye out for two surveys from Ken and Colleagues about CRM in Canada, for more information:

    Employers: (https://survey.ucalgary.ca/jfe/form/SV_b7LGAFHK8dUlyDQ)

    Folks working CRM:(https://survey.ucalgary.ca/jfe/form/SV_erDqAUKQ8XG7JDE)

    Credits

    Sponsors: APANB and ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel

  • It’s spooky season here on the New Brunswick Archaeology podcast. We’re joined by Dr. Chris Wolff to talk about his research about fear as an important aspect of societies past and present. He’ll also give you a primer on the archaeology of Newfoundland and Labrador, share some of his recent work at Stock Cove, and discuss how the peopling of Newfoundland fits into a broader understanding of the colonization of North America. And there’s even some bonus content about nuclear fallout shelters and drums!

    Show Notes:

    The Reformatory: A Novel, by Tanarive Due https://www.tananarivedue.com/

    The Shivers, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Shivers_(Austin,_Texas)

    Stephen Graham Jones, “The Only Good Indians” https://www.amazon.ca/Only-Indians-Stephen-Graham-Jones/dp/1982136456

    “Sustainability in Ancient and Island Societies”: https://upf.com/book.asp?id=9780813069975&fbclid=IwAR2jDWQU1QIXsOJ7w-_lwAOdTniLyRlaawayhNwrZgxrZRZi81Z6YTYbnbE_aem_AWGXJNXC7tyTIy1l9S6oRvjstF7l68BXdGRQ9CICmJu7cIBqp4-QxFNXY59Ia4iiKr_WcrBlkvoFEiZVGnn7xcPK

    Hit Pieces:

    Jones, Brian (2023) Constraints and Assumptions for Modeling the Paleoindian Colonization of New England. Northeast Anthropology 91-92:1-18.

    MacInnes, David (2023) Population Dynamics, Mobility and Pottery Use Among Hunter-Gatherers on the Maritime Peninsula of North America. Northeast Anthropology 91-92:19-51.

    McLellan, A. and Woolsey, C.A. (2024) ‘Thematic Analysis of Indigenous Perspectives on Archaeology and Cultural Resource Management Industries’, American Antiquity. First View article.

    Sponsors: APANB and ULeth SSHRC Exchange

    Producer: Emanuel Akel

  • This fortnight we were joined by some of the UNB and Parks Canada team conducting bioarchaeological research at the (rapidly eroding) Fortress of Louisbourg in Cape Breton. Tune in to hear from Amy Scott, Mallory Moran, Kelsey Kane, Chris Burgess, Nicole Hughes, Taylor Corbett, and Nicole Breedon about mitigating 18th century cemeteries from the Fortress, and the cutting edge, we mean breaking news, uhhh….well anyway about broken bones, 18th century medical practice, and much more. Dr. Amy Scott and her research team will give an expanded presentation, “Skeletal Stories,” at the UNB-Fredericton’s Harriet Irving Library Wednesday, March 27 from 4-9:00.

    To learn more:

    Event details: https://www.facebook.com/unbbioarchaeologyfieldschool/posts/pfbid09fFxXUFe2aDRtNh9GVXNEHFF5XHZnnVCjkqkVNATA8JCsuRLomDuAao1m2sjgU2ql

    Dr. Amy Scott: https://www.unb.ca/faculty-staff/directory/arts-fr-anthropology/scott-amy.html

    UNB Bioarchaeology Field School: https://www.unb.ca/fredericton/arts/departments/anthropology/research/bioarchaeology/index.html

    Fortress of Louisbourg: https://parks.canada.ca/lhn-nhs/ns/louisbourg

    Some recent papers:

    Hughes et al (2024) Surgery under siege: a case study of leg amputation in 18th century Louisbourg, Nova Scotia Canada

    Scott et al (2023) A colony without a cough? A bioarchaeological exploration of tuberculosis at the eighteenth-century Fortress of Louisbourg, Canada

    Scott et al (2023) A bioarchaeological exploration of adolescent males at the eighteenth-century Fortress of Louisbourg, Nova Scotia, Canada

    Scott et al (2020) Comparing biological and pathological factors affecting osteocalcin concentrations in archaeological skeletal remains

    Scott et al (2020) Colonial urbanism: a comparative exploration of skeletal stress in two eighteenth century North American French colonies

    Credits

    Producer: Emanuel Akel

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth SSHRC Exchange, ULeth ORIS

  • This fortnight, the New Brunswick Archaeology Podcast makes sure you don’t feel like you’re up a creek without a paddle. Your hosts, Ken and Gabe, talk about dugouts, birchbark canoes, skin boats, and portage routes in a 13000 year tour of what we know, and especially what we don’t, about watercraft. We also introduce our new producer, Emanuel Akel. Finally, we’d like to fondly remember Dick Doyle, friend and archaeologist extraordinaire. 

    Check out Emanuel’s Podcast, Noize & Freeze Files, https://open.spotify.com/show/3uwx3f15B8zijkAXYlPZci?si=0960c2b904b84a89&nd=1&dlsi=79e9a10758944d87

    Show Notes

    Adney, Tappan, and Howard Irving Chapelle (1993). The bark canoes and skin boats of North America. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C.

    Cape Porpoise Archaeological Alliance.

    Cook, David S. (1985) Above the Gravel Bar: The Native Canoe Routes of Maine. Polar Bear and Company, Solon.

    Holyoke, Kenneth R., and M. Gabriel Hrynick (2015) Portages and Lithic Procurement in the Northeastern Interior: A Case Study from the Mill Brook Stream Site, Lower Saint John River Valley, New Brunswick, Canada. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 39(2):213-240.

    Moran, Mallory L.( 2020) "Mehtaqtek, Where The Path Comes To An End": Documenting Cultural Landscapes Of Movement In Wolastoqiyik (Maliseet) First Nation Territory In New Brunswick, Canada, And Maine, United States. PhD, Anthropology, William and Mary, Williamsburg.

    Sanger, David (2009) Birchbark Canoes, Dugouts, and Gouges: Is There Any Logical Relationship? Maine Archaeological Society Bulletin 49(2):17-34.

    Spahr, Tim, Arthur Anderson, Gabriel Hrynick, Gemma-Jayne Hudgell, and Arthur Spiess (2020)    A report on a late Woodland period dugout canoe from Cape Porpoise, Maine, USA. The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology:1-14.

    Spahr, Tim, Arthur Anderson, Gabriel Hrynick, Gemma-Jayne Hudgell, Elizabeth Kelley Erickson, Nancy Asch Sidell, and Arthur Spiess (2023)    A Late Woodland paddle in association with a dugout canoe from Cape Porpoise, Maine, USA. The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology 18(3):541-545.

    Dick Doyle’s obit: https://www.pressherald.com/2024/01/05/obituaryrichard-a-dick-doyle-2/

    Hit Pieces

    Maine Archaeological Society Meeting (in Honour of Dick Doyle) is April 7, 2024 at Vile Arboretum. Check here for more updates:  https://mainearchsociety.org/

    Searcy, M., K. Banks and S. Jensen (2024). Improve Your Employability: Insider Tips on Jobs in the Cultural Resource Management (CRM) Sector. The SAA Archaeological Record, 24(1): 28-35.  

    Demeischel, Jenna and S. Terry Childs (2024). A collections-Based View of the Future of Archaeology. Special issue of Advances in Archaeological Practice 12(1)

    Credits

    Producer: Emanuel Akel

    Sponsors: APANB, ULeth SSHRC Exchange, ULeth ORIS

  • This fortnight (and a half...) Gabe and Ken are talking archaeology with our friend and esteemed guest, Mr. Austin Paul, Esq. We're also in the same room, and joined by a whole crowd of people in the Riverside Room at Picaroons Roundhouse/540 North on the banks of the Wolastoq. That's right, it's our first live episode, recorded in Fredericton on February 20th as part of the APANB/UNB Anthropology sponsored "Night of New Brunswick Archaeology".

    Credits

    Emanuel Akel (Producer)

    Special Thanks

    The Association of Professional Archaeologists of New Brunswick (APANB)Picaroons BrewingULeth SSHRC Exchange University of Lethbridge UNB Visiting Speakers FundUNB CETL Equipment ServicesUNB Department of AnthropologyEcofor Consulting Ltd. Trevor DowDallas Tomah
  • Tune in this fortnight for a new NB Archaeology Podcast series, “Great Sites.” In Great Sites episodes, we’ll showcase important archaeological sites from New Brunswick and the region.

    This episode, we talk to Dr. Sue Blair of the University of New Brunswick about the Jemseg Crossing Site (BkDm-14), where she led one of largest scale archaeological excavations ever undertaken in the province. The project was also a pioneering collaborative archaeology project. 

    Great Cites

    Blair, Susan. "Jemseg Archaeological Site". The Canadian Encyclopedia, 04 March 2015, Historica Canada. www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/jemseg-archaeological-site. Accessed 01 February 2024.

    Blair, S. E. (2010). Missing the boat in lithic procurement: Watercraft and the bulk procurement of tool-stone on the Maritime Peninsula. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 29(1), 33-46. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2009.10.006

    Perley, K., & Blair, S. (Eds.). (2003). Wolastoqiyik Ajemseg The People of the Beautiful River at Jemseg, Volume 1: Important Stories and Spoken Histories. New Brunswick manuscripts in archaeology; 34E. New Brunswick Culture and Sport Secretariat, Heritage Branch, Archaeological Services, Fredericton, N.B. https://www2.gnb.ca/content/dam/gnb/Departments/thc-tpc/pdf/Arch/MIA34English.pdf

    Blair, S. (Ed.). (2004). Wolastoqiyik Ajemseg, The People of the Beautiful River at Jemseg: Volume 2, Archaeological Results (Vol. 2). New Brunswick manuscripts in archaeology; 36E. New Brunswick Culture and Sport Secretariat, Heritage Branch, Archaeological Services, Fredericton, N.B. https://www2.gnb.ca/content/dam/gnb/Departments/thc-tpc/pdf/Arch/MIA36english.pdf

    If you liked this episode, consider:

    S01E08 "Broadly Speaking", S01E09 "Big Yellow Taxonomist: The Early Maritime Woodland", and "S01E11 "Nopewell"