- Видео 27
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NH Archeological Society
Добавлен 9 сен 2020
2024 William Griswold - Reconstructing the second Revolutionary War battle of Saratoga.
Reconstructing the Beginning of the second Revolutionary War battle of Saratoga.
William Griswold, Ph.D., retired National Park Service archeologist. Owner of Hadley Woods Archaeological Services, LLC in Nashua, NH.
Metal detection surveys in 2019 and 2021 at the Barber Wheatfield in Saratoga National Historical Park have allowed us to conclusively identify the site of the beginning of the second battle at Saratoga, known as the Battle of Bemis Heights. This survey allowed us to reconstruct portions of the battle including the location of the British/German lines, the direction of the American attack, and the location of the British artillery. This battle was considered the turning point i...
William Griswold, Ph.D., retired National Park Service archeologist. Owner of Hadley Woods Archaeological Services, LLC in Nashua, NH.
Metal detection surveys in 2019 and 2021 at the Barber Wheatfield in Saratoga National Historical Park have allowed us to conclusively identify the site of the beginning of the second battle at Saratoga, known as the Battle of Bemis Heights. This survey allowed us to reconstruct portions of the battle including the location of the British/German lines, the direction of the American attack, and the location of the British artillery. This battle was considered the turning point i...
Просмотров: 100
Видео
2024 Kimberly Kulesza - Navigating Sacred Spaces: Viking and Early Medieval Gotland.
Просмотров 12614 дней назад
Navigating Sacred Spaces: Cosmoeconomics and Religious Hybridization in Viking and Early Medieval Gotland. Kimberly Kulesza, Behavioral & Social Science Program Coordinator, Manchester Community College. “Navigating Sacred Spaces” explores the intersectionality of theories of cosmoeconomics and hybridization as it relates to religious transition on the Swedish island of Gotland. The Viking Age ...
2024 Mark Doperalski, Updates from SCRAP Work at Mollidgewock State Park
Просмотров 16014 дней назад
Updates from SCRAP Work at Mollidgewock State Park A summary of the archaeological deposits reflecting the human use of the location over a period of time spanning from the present to at least 8,000 years ago. The talk will focus on the pre-contact Native American deposits principally from the Middle Archaic and the Late Archaic-Early Woodland Transition periods. This presentation was part of t...
2023 Martin & Baker Early Piscataqua Ceramic Artifacts
Просмотров 526 месяцев назад
The Early Piscataqua Region, as Seen Through its Ceramic Artifacts. Dr. Alix Martin, Archeologist, Strawbery Banke Museum, and Dr. Tad Baker, Professor of History, Salem State University. Sport divers Ray and John Demers recovered thousands of historic artifacts from the waters off New Castle in the 1970s, one of the largest and most important assemblages in the northeast. The Demers Collection...
2023 Nathan Scholl - Archaeological Investigations in the Umbagog Lake Region
Просмотров 1336 месяцев назад
Shallow Water; Deep History: Archaeological Investigations in the Umbagog Lake Region Nathan Scholl, M.A., RPA, Geoarchaeologist. Umbagog Lake is located on the border of New Hampshire and Maine in a remote region of both states. This lake is the headwaters of the Androscoggin River and was the historical intersection of at least four indigenous trails. Investigations between 2019 and 2022 of t...
2023 Gail Golec, The Kchi Pôntegok Petroglyphs: Recontextualizing the Bellows Falls Petroglyph Site
Просмотров 876 месяцев назад
The Kchi Pôntegok Petroglyph Project: Recontextualizing the Bellows Falls Petroglyph Site within an Indigenous Landscape. Gail Golec, Project Archaeologist, Monadnock Archaeological Consulting, Inc. Interpretation of Indigenous history has historically been grounded in white Euro-American culture and as a result, important elements of the Indigenous worldview are often overlooked or disregarded...
2024 Jon Apperstein - Extensive Maize Agriculture in Northeast
Просмотров 366 месяцев назад
A Kernel of Truth: On the Possibilities of Extensive Maize Agriculture in the Archaeological Northeast. Jon Apperstein, Ph.D. candidate, Dartmouth College. Our understanding of the regional archaeological landscape has been relatively stable for the past few decades. The main archaeological questions continue to be centered on the great maize debate and its intersection with Woodland settlement...
2024 Alex Garcia Putnam - The Brentwood Poor Farm
Просмотров 736 месяцев назад
The Brentwood Poor Farm: Bioarchaeological Insights on Poverty and Marginalization in Historic New Hampshire. Alex Garcia-Putnam, Ph.D., Co-Director of the Forensic Anthropology Identification and Recovery (F.A.I.R.) Lab, UNH. This presentation includes photos of human remains This work explores the lives and deaths of inmates of the Brentwood Poor Farm, Brentwood, NH (1841-1868). The hardships...
2024 Samantha Taylor - Bridging Informational Gaps Between Diasporic Communities
Просмотров 217 месяцев назад
African American cultural landscapes are often plagued by inaccurate yet deeply rooted historic narratives. These unreliable accounts of the past are often the result of longstanding prejudice, an absence of primary sources, and historically denying African American communities’ control over their own historical narrative. Pandenarium, a nineteenth century antebellum freedman community in Merce...
Karlee Feinen, The Stratigraphy of Weirs Beach
Просмотров 917 месяцев назад
Located on Lake Winnipesaukee in the town of Laconia, Weirs Beach is among the most important archaeological sites in New Hampshire. However, instances of stratigraphic disturbances have moved the cultural deposits at the site. My research analyzes recent excavations by Dr. Nathaniel Kitchel and what can be learned from the stratigraphic disturbances at the site. This presentation is part of th...
Jake Tumelaire - High Above the River : Points, Pottery and a Pithouse in Manchester
Просмотров 83Год назад
April is Archeology Month in New Hampshire. In 2023 New Hampshire Archeological Society (NHAS) is presenting a series of face to face and virtual educational events. For more information about NHAS our programs and membership go to NHAS.org. IAC conducted Phase IB testing that identified previously undocumented components of the Amoskeag West Bank site (27-HB-079) in Manchester. A subsequent Ta...
Dr. Gabe Hrynick - Recent Research at Coastal Sites in Downeast Maine
Просмотров 260Год назад
April is Archeology Month in New Hampshire. In 2023 New Hampshire Archeological Society (NHAS) is presenting a series of face to face and virtual educational events. For more information about NHAS our programs and membership go to NHAS.org. In the 1950s, Ted Stoddard of the Robert S. Peabody Museum’s Northeastern Archaeology Survey identified dozens of archaeological sites in coastal Downeast ...
White Mountain National Forest Archaeology: An Evening With Heritage Staff
Просмотров 101Год назад
April is Archeology Month in New Hampshire. In 2023 New Hampshire Archeological Society (NHAS) is presenting a series of virtual educational events. For more information about NHAS our programs and membership go to NHAS.org. The White Mountain National Forest (WMNF) comprises 800,000 acres of federally managed land in three New Hampshire counties, Grafton, Carroll, and Coos, and Oxford County i...
Matthew D. O'Leary, Geospatial Analysis of Frontier Instability in Northeastern America
Просмотров 1062 года назад
April is Archeology Month in New Hampshire. In 2022 New Hampshire Archeological Society (NHAS) is presenting a series of virtual educational events. For more information about NHAS our programs and membership go to NHAS.org. This Land Will Perish Having Ruined France:” Geospatial Analysis of Frontier Instability in Northeastern America - NHAS Matthew D. O'Leary, Doctoral Student, Syracuse Unive...
Tom Martel, Hawaiian Archeology
Просмотров 682 года назад
April is Archeology Month in New Hampshire. In 2022 New Hampshire Archeological Society (NHAS) is presenting a series of virtual educational events. For more information about NHAS our programs and membership go to NHAS.org. Hawaiian Archeology - NHAS Tom Martel, Archaeologist/Project Supervisor at Cultural Surveys Hawaii, NH SCRAP volunteer, MHA volunteer An insightful discussion of Hawaiian A...
Victoria Bunker, Chester Price Award Winner, Wakefield Rail Yard
Просмотров 752 года назад
Victoria Bunker, Chester Price Award Winner, Wakefield Rail Yard
Heather Rockwell Geographic Information Systems in Archaeology
Просмотров 402 года назад
Heather Rockwell Geographic Information Systems in Archaeology
Richard Boisvert - Listing the Potter Paleo Indian Site -National Register of Historic Places
Просмотров 2922 года назад
Richard Boisvert - Listing the Potter Paleo Indian Site -National Register of Historic Places
Robert Goodby - A Deep Presence: 13,000 Years of Native American History
Просмотров 3673 года назад
Robert Goodby - A Deep Presence: 13,000 Years of Native American History
Life and Death at Caesarea Maritima: Using Osteobiography to Create Narrative
Просмотров 933 года назад
Life and Death at Caesarea Maritima: Using Osteobiography to Create Narrative
Hannah Dutton:"Legacy Collections" or archaeological materials
Просмотров 1163 года назад
Hannah Dutton:"Legacy Collections" or archaeological materials
Formulating a Thesis Formulating a Thesis
Просмотров 393 года назад
Formulating a Thesis Formulating a Thesis
The Mount Holly Mammoth Nathaniel Kitchell
Просмотров 1913 года назад
The Mount Holly Mammoth Nathaniel Kitchell
North Carolina Archeology A Taste of 1800s Wilmington
Просмотров 703 года назад
North Carolina Archeology A Taste of 1800s Wilmington
Alix Martin and Anne Jennison: People of the Dawnland: Indigenous presence at Puddle Dock
Просмотров 1383 года назад
Alix Martin and Anne Jennison: People of the Dawnland: Indigenous presence at Puddle Dock
Heather Rockwell: Investigating the use of stone tools with microwear analysis
Просмотров 3833 года назад
Heather Rockwell: Investigating the use of stone tools with microwear analysis
I keep finding stone tools on my property and when I walk my dog I’ll notice some pieces sticking out of the dirt and now the feral chickens are kicking the rocks in the road where they get run over. I try to pick them up but I want to be able to identify what they’re used for. You can tell they’re man manipulated stone, various those of stone some hard and dense and some light volcanic and also really old coral. I thought it was modern coral til I found in my own backyard pieces used for shaping something small and cylindrical. I’ve found hand axe like things that fit perfectly in your hand. You can tell where they’re meant to be gripped (right handed anyway). And pestles, stuff meant to be gripped and rubbed down because they have a smooth flat bottom surface. I have a complete ulumaika. And a broken large adze that’s really really cool because the top 3 sides are polished so smooth, the stone feels soft and it’s perfect rectangular shape was my apple falling on Newton’s head moment. On the surface behind my garage, where it probably broke from the 80yr old construction or the routine lawnmowers, weed eaters that been cutting grass there for decades. I find a lot of the same shaped stuff and yet I don’t know what it’s purpose was for. It kills me I can’t find any information ANYWHERE. I find results for modern artist made stone tools but these are modern reproductions or just how they think they were made. If I can’t find information on what the stone artifacts were used for, I’d like to at least see pictures of other stone artifacts if not all the different ones that have been discovered. Idk why finding this information is so hard to find. 1 year later and a lot of wasted hours searching, I’m frustrated. So now I’ve been looking up other areas around the world of various cultures and finding identical shaped stone tools, usually early examples since we don’t have materials like flint, just mostly basalt. It’s a bit ridiculous at what great lengths I have to go to just to identify the types of stone artifacts that would’ve been important for daily living 200 years ago on the ground I stand on. These are literally everywhere and now getting destroyed by lawnmowers and modern living. I don’t think anyone else notices or cares to look at these rocks closer. But it would be nice to know what’s rare, common, a complete piece compared to possibly broken or unfinished. I live on Haleakala, and I swear some of these stones once had little images on them. It’s hard to find one that hasn’t been worn down. I swear I found a really good one and ruined it by trying to wash the dirt off. I’m not going back to college for this. But seems like everywhere else in the world has information out there on their local stuff. And this video is out of state and yet one of the only researched videos out there. Idk if they’re gate keeping because they want you to physically visit a museum, Gate keeping the knowledge because individuals that know want you to be an apprentice for them which cmon, now isn’t the time to be stingy with that dying knowledge, it should be shared to keep it alive. Or no one cares. I get tidbits from eBay images that look possibly real and old, because a lot of the modern artist stuff looks so non-traditional (it’s trash) so I don’t trust what little info they do say. There’s like 2 or 3 old guys Ive found vids of but they have examples for a handful of stuff. I want a glossary or reference book of some kind! 😩
We are contacting the presenter Tom Martel and either he or we will get back to you.
Where is the second panel ? The DAR violated a sacred site. Imagine all the destruction done to the great artifacts that were here in this land
Sorry for the delay in getting back to you. You may want to contact Gail Golec directly at www.thesecretlifeofdeath.com/contact
Aloha Does Tom still live in Hawaii? If so, has he been to Kalalau valley on Kauai? I'm not an archaeologist but Kalalau seems to throw out the mainstream narrative on colonization of Hawaii. From what I've read, the first Polynesians are said to have landed on the big island and then slowly moved north to the other islands. This confuses me because Kalalau is way more developed than the valleys on the other islands and Wainiha valley is way more developed but private property owned by the Robinsons. I secretly recorded a conversation with one of the Robinsons and asked if I could go into Wainiha valley to photograph the terraces and he said no because he was afraid he would loose the property if the photos made it out to the public. It's 20,000 acres of terrace after terrace and temple sites everywhere. What I'm trying to say is, Hawaii was fully occupied when the Polynesians arrived and it's been occupied for thousands of years. I can prove this if you come to Kauai. Mahalo
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