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From:
Karen Mudar <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 2 Jul 2007 11:42:37 -0400
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Dear Colleagues,



I have had several complaints that the Archeology E-Gram postings to

Histarch are illegible.  I am re-submitting the June issue as an RTF file.

Please let me know if that helps at all.  There is little else that I can

do, and I apologize to those of you who are burdened by a long message that

is unreadable.



Karen Mudar



   June 2007, Archeology E-Gram (rtf. version)



   Forest Service’s Passport in Time Program now Multi-Agency

   Beginning in 1989, the Forest Service has provided information about

   archeological projects on Forest Service lands to volunteers seeking

   suitable projects through the Passport in Time (PIT) clearinghouse.  In

   1991, PIT became a national program and since its inception, more than

   14,000 PIT volunteers have contributed more than 605 person years of

   labor to archeological projects in National Forests. In 2006, PIT

   announced that the program would also host information about volunteer

   opportunities at archeological sites and historic structures sponsored

   by other federal agencies.  In 2006, PIT expanded clearinghouse listings

   beyond national forests to include any projects that are sponsored by

   any government agency, college, university, or archeological research

   firm wishing to include volunteers in the accomplishment of

   archeological or historical research.  PIT projects may be field, lab,

   or office based; and may include survey, excavation, artifact process,

   analysis, archival research, recording oral histories, rehabilitation of

   historic structures, or interpretation.  While prospective volunteers

   may search the website for free, the Forest Service charges an

   administrative fee to sponsoring agencies.

   Contact: Jill Osborn, [log in to unmask]

   To learn more about PIT or volunteer archeological activities, visit

   www.passportintime.com/



   Archeology at Voyageurs NP

   Over the past 20 years, archeologists and cultural resource specialists

   at the NPS Midwest Archeological Center and at Voyageurs NP have

   collaborated with members of the Bois Forte Ojibwe bands to carry out

   research on historic use of the park. The study area is part of an

   intact ecosystem contained within Quetico Provincial Park, Forest

   Service Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, and Voyageurs NP.  The

   ongoing project combines archeological and archival research to

   investigate the use of the area between the 1700s and 1950s by Bois

   Fortes bands.  Field work and archival research have identified over 50

   sites, and identified some of the ways that the Ojibwe were able to

   maintain off-reservation settlements, community structure, and

   traditional subsistence strategies well into the 1950s.  At present

   there is only one allotment inside the park but at the beginning of the

   20th century, more than 30 Native American families owned land inside of

   the boundaries of the present-day Voyageurs NP.  Park staff  have shared

   the results of their research with local families to help identify the

   places where parents and grandparents lived, worked, and were sometimes

   buried.



   NPS archeologist Jeff Richner has summarized this research in an article

   in the March 2007 issue of the Society for American Archeology

   Archeological Record.  “The Bois Forte Ojibwe’s Historic Use of the

   Voyageurs National Park Area” describes the program of archeological

   research that has been carried out in the last several decades in

   Voyageurs NP, and the collaborations that have developed between park

   archeologists and the Native American communities.



   For more information about archeology at Voyageurs NP, go to the

   National Archeological Database (NADB;

   www.cast.uark.edu/other/nps/nadb/nadb.mul.html) and query on Koochiching

   County, MN.  There are at least seven references!



   To read the full article, go to

   http://www.saa.org/Publications/theSAAarchRec/mar07.pdf

   To learn more about Voyageurs NP, go to http://www.nps.gov/voya/

   First Finds from Excavation of President’s House in Philadelphia

   Archeologists working at the site of the President’s House at 6th &

   Market Streets in Independence NHP have located remains of the actual

   house.  These findings are shedding new light on Presidents George

   Washington and John Adams' residence from 1790 to 1800.  “We’re very

   excited,” said NPS Archeologist Jed Levin.  “It was a long shot that any

   portion of the house would survive.   And now we’re learning things we

   might otherwise never have known!”



   Excavations in the kitchen where Hercules – one of at least nine

   enslaved Africans who toiled in the

   Washington household – presided as George Washington’s chef, have

   unearthed a large portion of the southeast corner wall and foundation

   along the south wall of the main house.  As Levin explains, “Based on

   documentation, we thought the President’s House kitchen was only one

   story, so we didn’t expect it to have deep foundations.  But now we know

   it also had a basement.” A coin dated to 1833 from an upper level

   confirmed that the Presidents house was torn down in 1832 and another

   structure built on the lot.



   This particular excavation is part of the preparation for commemoration

   of the President’s House site.  The team, headed by Kelly/Maiello

   Architects and Planners, will design and build a new permanent outdoor

   installation commemorating the President’s House and all its occupants –

   including the nation’s first two presidents, their families, and the

   enslaved Africans who lived and worked in the Washington household.

   Contact: Jane Cowley, [log in to unmask]

   For more information about Independence NHP visit

   http://www.nps.gov/inde/



   NPS Southeast Archeological Center Receives Award

   The NPS Southeast Region Division of Education and Interpretation has

   awarded the Southeast Archeological Center (SEAC) the Keeper of the

   Light Award, the highest award it bestows. The award recognizes the

   critical role that education, interpretation, and outreach play in

   cultivating an understanding and appreciation for America's rich

   cultural heritage.



   For nearly two decades, through its Public Interpretation Initiative and

   other activities, SEAC has contributed to public education,

   interpretation, and outreach.  The award recognizes significant public

   outreach activities.  SEAC’s public education activities aid the NPS in

   accomplishing the NPS education/preservation mission set by the U.S.

   Department of the Interior’s National Strategy for Federal Archeology.

   For more information about the Southeast Archeological Center, visit

   http://www.nps.gov/history/seac/



   Pecos NHP to host Pecos Conference

   The 2007 Pecos Conference will be held on August 9-12 at Pecos NHP.

   This year's conference theme is Galisteo Basin Archeology.   In addition

   to the customary conference presentations and activities, the 2007

   conference will highlight current research and preservation efforts in

   the Galisteo Basin and northern Rio Grande.  Two mini-symposia, a Friday

   evening lecture, and Sunday tours to several Galisteo Basin

   archeological sites will focus on the Galisteo Basin.



   First inspired and organized by A.V. Kidder in 1927, the Pecos

   Conference has no formal organization or permanent leadership.  Open to

   all professional and avocational archeologists and the general public,

   the Pecos Conference is an important opportunity for students of

   Southwestern prehistory to meet.



   The 2007 conference is sponsored by the NPS; Museum of Indian Arts and

   Culture/Laboratory of Anthropology; US Forest Service; New Mexico State

   Historic Preservation Division; and the School for Advanced Research.



   For more information about the Pecos Conference and to register, go to

   www.swanet.org/2007_pecos_conference/



   Archeological Resources on NPS History Program website

   The NPS History Program, which posts information about unpublished and

   out of print reports and books about national park resources on the NPS

   History Program website, has surpassed the 2,000 document mark. First

   developed for internal use to facilitate access to hard to get

   resources, the studies available on the website reflect the wide

   diversity of research carried out in the National Park system.  Now in

   the 10th year of the project, the website boasts over 2,000 electronic

   copies of reports and books, and over 1500 articles on anthropology,

   history, architecture, biology, geology, and other topics.  In addition,

   selected out of print park handbooks, and interpretive guides are

   available.



   Project manager NPS Historian Harry Butowsky notes that “these

   publications were written by some of the best people the NPS ever

   employed.” Butowsky, a noted historian whose recent activities include

   collecting oral histories from Pearl Harbor survivors and historians,

   has received the prestigious George Wright Society Communication award,

   partly for the History website.  Butowsky continues work to identify

   documents for the website, and happily accepts suggestions of titles of

   out of print or unpublished documents pertaining to the NPS.  All of the

   publications can be printed out, and can be located through internet

   search engines.



   Of particular interest to archeologists is the Archeological

   Research/Publications in Archeology/Anthropology Papers Series,

   http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/archeology/index.htm.

   These publications were the culmination of a series of archeological and

   anthropological research studies conducted by the NPS starting in the

   late 1940s and early 1950s. Originally published as the Archeological

   Research Series, the series was retitled Publications in Archeology

   following the establishment of the Office of Professional Publications.

   The Anthropological Papers Series was discontinued after only two titles

   were published.  Three publications from these series are now available

   electronically, which can be reached through the “Classic Publications”

   button on the homepage.  Others will be posted as they become available.





   Underwater archeologists will be interested in the series of Submerged

   Cultural Resource Studies

   http://www.nps.gov/history/history/hisnps/submerged.htm. Currently, 15

   reports are posted and others will be posted as they become available.

   The majority of the studies report on the results of work completed by

   the NPS Submerged Resources Center in units of the national park system.



   The website also hosts electronic copies of publications from the NPS

   “Fauna Series,” which will be useful to zooarcheologists (

   http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/fauna.htm).  The studies

   are an outcome of the wildlife survey program initiated by George Wright

   in 1929.  The website has eight out of print publications from this

   series, including the first, by George Wright, “Fauna of the National

   Parks of the United States,” and two by noted biologist Adolph Murie.

    Contact: Harry Butowsky, [log in to unmask]

   To visit the website, go to http://www.nps.gov/history/history/



   Speakers at Archeology Field School, Vancouver National Historic Reserve

   Experts in the fields of history and archeology will speak during the

   seventh annual archeology field school at the Vancouver National

   Historic Reserve, a program of the Northwest Cultural Resources

   Institute.  These fascinating talks are open to the public.  The

   lectures will address topics ranging from the archeology of Jamestown to

   the Rogue River Indian wars at Fort Lane in southern Oregon.  The field

   school is a joint undertaking of the Northwest Cultural Resources

   Institute and Fort Vancouver National Historic Site (NPS); Portland

   State University; Washington State University, Vancouver; and the

   Vancouver National Historic Trust Reserve.

   All of the talks will be held in the Auditorium of the Pearson Air

   Museum.

   Contact: Doug Wilson, [log in to unmask]

   For more information about the Fort Vancouver NHS go to

   http://www.nps.gov/fova/



   Projects in Parks: Battlefield Archeology at King’s Mountain NMP

   Although portable metal detectors have been used recreationally since

   the development of the equipment in the mid-1940s, little common ground

   had been established between archeologists and metal detecting

   hobbyists. A wildfire in 1984 that consumed the tall grass covering the

   Little Big Horn Battlefield provided a unique opportunity for an

   innovative archeologist and a group of metal detector hobbyists to

   establish a mutually beneficial relationship. This collaboration on the

   plains of Montana provided the basis for a whole new line of inquiry

   which came to be known as Battlefield Archeology.  Projects undertaken

   on battlefields in the Southeast United States by staff of the NPS

   Southeast Archeological Center employed and further modified, and

   improved battlefield archeology methods to provide new and/or revised

   interpretations of battles associated with the American Revolution, the

   War of 1812, the Indian Wars, and the Civil War, including the Battle of

   King’s Mountain, Revolutionary War.



   NPS employees who can access the NPS intranet can read the full report

   by going to Projects in Parks <

   http://inside.nps.gov/waso/custommenu.cfm?lv=3&prg=279&id=3670> on

   InsideNPS.  Other readers can access the full report through the What’s

   New page  http://www.nps.gov/history/archeology/NEW.HTM on the

   Archeology Program website.





   Archeology E-Gram, distributed via e-mail on a regular basis, includes

   announcements about news, new publications, training opportunities,

   national and regional meetings, and other important goings-on related to

   public archeology in the National Park Service and other public

   agencies.  Recipients are encouraged to forward Archeology E-Grams to

   colleagues and relevant mailing lists.  The Archeology E-Gram is

   available on the News and Links page

   http://www.cr.nps.gov/archeology/public/news.htm on the Archeology

   Program website.



   Projects in Parks is a feature of the Archeology E-Gram that informs

   others about archeology-related projects in national parks.  Prospective

   authors should review information about submitting photographs on the

   Projects in Parks webpage on InsideNPS.  The full reports are available

   on the Projects in Parks webpage

   http://inside.nps.gov/waso/custommenu.cfm?lv=3&prg=279&id=3670 on

   InsideNPS; and through individual issues of the Archeology E-Gram on the

   on the News and Links page

   http://www.cr.nps.gov/archeology/public/news.htm on the Archeology

   Program website.



   Contact Karen Mudar, Archeology Program, NPS, (202) 354-2103,

   [log in to unmask] to contribute news items, stories for “Projects in

   Parks,” and to subscribe.

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