5-0320 PRESERVING TRACES, REVEALING TIDEMARKS, EXPLORING LEGACIES: THE PERSISTENT DIFFERENCE(S) OF SHELL MIDDEN ARCHAEOLOGY
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Saturday, November 19, 2011: 10:15-12:00

Abstract is available to registrants only. Please log in or register to view abstract text.

This session would be of particular interest to:
Practicing and Applied Anthropologists, Teachers of Anthropology in Community Colleges, Students, Those involved in mentoring activities
Organizers:  Michelle A Lelievre (Department of Anthropology, University of Chicago)
Chairs:  Alan F Greene (Department of Anthropology, University of Chicago)
10:30
 Jomon Shell-Middens and Politics of Ethnic Identity: The Japanese, the Ainu, or Someone Else?
Fumiko Ikawa-Smith (Department of Anthropology, McGill University)
10:45
Tracing Archaeological Histories Through the (Dis)Continuities of Shell Midden Formation
Aubrey Cannon (Department of Anthropology, McMaster University)
11:00
Scaling Shell Midden Seasonality Across the Millennia Years
Meghan Burchell (Department of Anthropology, McMaster University) and Aubrey Cannon (Department of Anthropology McMaster University)
11:15
A Legacy of Season of Harvest and Paleoclimate Reconstruction From Shells of the Variable Coquina Clam (Donax variabilis)
Irvy R Quitmyer (Department of Natural History, Florida Museum of Natural History) and Douglas S Jones (Florida Museum of Natural History)
11:45
Shell Midden Legacies In Coastal Maine: Connecting Past and Present Native Traditions
Lisa K Neuman (Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology and Native American Programs, University of Maine) and Brian Robinson (Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology and Climate Change Institute, University of Maine)
See more of: Archaeology Division

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Duke University Press

Sponsors:
Wiley-Blackwell
Oxford University Press
Microsoft Research