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Episode 53: Digging in Algonquin Park Part 1 - Indigenous Origins
Manage episode 378162271 series 2896861
Episode 53: Digging in Algonquin Park Part 1 - Indigenous Origins
This is the first of three episodes on archeological activities that have taken place in Algonquin Park since the late 1930s. The focus of the Part 1 is to provide some insight into the archeological and anthropological origins of Algonquin Park's first visitors.
This musical interlude is called Arrival and comes from Dan Gibson’s Solitudes CD Thunder Spirit. It is brought to you with the approval of Digital Funding LLC. Solitudes music can be found where ever you get your music streaming.
For this series, I’ve relied on a number of key sources including:
- Chapter 2 in David Euler and Mike Wilton’s 2009 Algonquin Park – The Human Impact by Chief Kirby Whiteduck,
- Rory MacKay’s Algonquin Park – A Place Like No Other and Spirits of the Little Bonnechere
- Several ‘thought leadership papers by William Allen including:
- Importance of Archaeology re Species at Risk: Eel Focus William Allen Nov 2007
- Nineteenth Century Aboriginal Farmers of the Madawaska River
- Several ‘thought leadership papers by Rory MacKay including
- Potatoes in the Pines - Looking at the Material Culture of Nineteenth Century Logging Camps: An Algonquin Park Perspective and beyond April 2014
- Why was this research on the camboose shanties of Algonquin Park important?
- Archaeological Research in Algonquin Provincial Park and immediate vicinity to 2023: A Categorization and Chronology
- An Alternate Explanation for the Anomalous Vision Pits at Rock Lake in Algonquin Provincial Park
- Ontario Archeological Society’s ARC Notes Vol 12 Issue 5 Sept-Oct 2007
Pukaskwa Pits: Rethinking the vision quest hypothesis, by Nancy Champagne
Ontario Archeological Society’s ARC Notes Vol 14 Issue 6 Nov-Dec 2009
The Aarel site Caboose Shanty, Algonquin Park by Rory MacKay
Archaeologists Come to Their Senses - Looking beyond visual archaeological evidence By William Allen
Ontario Archeological Society’s ARC Notes Vol 16 Issue 2 Mar-Apr 2011
The Nesswabic (Petawawa) River Watershed: Zone of Political Tension over the Centuries by William Allen
- The Ontario Archaeological Society Field Manual
- William Hurley’s Second Annual report on Archaeological research conducted in Algonquin Provincial Park.
- Dr. John Casselman: American Eels in the St. Lawrence River System - Going, Going, Gone
- Paddling through the past. Ottawa-Gatineau's Ancient Cultural Landscape
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fShFTkp9j7g
64 Episoden
Manage episode 378162271 series 2896861
Episode 53: Digging in Algonquin Park Part 1 - Indigenous Origins
This is the first of three episodes on archeological activities that have taken place in Algonquin Park since the late 1930s. The focus of the Part 1 is to provide some insight into the archeological and anthropological origins of Algonquin Park's first visitors.
This musical interlude is called Arrival and comes from Dan Gibson’s Solitudes CD Thunder Spirit. It is brought to you with the approval of Digital Funding LLC. Solitudes music can be found where ever you get your music streaming.
For this series, I’ve relied on a number of key sources including:
- Chapter 2 in David Euler and Mike Wilton’s 2009 Algonquin Park – The Human Impact by Chief Kirby Whiteduck,
- Rory MacKay’s Algonquin Park – A Place Like No Other and Spirits of the Little Bonnechere
- Several ‘thought leadership papers by William Allen including:
- Importance of Archaeology re Species at Risk: Eel Focus William Allen Nov 2007
- Nineteenth Century Aboriginal Farmers of the Madawaska River
- Several ‘thought leadership papers by Rory MacKay including
- Potatoes in the Pines - Looking at the Material Culture of Nineteenth Century Logging Camps: An Algonquin Park Perspective and beyond April 2014
- Why was this research on the camboose shanties of Algonquin Park important?
- Archaeological Research in Algonquin Provincial Park and immediate vicinity to 2023: A Categorization and Chronology
- An Alternate Explanation for the Anomalous Vision Pits at Rock Lake in Algonquin Provincial Park
- Ontario Archeological Society’s ARC Notes Vol 12 Issue 5 Sept-Oct 2007
Pukaskwa Pits: Rethinking the vision quest hypothesis, by Nancy Champagne
Ontario Archeological Society’s ARC Notes Vol 14 Issue 6 Nov-Dec 2009
The Aarel site Caboose Shanty, Algonquin Park by Rory MacKay
Archaeologists Come to Their Senses - Looking beyond visual archaeological evidence By William Allen
Ontario Archeological Society’s ARC Notes Vol 16 Issue 2 Mar-Apr 2011
The Nesswabic (Petawawa) River Watershed: Zone of Political Tension over the Centuries by William Allen
- The Ontario Archaeological Society Field Manual
- William Hurley’s Second Annual report on Archaeological research conducted in Algonquin Provincial Park.
- Dr. John Casselman: American Eels in the St. Lawrence River System - Going, Going, Gone
- Paddling through the past. Ottawa-Gatineau's Ancient Cultural Landscape
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fShFTkp9j7g
64 Episoden
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