This sounds like a neat one for those interested in the Northwest
Coast (like me!). There is information below, and I will upload the
flyer, too.
Prof. Bovy
------------------------------------------------------------
From: "Anthony P. Graesch" <
agra...@ucla.edu>
Date: May 12, 2009 6:45:15 PM EDT
To: "Anthony P. Graesch" <
agra...@ucla.edu>
Subject: 2009 Archaeology Field School
Greetings,
I'm wondering if you could distribute this archaeology field school
announcement to your undergraduate e-mail listserve. Many thanks!
-------------------
The UCLA Archaeology Field School in British Columbia has one
remaining enrollment slot for the 2009 season.
Join an exciting historical archaeological investigation of a
prominent 19th century Sto:lo (Coast Salish) village in the Pacific
Northwest. Our household-level research is aimed at understanding
how aboriginal political economies changed following European contact
and settlement. In 2009, excavation will focus on two cedar plank
long houses and defensive elements of a large, politically important
community.
In the field, you will learn core archaeology field methods, including
survey, mapping, excavation, materials analysis, and laboratory
procedures. For more information, see the attached flier (pdf), visit
these web sites (below), and/or contact the instructor.
http://www.graesch.com/archaeology/fieldschool
http://www.archaeology.ucla.edu/BritishColumbia/overview.htm
Anthony P. Graesch, Ph.D.
Postdoctoral Fellow, Center on Everyday Lives of Families at UCLA
Research Associate, Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA
310-267-4256 (office)
323-460-4140 (fax)
310-490-7594 (mobile)
anthony....@ucla.edu