The Paper I Always Wanted to Give, but Never Had the Nerve - or the Evidence

Session Hosting Format: 
in-person session
Organizer(s): 
  • Peter Ramsden, McMaster University
Contact Email: 
Session Description (300 word max): 

I expect most people are familiar with that situation where you have an insight into some episode in the archaeological past: you feel sure you suddenly understand why something happened or how two events are connected, or you experience a vague understanding of some general process underlying some of the broad episodes in ancient human history.  Sometimes these insights come to us in the course of conversations over bar tables, which can go late into the night.  But I also expect that for most of us, those insights generally remain as vague notions: trying to write a paper or book about them would be just too time consuming and might not work out anyway.  And we have other chores, and other bar conversations, to get on with.

 

In this session I invite people to share some of those unformulated insights - without the tedious necessity of presenting evidence or making well-reasoned arguments.  Just tell us what your crazy idea is. And if you can do it 10 minutes (preferably) while showing us some interesting pictures, so much the better.  If you're interested in participating, contact me at ramsden@mcmaster.ca.

Presentations
A medieval coin-undrum from southwest Nova Scotia
Presentation format: In-Person
Author(s):
  • Benjamin Pentz - Echoes CHM

A new titlist for Canada's oldest English coin has emerged from an artifact collection in southwest Nova Scotia. This 14th Century, Edward III (1327–77) half groat was found by a collector at a large archaeological site and Mi'kmaq encampment on the Lake Rossignol Reservoir. Frustratingly, most of my "dime a dozen" theories of Who, When and Why are tarnished by poor context and underweight evidence. If these explanations are "not worth a plugged nickel”, then, I ask the audience, "A penny for your thoughts...?"

Constant Craving: Musings on the Absence and Presence of Walrus in Dorset Assemblages in Newfoundland
Presentation format: In-Person
Author(s):
  • Deirdre Elliott

In early 2021, I had the opportunity to analyze an interesting assemblage of faunal remains recovered from a Middle Dorset site on the west coast of Newfoundland. Most of the interesting things are either taxonomic or taphonomic, and would likely bore (taphonomy pun) audience members out of their seats. But out of nearly 7000 fragments of bone, I identified six as walrus – and I’ve been thinking about them ever since. Walrus seem never to have been particularly abundant, or at least abundantly accessed, on the island of Newfoundland, where Dorset sites are the most numerous of all Indigenous sites known to date. Join me as I, despite having little supporting evidence, explore the concept of longing in the archaeological record of the Dorset in Newfoundland, and in a discussion of some of the possible causes, implications, and parallels elsewhere.

Creative versus wishful thinking? Plains Woodland in the Lauder Sandhills, southwestern Manitoba
Presentation format: In-Person
Author(s):
  • Scott Hamilton - Lakehead University

In the late 1980s, Dr. Bev Nicholson described Vickers Focus pottery, reminiscent of Plains Woodland wares from widely scattered southern Manitoba sites. Such Plains Woodland pottery is associated with semi-sedentary forager-farmer lifestyles in the south, and Bev wondered about its presence north of the generally agreed limit of Indigenous agricultural production. In 1993 he invited Scott Hamilton to join him in investigating such sites in the Lauder Sandhills. Our scotch-talk often revolved around whether Vickers Focus represented a northward expansion of forager-horticulturalists, or whether they adapted in favour of mobile foraging. If the former, how did they manage it so far north, if the latter why did they occupy places removed from conventional archaeological expectations, and what evidence was required to address such questions?

This introduced us to new techniques far beyond our primary training and contributed to the training of several academic generations of students. Hindsight forces me to wince at some of our assumptions, but our work clarified that the distinction between mobile foraging and agricultural village life was a continuum rather than a binary choice, and that adaptive flexibility plays a significant role in human history.

Did the Beothuk actually speak an Algonkian language?
Presentation format: In-Person
Author(s):
  • Jamie Andronowski-Brake - Provincial Archaeology Office, NL

Debate about whether the Beothuk spoke an Algonkian language goes back to the nineteenth century and largely ended in 1978 with the publication of John Hewson’s Beothuk Vocabularies.  He concluded that their language must have been part of the Algonkian family, however, some researchers have recently raised doubts about this.  Clear archaeological evidence for an ancestral Beothuk presence in the region for approximately 2000 years appears to rule out the possibility of them speaking a Central Algonkian language.  In other words, if it was an Algonkian language, it could only have been an Eastern Algonkian language.  Furthermore, Hewson’s understanding of the position of the Beothuk language began with the idea that all of the recent historical neighbours of the Beothuk were speakers of Algonkian languages, and therefore this family was the best source of comparative data for his study.  However, currently available evidence suggests that the late precontact period next-door neighbours of the Beothuk were Iroquoians and Dorset.  They may not have had any Algonkian neighbours in precontact times at all, which suggests that we may need to go back to the drawing board for comparative linguistic data.   

On A Cold Winter’s Night
Presentation format: In-Person
Author(s):
  • Philip Woodley - Western University

People who lived during the Middle Woodland period of southern Ontario (ca 400 BCE – 900CE) were hunter-gatherers, foragers, fishers, and procurers who knew their environment and stored foodstuffs to support themselves through the cold season. Besides requiring food and water to survive, firewood would have been essential for heating homes and cooking during the winter making it a requirement for winter survival, one not easily procured from beneath a thick blanket of snow. In this paper I will present some speculative concepts that, much like other staples, firewood would have been collected ahead of time and cached in areas where people planned on spending the winter.

Save your drill bits for something useful: a commentary on clay pipe stem dating techniques
Presentation format: In-Person
Author(s):
  • Barry Gaulton - Memorial University

Ever since J.C. Harrington (1954) and Lewis Binford (1962) first postulated methods for dating colonial-era archaeological sites using the stem bore holes from broken clay tobacco pipes, archaeologists in North America have been hunching over their desks busily measuring these fragments with slavish enthusiasm. I was among these naïve acolytes. Tens of thousands of pipestems later, I had nothing to show for it other than bad posture, poor eyesight, a bunch of worn-down drill bits, and a long list of excuses as to why these dating techniques were not reliable. This paper is a tongue-in-cheek account of a journey through pipe bore measuring madness, culminating in an intervention by my mentor and dear friend Jim Tuck, whose threat to pave his driveway with my coveted pipe stems finally released me from interpretative purgatory.

The Crap We Don’t Know: Searching for Human Waste in Ancient Times
Presentation format: In-Person
Author(s):
  • Gary Warrick - Wilfrid Laurier University

Archaeology has failed to address one of the fundamental issues in the lives of ancient peoples – where did people excrete their bodily waste and what happened to it afterwards? A brief survey of global archaeology and history demonstrates a relative silence on ancient practices surrounding the excretion, disposal, and use of human waste. Considering the very real health hazards of human waste, this is a topic that deserves more attention. The potential value of pursuing archaeological research on human waste is discussed in the context of Huron-Wendat settlements of the sixteenth and seventeenth century.

The Threads Be Unravelling: The Legislative Make-believe of Contemporary Cemeteries as Archaeological Sites
Presentation format: In-Person
Author(s):
  • Holly Martelle - TMHC

The cultural resource management industry in Ontario is witnessing some bewildering times. Never in the course of their careers could archaeologists envision a scenario where they would be conducting test pit survey and excavation smack dab in the middle of a very active, contemporary cemetery, amongst standing stones, intact graves, personal commemorations, and active mourners. Yet here we are, on a regular basis, undertaking such work as a result of legislative knitting of two disparate pieces of legislation and regulatory oversight. This paper outlines the situation in an effort to seek input from others on how to unravel this untenable situation.

Then Again, I've Probably Got It Wrong.
Presentation format: In-Person
Author(s):
  • Peter Ramsden - McMaster University

One outgrowth of a paper I published back in the Stone Age was the general idea (only in my head) that cultural change can result from a misunderstanding of the meaning of items of material culture. In a nutshell: somebody attributes an erroneous significance to a piece of material culture, starts behaving as though they had got it right, and their mistake becomes the new accepted meaning of the item in question. In some cases, the results can be quite profound.

Tracing the Qivittoq in the Archaeological Landscape
Presentation format: In-Person
Author(s):
  • Mari Kleist - Ilisimatusarfik/Grønlands Universitet

In Greenland, many stories—especially from hunters—tell of sightings or encounters with qivittut (singular: qivittoq). A qivittoq is someone who has abandoned society, often driven by shame, anger, jealousy, or despair, and seeks to survive alone in the wilderness. According to legend, they eventually gain supernatural powers, can take the shape of animals, or move incredibly fast across the landscape. Feared as vengeful and dangerous, their stories serve as cautionary tales about the consequences of isolation.

Deeply rooted in Greenlandic culture, the qivittoq tradition appears in both ancient legends and modern literature and film. Even today, there are reports of encounters, especially in fjords during spring, summer, and early autumn.

I have long wanted to survey specific fjords to document locations linked to qivittoq sightings. But can we trace the qivittoq in the archaeological landscape? And is it even possible? This paper explores examples and key questions.