Updating nearshore and shoreline archaeology: Boat graveyards, wharf piles, harbour jetsam, and always more

Session Hosting Format: 
in-person session
Date/Heure: 
Vendredi, mai 2, 2025 - 1:20pm
(NDT)
Room: 
Queen's College 4001
Organizer(s): 
  • Marie Trottier
  • Thomas Garneau-Lelièvre
  • Louis Duval
  • Brad Loewen
Contact Email: 
Session Description (300 word max): 

Archaeology has eternal love for shipwrecks, especially those with a rich cargo and a famous name. Archaeology has been slower to warm to nearshore and shoreline sites, even though these sites do not lack suitors. Recreational divers succumb to the charm of boat and ship graveyards, wharf remains and scattered jetsam in harbours and moorages. Beach-walkers, after a major storm, discover the haunting remains of a ship long hidden by sand, or dislodged from its previous resting place. Kids and families tirelessly scramble on the overgrown ruins of their favourite abandoned canal, dam, wharf or timber slide. Many people intuitively espouse these sites as a true record of a land built on wood and water. A growing community of maritime archaeologists has also recognised the inner beauty of these abundant nearshore and shoreline sites, and reflected on the special challenges facing their inventory, protection and study.

The springboard for this session is the underwater site of a 19th-century boomtown on the Saint Lawrence River, Anse-aux-Batteaux, and its sister shoreline site, the monumental ruins of the Canal de Soulanges. Students from the Université de Montréal have investitaged these sites since 2017. To build a broader session, we invite updates on nearshore and shoreline sites – from both research and heritage perspectives. We invite reports on the vital community role in reporting, monitoring and investigating these sites. We invite multi-site, regional syntheses. We invite contributions from all archaeological periods that will deepen our understanding of strategic places in shaping the fluvial, lacustrine and maritime archaeological record over time. The work of Westerdahl (1992, 2006), Sherratt (2006) and Ford (2011) on maritime cultural landscapes, seen as physical networks of transport routes, nodes and portages, may help to structure such regional, deep-time archaeological approaches.

Masquer Présentations
01:20 PM: Anse-aux-Batteaux (Les Coteaux, Québec): The submerged remains of a 19th-century river port and ship graveyard
01:40 PM: Archaeology of a 19th-century river steamboat: the Chieftain?
02:00 PM: Anse-aux-Batteaux in the 19th century: a case study of an underwater artefact scatter
02:20 PM: Uncovering the Mid-19th Century Central Toronto Waterfront– New Excavations at Union Station
03:00 PM: Report on the Boultenhouse Shipyard Archaeological Project: A Non-Invasive Survey of a 19th Century Shipyard
03:20 PM: Grandiose visions, monumental remains: coming to archaeological terms with the Soulanges Canal, 1893-1960
03:40 PM: Reservoirs of Knowledge: artifact collectors and collections from southwest Nova Scotia
04:00 PM: What happens to small ports when ships no longer call? Coteau Landing’s transition to villégiature as a case study in changing shoreline occupation modes