The Last Quarter Century in Canadian Plains Archaeology

Conference Paper

The Last Quarter Century in Canadian Plains Archaeology

Ian Dyck

Abstract

Over the past 25 years Canadian Plains archaeology has been transformed from a small-scale, modestly funded, self-disciplined enterprise, based in provincial museums, archaeological societies, universities and national historic parks, into a variable-scale enterprise dominated by cultural resource management imperatives, funded by industrial developers, regulated by provincial governments, and sensitive to aboriginal interests. This paper reviews important developments during this period - in orientation, methods, substantive results and information dissemination.