Holly Herbster and Suzanne Cherau

Past to Present: Archaeology and the Aquinnah WampanoagNortheast Anthropology, Number 64:43-54, 2002.

The Contact Period - New Discussions from Martha’s Vineyard.  Paper presented at the 42nd Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Anthropological Association, Bridgewater State College, Bridgewater, MA, 2002.

Past to Present: Archaeology and the Aquinnah Wampanoag.  Paper presented at the 67th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Denver, CO, 2002.

Holly Herbster

 Contexts for Contact- the Documentary Archaeology of Magunkaquog.  Paper presented at the American Society for Ethnohistory Annual Meeting, Quebec, Canada, 2002.

Matt Kierstead 

Vulcan: Birmingham’s Industrial ColossusIA: The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archaeology  28 (1) 59-74, 2002.

  

Alan Leveillee 

Symposium Discussant:  Voices from the Deep: Recent Advances in the Study and Management of Native North America's Submerged Cultural Resources.  69th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, 2004. 

 Evidence of Red Ocher as a Processed Commodity from Millbury and Charlton, MABulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society.  Volume 64(2)11-12, 2003.                        

Evidence for Significant Submerged Prehistoric Sites in Greenwich Bay, Rhode Island.  Paper presented at the 64th Annual Meeting of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Middleborough, MA, 2003.   

Best Plans Laid of Mice and Men:  Applied Archaeology in the Shadow of the URI Convocation Center.  Paper presented at the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Anthropological Association, Burlington, VT, 2003. 

Symposium Discussant:  Muddy Waters: Identifying, Assessing, and Managing Submerged Prehistoric Cultural Resources in the Northeastern United States.  36th Annual Conference on Historical and Underwater Archaeology, Providence, RI, 2003.

 Organizer and Chair:  Public Archaeology Session.  36th Annual Conference on Historical and Underwater Archaeology, Providence, RI, 2003

Twenty Years of Archaeology at PAL. Paper presented at the 42nd Annual Meeting of the New England Anthropological Association, Bridgewater, MA. 2002.

An Old Place, Safe and Quiet: A Blackstone River Valley Cremation Burial Site. Greenwood Publishing Company.  Westport, CT. 2002.

Alan Leveillee and Joseph Waller

 “ I Can’t Read So Good, But I Like Archaeology”, Tony C.: An Educational and Public Outreach Project in the Blackstone River Valley National Heritage CorridorBulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society.  Volume 64(1) 14-19, 2003.

Applied Archaeology Influencing Native Traditions: A Case from Rhode IslandArchaeology of Eastern North America. 30:21-28, 2002.

Duncan Ritchie

A Late Woodland and Contact Period Ceramic Assemblage From the Hartford Avenue Rockshelter, Uxbridge, MA.  Bulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society, 65(1): 9-17, 2004.

Late Woodland Lithic Resource Use and Native Group Territories in Eastern Massachusetts. In A Lasting Impression: Coastal, Lithic and Ceramic Research in New England Archaeology.  Edited by Jordan Kerber.  Bergin & Garvey, Westport, CT, 2002.

Local Lithic Materials in Archaic Technologies: Mylonite and Amphibolite From the Castle Hill Site, Wayland, Massachusetts. Bulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society (63) 1, 2. With Tonya Largy, 2002.

David S. Robinson

Whale Rock Light Project: Marine Archaeological Survey & Walter B. Eberle Memorial.  Invited lecture, Beavertail Lighthouse Museum Association's Annual Meeting, Jamestown, RI, 2005.     

Through the Looking Glass:  Technology's Role in Underwater Archaeology

 Invited lecture, presented:

·         as part of the Connecticut Museum of Natural History and Center for Archaeology's Summer 2005 Public Education Program, National Undersea Research Center, University of Connecticut-Avery Point Campus, Groton, CT, 2005.

·         as a public lecture for Massachusetts Archaeology Month 2004, the Custom House Maritime Museum, Newburyport, MA, 2004.

·         as part of the symposium, Technology and the Archaeologist: Applications of the New and Re-Creations of the Old, Conference on New England Archaeology 2004 Annual Meeting, Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center, Ledyard, CT, 2004.

  

'Land ho!' - A Nautical Archaeologist's Search for Submerged Paleolandscapes in Southern New England.  Invited paper presented:

·         as part of the symposium, Regional CRM Investigations in New England:  Recent Discoveries by PAL, Inc., and PAST, Inc., 45th annual meeting of the Northeastern Anthropological Association, Lake Placid, NY, 2005.

·         as part of the University of Rhode Island Graduate School of Oceanography's Oceanographic Archaeology Program's Spring 2005 Seminar Series, URI-GSO Narragansett Bay Campus, Narragansett, RI, 2005.

Assessing the Submerged Prehistoric Archaeological Sensitivity of the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary.  Paper presented to the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, Marine Archaeology Working Group of the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary's Advisory Council, Scituate, MA.  2004. 

Muddy Waters: Identifying, Assessing, and Managing Submerged Native North American Cultural Resources in the Northeastern United StatesPaper presented at the 69th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, in the symposium Voices from the Deep: Recent Advances in the Study and Management of Native North America's Submerged Cultural Resources (D. S. Robinson, organizer/chair).  Montreal, Quebec, Canada, 2004.

 PAL Assists National Marine Sanctuary with Maritime Heritage Planning Initiative. Conference on New England Archaeology Newsletter 23:16-17, 2004. 

ROV Technology Proves Effective During Underwater Survey in Boston Harbor. Conference on New England Archaeology Newsletter 23:17, 2004. 

Submerged Prehistoric Sites in Southern New England:  Past Research and Future Directions.  Bulletin of the Archaeological Society of Connecticut 65:41-56. 2003.  With Daria E. Merwin and Daniel P. Lynch.

Prehistoric Underwater CRM in the Northeastern United States:  Recent Projects and Approaches.   Paper presented a part of the symposium Muddy Waters:  Identifying, Assessing, and Managing Submerged Prehistoric Cultural Resources in the Northeastern United States (David S. Robinson, organizer/chair) at the 36th Annual Conference on Historical and Underwater Archaeology, Providence, RI. 2003. 

Recent Approaches to Assessing Submerged Prehistoric Sites in Southern New England: Past Research and Future Directions.  Paper presented at the Spring Meeting of the Archaeological Society of Connecticut, Essex, CT. 2002.  With Daria E. Merwin and Daniel P. Lynch

Recent Approaches to Assessing the Archaeological Potential for Submerged Ancient Native American Cultural Resources in the Northeastern U.S.  Paper presented at the 42nd Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Anthropological Association (NEAA), Bridgewater, MA, 2002.

Assessing the Archaeological Potential for Submerged Ancient Native American Resources in the Northeastern U.S.: A Marine-transgressive Approach.   Paper presented at the National Museum of Denmark’s Center for Maritime Archaeological Research, Roskilde, Denmark, 2002.

Joseph N. Waller 

2004 in press:  “Ashes to Ashes and Dust to Dust”:  Observations on Human Skeletal Taphonomy at Two Historic Cemeteries in Northern Rhode IslandNortheast Historical Archaeology. 

The Memorial Park Locus 2 PaleoIndian Site in Northeastern Massachusetts.  Paper presented at the 69th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, 2004. 

Ashes to Ashes and Dust to Dust: Observations on Human Skeletal Taphonomy at Two Historic Cemeteries in the Northeastern United States. Paper presented at the 42nd Annual Meeting of the Northeastern Anthropological Association, Bridgewater, MA. 2002.

Joseph N. Waller and Alan Leveillee

Archaic Period Land Use and Settlement in the Pawcatuck River Watershed of South-Central Rhode IslandNortheast Anthropology 63:71-82, 2002.

Joseph N. Waller and Duncan Ritchie 

Do Hearths Necessarily Mean Homes?  A Comparison of Late Archaic Mobility and Settlement in Northeastern Massachusetts and Central Rhode Island as Represented at the Pine Hawk and Bear Swamp 2 Archaeological Sites. Paper presented at the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Conference on New England Archaeology, Sturbridge, MA, 2003. 

Memorial Park Locus 2: Report on the Discovery of a Probable PaleoIndian Occupation within the Combined Lower Shawsheen and Merrimack River Drainages of Northeastern Massachusetts. Paper presented at the 43rd annual meeting of the Northeastern Anthropological Association, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, 2003.