Two Online Archeology Events on 15 Feb.
Two online events about archeology are coming up next Thursday, 15 February.
The Lake Champlain Maritime Museum will host its third annual Virtual Archaeology Conference that afternoon from 1:00 to 4:00 P.M., with staff speaking about various work going on at and around the museum.
The scheduled presentations are:
Go to this webpage for more details on the museum’s program and to register.
That same evening, starting at 7:00 P.M., the Shirley-Eustis House Association will host an online lecture by Boston City Archaeologist Joe Bagley on “Archaeology at Shirley Place.”
Bagley will share new information learned about the eighteenth-century enslaved inhabitants of the estate and new insights into the former location of the 1747 Shirley-Eustis House. The presentation will include artifact discussions and digital reconstructions of the historic property before it was developed in the nineteenth century.
Go to this page to register for the Shirley-Eustis House’s event.
Both of these online events are free, but donations to the hosting organizations are welcome.
The Lake Champlain Maritime Museum will host its third annual Virtual Archaeology Conference that afternoon from 1:00 to 4:00 P.M., with staff speaking about various work going on at and around the museum.
The scheduled presentations are:
- Patricia Reid, “Legacy Collection: Leege Collection Artifacts from Arnold’s Bay”
- Cherilyn Gilligan, “Arnold’s Bay Artifacts: Conservation and Context”
- Chris Sabick, “The Excavation and Documentation of the Revolutionary War Row Galley Congress”
- Paul Gates, “Site Formation Processes: Defining the Theoretical Process of Archaeology for the Revolutionary Warship Congress”
Go to this webpage for more details on the museum’s program and to register.
That same evening, starting at 7:00 P.M., the Shirley-Eustis House Association will host an online lecture by Boston City Archaeologist Joe Bagley on “Archaeology at Shirley Place.”
Bagley will share new information learned about the eighteenth-century enslaved inhabitants of the estate and new insights into the former location of the 1747 Shirley-Eustis House. The presentation will include artifact discussions and digital reconstructions of the historic property before it was developed in the nineteenth century.
Go to this page to register for the Shirley-Eustis House’s event.
Both of these online events are free, but donations to the hosting organizations are welcome.
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