SHA 2025 Conference on
Historical and Underwater Archaeology
Landscapes in Transition: Looking to the Past to Adapt to the Future
New Orleans, Louisiana | January 8-11, 2025
Conference Agenda
Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 16th May 2025, 03:40:19am CDT
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Session Overview | |
Location: Studio 7 Capacity 90 |
Date: Wednesday, 08/Jan/2025 | |
1:00pm - 5:00pm |
WKS-6: Historic Button Identification Location: Studio 7 Instructor: Lindsay Bloch, Tempered Archaeological Services, LLC Most historic button guides emphasize ornate or specialty buttons, not the everyday buttons that most people wore. Using a material and technological approach, in this workshop we will cover how to identify 18th-20th century buttons of metal, glass, porcelain, organic materials, and synthetics. We will discuss chronological change in button manufacture and decorations, as well as gendered aspects of button use. Through lecture and hands-on practice, participants will learn to identify button composition, date, and use context. |
Date: Thursday, 09/Jan/2025 | |
9:00am - 11:45am |
SYM-291 (T): Comparative Colonialism: A View from English North America Location: Studio 7 Chair: Julia A King, St. Mary's College of Maryland Chair: Barbara J. Heath, University of Tennessee Discussant: Philip Levy, University of South Florida 15min intro + 15min presentation “The Prospects Of Obtaining Wealth With Ease”: Considering Native American Enslavement In The Archaeological Record At Drayton Hall. 9:30am - 9:45am Colonial Cattle Economies 9:45am - 10:00am Eurasian Grains, Labor, and the Seventeenth-Century Chesapeake 10:00am - 10:30am 15min presentation + 15min break Tracing Trade: A Documentary History of Three 17th-Century Sites in New England 10:30am - 10:45am Assessing Functional Variation in Colonoware Assemblages at an Inter-regional Scale 10:45am - 11:00am Portobago And St. Giles Kussoe: A Comparison Of Two Trading Posts, One From Virginia And The Other From Carolina 11:00am - 11:15am The Sacred is Secular: An Analysis of Jesuit Rings Recovered from Colonial Sites throughout the Eastern Woodlands 11:15am - 11:45am 15min presentation + 15min discussion From the Piedmont to the Lowcountry: An Empirical Comparison of Catawba-Made Pottery and “River Burnished” Colonowares in South Carolina |
1:30pm - 3:15pm |
GEN-05 (UW): Maritime Lagniappe: Community-Engaged Research and Management Location: Studio 7 Chair: Madeline Roth, East Carolina University Culturally Relevant Frameworks for the Identification and Protection of Maritime Heritage of Guam and Northern Marianna Islands 1:45pm - 2:00pm Traditional Cultural Places Inventories and Monitoring: Expanding the Management Mindset 2:00pm - 2:15pm SeaTube and Video Annotations: Collaboration Tools for UCH Interpretation 2:15pm - 2:45pm 15min presentation + 15min break Managing Iceland's Maritime Cultural Heritage: A Collaborative Plan For The Future 2:45pm - 3:00pm Interactive Website to Mitigate Damage to Shallow Fresh Water Shipwrecks 3:00pm - 3:15pm Exploring the Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary at Scale |
Date: Friday, 10/Jan/2025 | |
8:45am - 12:00pm |
SYM-161 (T): Social Landscapes of Settler Colonialism in the Caribbean Location: Studio 7 Chair: Kristen R. Fellows, North Dakota State University Chair: James A. Delle, Chronicle Heritage Discussant: Mark Hauser, Northwestern University “The Golden Splendor of Montserrat Limes!”: A Multi-Scalar Archaeology of Caribbean Citrus Industry (ca. 1852-1928) 9:00am - 9:15am An Archaeology of Supremacy: A Planter's Household at Stewart Castle, Jamaica 9:15am - 9:30am Economic and Social Outlooks for Middle Management in Colonial Dominica 9:30am - 9:45am St. Lucia’s 18th-Century Free Black Community and its Impact on the French and Haitian Revolutions 9:45am - 10:15am 15min presentation + 15min break Material and Social Landscapes at LaSoye, Dominica, 15th-18th Century 10:15am - 10:30am Paths from the Plantation to Prosperity: An Archaeology of Barbadian Migration to Liberia 10:30am - 10:45am Power and Position on the Barbuda Plantation 10:45am - 11:00am Pre- and Post-Emancipation Consumer Choice among Enslaved and Free Laborers on St. Kitts’ Southeast Peninsula 11:00am - 11:15am Repurposed Metal Objects from the Plantation at Marshalls Pen: How the Reuse of Iron Reflects Settler Colonial Tension in 19th Century Jamaica 11:15am - 11:30am United States Virgin Islands Tropical Hardwoods Debris Reuse Guidelines: An Example of Collaboration Among Federal and Territorial Disaster Response/Recovery Partners Addressing a Unique Category of Community Cultural Assets 11:30am - 12:00pm 15min presentation + 15min discussion Untamed Ecologies And Fugitive Geographies In Colonial Dominica, 1763 – 1978 |
1:30pm - 3:45pm |
GEN-17 (T): Landscapes of Memory and Identity: Exploring Religious Sites, Urban Waterfronts, and Environmental Legacies in Historical Archaeology Location: Studio 7 Chair: Ian Kuijt, Univ. of Notre Dame Historical Memory in Cane Hill, Arkansas 1:45pm - 2:00pm Beyond the Site Boundary: Between Specific Sites and Expansive Narratives 2:00pm - 2:15pm Demographics and Everyday Matters: Mobile Bay, Alabama 2:15pm - 2:30pm Landscape, Movement and Constraint: Germanna (Virginia) in the First Half of the Eighteenth Century 2:30pm - 3:00pm 15min presentation + 15min break Thinking about Villages: Population and Settlement Organization, Nineteenth to Twentieth century Inishark, Ireland. 3:00pm - 3:15pm If I Wanted To Get There, I Wouldn’t Start From Here: Movement, Place And Space In Post-medieval Communities 3:15pm - 3:30pm "The Need of Being Versed in Country Things” 3:30pm - 3:45pm Archaeological Excavation Changing an Urban Landscape: The Case of a Mass Killing Site of the Bangladesh Genocide. |
Date: Saturday, 11/Jan/2025 | |
1:30pm - 3:00pm |
GEN-08 (UW): Old Black Water, Keep on Rollin': Maritime Coastal Zone, Cultural Landscapes, and Climate Location: Studio 7 Chair: Jeremy R Borrelli, East Carolina University A Maritime Cultural Landscape Study of St. Croix, USVI 1:45pm - 2:00pm The Graveyard Shift: A Study Of A Boat Graveyard In The Wetlands of Pensacola 2:00pm - 2:15pm A Look Below the Marsh: Climate-Related Shoreline Impacts on the 18th Century Waterfront at Brunswick Town, North Carolina 2:15pm - 2:30pm The American Lighthouse and Shipwreck Site Formation 2:30pm - 2:45pm Monitoring the Effects of Changing Coastal Processes on Historic Shipwrecks in New Jersey 2:45pm - 3:00pm Above Water, Below Ground: Toward an amphibious archaeology of empire in the early American Chesapeake |
3:15pm - 4:30pm |
SYM-407 (T): Landscapes in Dispute, Territorial Futures: Restitution and Reparation in the Face of Enclosure, Industrialization, and Extractivism Location: Studio 7 Chair: Daniella Jofre, Universidad de Chile Discussant: Daniela Balanzategui, University of Massachussets Boston Archaeology, Food Sovereignty, and Networks of Solidarity among Indigenous, Afrodescendens Communities, and Beyond in Brazil and Ecuador 3:30pm - 3:45pm Extracting Displacement: Material Heritage, Extractivism, Paramilitarism, and La Guardia Indígena in Colombia 3:45pm - 4:00pm Unveiling the Colonial Legacy in the Chota Valley, Ecuador: The 20th Century Mascarilla Sugar Mill 4:00pm - 4:30pm 15min presentation + 15min discussion Interpolating Stakeholders: The Industrial Complex of Resource Managment and Enterprise |
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