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, 01:03:29am CDT
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Session Overview |
Date: Tuesday, 07/Jan/2025 | |
3:00pm - 6:00pm | REG-1: SHA Registration Location: Preservation Hall Foyer |
Date: Wednesday, 08/Jan/2025 | |
7:30am - 9:00pm | REG-2: SHA Registration Location: Preservation Hall Foyer |
9:00am - 11:30am | WKS-4: Historical Plastics in the Archaeological Record Location: Studio 4 Instructors: Kimberly Wooten and Julia Huddleson, California Department of Transportation, Cultural Studies Office This workshop will give an overview of the history and development of plastics, followed by hands-on training with plastic artifacts from the early 1900s through the modern era, with a focus on domestiic sites. |
9:00am - 1:00pm | WKS-2: Water, water, everywhere; Hey, what's that in the drink?: Submerged Cultural Resources Awareness Workshop Location: Studio 3 Instructors: Kendra Kennedy, RPA (Wisconsin Historical Society); Garry Momber (Maritime Archaeology Trust) |
9:00am - 5:00pm | SHA Board of Directors Meeting Location: Riverview |
9:00am - 5:00pm | T-1: WWII Museum All-Day Pass and Campaigns of Courage Tour The National World War II Museum is located at 945 Magazine Street, New Orleans, LA 70130, approximately a 15-minute walk from the New Orleans Marriott. The National World War II Museum tells the story of the American experience in the war that changed the world - why it was fought, how it was won, and what it means today. You will receive a Museum Compass Pass, which gives you access to all permanent and special exhibits. The museum is open from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., so arrive early and tour the exhibits. At 1:30 p.m., a private two-hour guided tour of Camapigns of Courage, which follows the American soldier through the experiences of fighting in the European and Pacific Theatres, will begin for those registered for this tour. |
9:00am - 5:00pm | WKS-1: Practical Aspects of Bioarchaeology and Human Skeletal Analysis Location: Studio 6 Instructors: Thomas A. Crist, Ph.D. (Utica University) and Kimberly A. Morrell (AECOM) This workshop introduces participants to the practical aspects of locating, excavating, storing, and analyzing human remains from historic-period graves. It also will address the appropriate role of historical archaeologists in forensic investigations and mass fatality incidents. Participants will also learn about the basic analytical techniques that forensic anthropologists use to determine demographic profiles and recognize pathologic lessons and evidence of trauma. |
9:00am - 5:00pm | WKS-3: Archaeological Illustration Location: Studio 2 Instructor: Jack Scott, Jack Scott Archaeological Illustration Pen and ink is all basically a matter of skill and technique, which can be easily taught, and the results can be done faster, cheaper, and are considerably more attractive than the black-and-white illustrations done on the computer. Workshop participants will learn about materials and techniques, page design and layout, maps, lettering, scientific illustration conventions, problems posed by different kinds of artifacts, working size, reproduction concerns, ethics, and dealing with authors and publishers. |
10:00am - 5:00pm | Book Room: Set-Up for Exhibitors Location: Bissonet |
1:00pm - 3:00pm | T-3: Pestilence, Pandemic and Plague Walking Tour Location: Unique NOLA Tours Shop Take a historic and strange tour of the squalid conditions of mass disease that New Orleans has encountered and hear inspiring tales of coping with filthy and four conditions. Uncover how epidemics such as Yellow Fever, Cholera, and more have infected New Orleans' residents and how the city has recovered. Learn about odd medical practices of long ago, including how voodoo and religion played a part in trying to contain the "uncontainable." This tour will leave from the Unique NOLA Tours shop at 815 Toulouse St., New Orleans, LA 70112. |
1:00pm - 4:00pm | FOR-142 (UW): Government Maritime Managers Meeting: Life's Roughest Storms Prove the Strength of Our Anchors Location: Studios 9-10 |
1:00pm - 5:00pm | T-2: Slave Revolt Tour - CANCELED Hidden History, LLC will provide a riding tour of the largest slave revolt in the United States, led by a descendant of the rebels. The tour will acquaint you with the aim of the revolt: the establishment of a second Black independent republic with its own sovereign state; and its heroic leader, Charles Deslondes. There will be 10-12 sites and stops during the four-hour tour. The bus will pick up those registered for the tour at the front entrance of the New Orleans Marriott. |
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. |
1:30pm - 4:00pm | WKS-7: Historic Plastics in the Archaeological Record - PM Session Location: Studio 4 Instructors: Kimberly Wooten and Julia Huddleson, California Department of Transportation, Cultural Studies Office This workshop will give an overview of the history and development of plastics, followed by hands-on training with plastic artifacts from the early 1900s through the modern era, with a focus on domestic sites. Minimum of 8 participants. |
2:00pm - 4:30pm | T-4: Historic Riverboat Cruise Location: Creole Queen Paddlewheeler Focusing on 300 years of New Orleans history, this cruise is narrated by a local historian who takes guests on a journey through the story of the city as you sail downriver to the Jean Lafitte Naitonal Historical Park and the historic Chalmette Battlefield. Highlights of the tour include the founding of the city by the LeMoyne brothers, the expansion of the city into the "French Quarters" of the Treme and Marigny, the Louisiana Purchase, the critical Battle of New Orleans. A one-hour shore excursion at the battlefield features a guided tour and talk by National Park Rangers. |
6:00pm - 6:30pm | WELCOME: Conference Welcome and Awards Ceremony Location: Acadia Join us Wednesday evening for the opening session of the SHA 2025 Conference for presentation of the Kathleen Kirk Gilmore Dissertation Award, the James Deetz Book Award, and the SHA Awards of Merit. |
6:30pm - 8:00pm | PLENARY: Landscapes in Transition: Looking to the Past to Adapt to the Future Location: Acadia The Search for Ancient Landforms off the Washington Coast To aid the Quinault Indian Nation (QIN) in having a deeper understanding of their coastline and the waters that border the present-day reservation, the QIN Tribal Historic Preservation Office is working together with academic and agency researchers to refine current models for the identification of potential submerged ancient cultural landscapes along the US Pacific Outer Continental Shelf. While the collection of geophysical data will provide us with a picture of where the mighty Quinault River once flowed, integrating these data with Quinault oral histories and traditional knowledge can help us to more fully understand how Quinault people have adapted to rising sea levels across millennia. These measurable processes are more than just numbers that become depictions through the magic of GIS. These types of studies, when done in genuine partnership, feed the People of the landscape their confidence and a reinstated relationship that have been lost through colonization, but still exist in the memories and teachings. This project incorporates this outcome by allowing tribal members to have time with processes and procedures being used, spark new ways of thinking, and help provide an understanding of their individual practices with their lands. From Change, New Ways to See: Historical Archaeology and Climate In 2006, archaeologist Shannon Lee Dawdy wrote eloquently about the effects of Hurricane Katrina on her interpretation of a late 18th century site in New Orleans. It’s not that the storm uncovered new artifacts, but rather her experience in helping to manage early stages of recovery in New Orleans gave her a new perspective: deposits she had described as being the outcome of an economic decision were, more likely, a family’s response to trauma. Her realization provides us with a powerful model now for our work in historical archaeology and climate change. Climate change is most often described in terms of its physical impacts - sea level rise, storms, droughts, wildfires. But the phenomena of climate change are the outcome of development of the modern world, centuries-long processes of colonialism, capitalism, and industrialization. Thus the study of the development of the modern world - historical archaeology – and those who practice and care for it are interwoven with all of the environmental and social transitions now taking place. And therefore it is important to explore how our experiences of these changes are shaping what we see, both in the past and for our roles into the future. |
8:00pm - 10:00pm | OPENING: Opening Reception Location: Mardi Gras Ballroom Following the Plenary Session, meet up with old friends and make new ones at the Opening Reception. Complimentary appetizers and a cash bar. |
Date: Thursday, 09/Jan/2025 | |
7:30am - 5:30pm | REG-3: SHA Registration Location: Preservation Hall Foyer |
8:30am - 5:00pm | BOOK 1: SHA Book Room Open Location: Bissonet |
9:00am - 10:15am | GEN-19 (T): Changing Environments in Southern New England Location: Studio 6 |
9:00am - 10:15am | GEN-20 (T/UW)): Gendered Perspectives: Exploring Women's Roles Globally Location: Studio 2 |
9:00am - 10:15am | SYM-141 (T): The Living and the Dead: New Interpretations of Above- and Below-Ground Cultural Historical Archaeology Location: Galerie 1 |
9:00am - 10:45am | SYM-309 (T/UW): Dialogue as Defense: Addressing Preservation Threats with Community Conversations on Heritage at Risk Location: Galerie 2 |
9:00am - 11:00am | SYM-348 (T): In Times of War and Conflict: An Exploration of New Sites, Methodologies, and Interpretations at Sites of Conflict in the New England Region Location: Studio 10 |
9:00am - 11:00am | SYM-167 (T/UW): The Conservation and Preservation of Archaeological Materials Location: Galerie 6 |
9:00am - 11:15am | GEN-09 (T): Consumer Choice and Economic Agency: Exploring Trade, Reuse, and Identity Location: Galerie 4 |
9:00am - 11:15am | SYM-115 (UW): The Ecology of Underwater Cultural Heritage: From Microbial Communities to Macrofauna Location: Studio 4 |
9:00am - 11:15am | SYM-149 (T): Mission San Antonio de Valero and the Alamo – A Construction History from Mission to Military Fortress, Texas, United States Location: Studio 8 |
9:00am - 11:30am | SYM-157 (T/UW): Bridging the Land and the Sea: Documenting and Assessing Climate Impacts on North Carolina’s Coastal Heritage Location: Studio 9 |
9:00am - 11:45am | SYM-291 (T): Comparative Colonialism: A View from English North America Location: Studio 7 |
9:00am - 11:45am | POS-01 (T/UW): Mapping Out the Past: People, Places, Commodities, and Stable Isotopes Location: Studio Foyer |
9:00am - 12:00pm | SYM-201 A (T): Cities on the Move: Reflecting on Urban Archaeology in the 21st Century, Pt 1 Location: Galerie 5 |
11:00am - 12:00pm | GEN-12 (T): Reconstructing Plantation Landscapes: Decolonization, Tenancy, and African American Communities in Virginia and Beyond Location: Studio 2 |
11:00am - 12:00pm | SYM-152 A (T/UW): Early Spanish Florida 1513-1763 Location: Galerie 1 |
12:00pm - 1:15pm | RL-2: Burial Grounds as Places to Interpret Heritage: Innovative Approaches Location: Riverview 1 Host: Harold Mytum, University of Liverpool This roundtable lunch is designed for those involved with historic burial grounds, and those interested in venues for heritage interpretation to come together and to consider innovative approaches. These can include standard tours (though what should be covered in these?), costumed interpreters, drama and music, and combining heritage interpretation with ecological management or using urban burial grounds as green spaces where the heritage awareness is a byproduct of increasing access. |
12:00pm - 1:15pm | RL-1: Feminist Historical Archaeology Location: Riverview 1 Host: Suzanne Spencer-Wood, Oakland University Join the discussion about researching gender power dynamics in the past, and relationships in the present. |
12:00pm - 1:15pm | RL-3: Community Archaeology Location: Riverview 1 Host: Alexandria Jones, Executive Director, Archaeology in the Community The roundtable will focus on various techniques for achieving a successful community archaeology project. Dr. Jones will share her approach, which involves using her research to advance the goals and heritage aspirations of the community. She will outline the essential skills needed to create, implement, and complete an effective community-supported project. While there's no one-size-fits-all formula for community projects, being prepared for potential challenges can make a difference. Join us for a meal and an engaging discussion about the exciting world of community archaeology! |
12:00pm - 1:15pm | RL-4: Collections and Curation Location: Riverview 1 Hosts: Elizabeth Bollwerk, Thomas Jefferson Foundaton, Inc./DAACS and Katherine Sims, City of St. Augustine Archaeology Program The SHA Collections and Curation Program offers this roundtable as a forum for discussing current and ongoing issues surrounding the long-term care of collections, data generated by the work that we do, and how to encourage/facilitate Collections-Based Research. The discussion will be driven by participant concerns and topics. |
12:00pm - 1:30pm | LUNCH 1 |
1:30pm - 2:30pm | GEN-06 (T): Unveiling Urban Narratives: From Campus Garbology to Public Archaeology Location: Studio 10 |
1:30pm - 3:00pm | GEN-02 (UW): All the Good Gris-Gris: Maritime Material Culture and Artifact Studies Location: Galerie 4 |
1:30pm - 3:15pm | SYM-163 (T): The Plantation in the Right-of-Way: Data Recovery at St. Rosalie Plantation, Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana Location: Studio 4 |
1:30pm - 3:15pm | GEN-05 (UW): Maritime Lagniappe: Community-Engaged Research and Management Location: Studio 7 |
1:30pm - 3:30pm | FOR-616 (T): Heritage Legislation for Our Time Location: Studio 8 |
1:30pm - 4:00pm | GEN-02 (T): From Maroon Colonoware to Chinese Diaspora: Exploring Domestic Ceramics and Material Culture in Global Contexts Location: Studio 6 |
1:30pm - 4:15pm | POS-02 (T): Mapping Out the Past: People, Places, Commodities, and Stable Isotopes Location: Studio Foyer |
1:30pm - 4:15pm | SYM-104 (T): Statuary and Memorial Commemoration of Minorities - Why They are Missing: Challenges and Controversies of Memory and Tradition Location: Studio 9 |
1:30pm - 4:30pm | SYM-201 B (T): Cities on the Move: Reflecting on Urban Archaeology in the 21st Century, Pt 2 Location: Galerie 5 |
1:30pm - 5:15pm | SYM-152 B (T/UW): Early Spanish Florida 1513-1763 Location: Galerie 1 |
1:30pm - 5:30pm | SYM-109 (T): Historical Archaeology of Chesapeake Landscapes in Transition Location: Galerie 2 |
1:30pm - 5:30pm | SYM-125 (T): Breaking Free from the (Institutional) Matrix: Archaeological Career Pathways In and Between Academia, CRM, Non-Profit, and Museum Spheres Location: Galerie 6 |
1:30pm - 5:30pm | SYM-234 (T/UW): A Decade of DPAA: Challenges and Opportunities to the Accounting Mission Location: Galerie 3 |
3:15pm - 4:45pm | GEN-08 (T): Industrial Legacies and Metallurgical Histories: Exploring Canal Projects, Blacksmithing, and Environmental Impacts in Colonial and Southeastern Archaeology Location: Studio 10 |
3:45pm - 5:00pm | GEN-16 (T): From Foodways to Flora: Exploring Zooarchaeology, Botanical Analysis, and African Diaspora in Urban and Coastal Archaeological Contexts Location: Galerie 4 |
3:45pm - 5:30pm | SYM-433 (T): The Archaeology of Harriet Tubman's Birthplace Location: Studio 4 |
4:30pm - 6:00pm | STUDENT RECEPTION Location: Riverview 1, 2 The Past Presidents’ Student Reception will take place on Thursday, January 9, 2025, from 4:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Students will have an opportunity to talk to senior professionals about a variety of career paths in historical archaeology. These career paths include: Academia; Private Sector Cultural Resource Management; Government Agencies; Museums and Collections; Public and Community Engagement; and Underwater Archaeology. |
6:00pm - 9:00pm | TICKETED RECEPTION: Dinner Jazz Cruise on the Steamboat Natchez Time: Boarding between 6:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. and return to dock at 9:00 p.m. Cruise up and down the mighty Mississippi River into the heart of the signature culture and lifestyle of New Orleans and Louisiana aboard the Steamboat NATCHEZ. Enjoy the sounds of jazz and wonderful New Orleans cuisine prepared on board by Executive Chef, Edward Thel and his staff and served by a team of food service professionals. This is the ninth steamer to bear the name NATCHEZ. Her predecessor, NATCHEZ II, raced the Robert E. Lee in the most famous steamboat race of all time. The NATCHEZ is proudly the undisputed champion of the Mississippi, never having been beaten – the best of her time! Her powerful antique steam engines were built in 1925 and are still on view today from the engine room. Her copper bell, inlaid with 250 silver dollar coins to produce a purer tone, once graced the SS JD Ayres. Her 32-note steam calliope was custom-crafted and modeled especially for the NATCHEZ. An evening on the NATCHEZ is truly an evening of excitement! The cruise departs from 400 Toulouse Street, a five-minute walk from the New Orleans Marriott.
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Date: Friday, 10/Jan/2025 | |
7:30am - 5:30pm | REG-4: SHA Registration Location: Preservation Hall Foyer |
8:30am - 5:00pm | BOOK 2: SHA Book Room Open Location: Bissonet |
8:45am - 12:00pm | SYM-161 (T): Social Landscapes of Settler Colonialism in the Caribbean Location: Studio 7 |
9:00am - 10:15am | SYM-711 (UW): Current Maritime Research in Saint Augustine, Florida Location: Studio 8 |
9:00am - 10:45am | GEN-15 (T): Multicultural Frontiers: Sheepherding, Railroad Labor, and Heritage Management in Early 20th Century Eastern California and Beyond Location: Galerie 4 |
9:00am - 10:45am | SYM-136 (T): Well, Well, Well: Papers in honor of Judith A. Bense Location: Galerie 5 |
9:00am - 10:45am | SYM-180 (T): Archaeology in the Community: 15 Years of Archaeology Service Location: Studio 10 |
9:00am - 11:00am | GEN-11 (T): From Opium to Moonshine: Unveiling Historical Substance Use, Prohibition, and Queer Histories in Archaeological Contexts Location: Studio 2 |
9:00am - 11:00am | SYM-175 (T): Beyond Meat: Animal-Human Relations in New Orleans and Louisiana Location: Studio 9 |
9:00am - 11:15am | GEN-04 (T): Navigating Inclusivity and Representation: Disability, Accessibility, and Activist Approaches in Archaeology and Historical Interpretation Location: Galerie 1 |
9:00am - 11:30am | SYM-168 (T): Deviations: Archaeologies of Sexuality Beyond the Heteronormative Location: Studio 6 |
9:00am - 11:30am | SYM-393 (T): “A Little Grass and Earth Thrown in to fill up the Grave”: Archaeological studies of American War for Independence burial spaces Location: Studio 4 |
9:00am - 11:45am | POS-03 (T): Cemeteries and Beyond - The Growing Body of Evidence From Archeological and Bioarcheological Analyses of the Human Condition Location: Studio Foyer |
9:00am - 11:45am | SYM-155 A (UW): The Intersection Between Natural and Cultural Heritage and the Pressing Threats to Both, Pt 1 Location: Galerie 3 |
9:00am - 12:00pm | SYM-162 A (T): Landscapes of Care: Exploring Heart-centered Practice in Historical Archaeology Pt. 1 Location: Galerie 2 |
10:15am - 12:00pm | GEN-05 A (T): Mapping Mortuary Landscapes: GIS, Fieldstone Cemeteries, and Marginalized Burial Practices from Colonial to Contemporary Times Location: Galerie 6 |
12:00pm - 1:15pm | RL-5: Writing Archaeology Stories for the Public: Writing So Publishers Will Listen and Communities Feel Heard Location: Riverview 1 Hosts: Alicia Odewale, University of Houston, and Jodi Skipper, University of Mississippi Historical Archaeologists have a remarkable ability to unearth and tell compelling stories from what remains of the past - old structure, hidden archives, buried artifacts, and even cultural landscapes on the brink of destruction. Yet, many face a significant challenge: how to translate these rich histories into public-oriented scholarship that resonates with both publishers and the communities we serve. Join us as we explore the future of archaeological storytelling and the challenges of writing stories that matter to publishers, communities, and ourselves. If you would like to discover your own voice in your publishing journey and share stories that reach beyond your academic or professional archaeology circles, then this session is for you. Whether you are new to the field or a seasoned writer, this session will explore the benefits and challenges of crafting impactful archaeology narratives that change history. |
12:00pm - 1:15pm | RL-6: Jobs in Maritime Archaeology Location: Riverview 1 Host: Paul Johnston, Smithsonian Institution What are the different job types and career tracks in nautical archaeology today? This discussion will speak to public archaeology (NOAA, National Park Service, BOEM, Parks Canada, Smithsonian, state programs, etc.); private-sector cultural resource management (contract archaeology, consulting); private foundations; academic positions and museum work (public and private), and treasure hunting. |
12:00pm - 1:15pm | RL-7: Publishing for Early Career Research and Students Location: Riverview 1 Hosts: Alasdair Brooks, Co-Editor, Historical Archaeology; Annalies Corbin, ACUA Editor; and Mary Sue Daoud, Associate Publisher, Springer You’ve done the research and synthesized the results. Now you need to share your findings with the community. What are your options? SHA provides many ways to publish your results: journal Historical Archaeology, Technical Briefs, books co-published with academic presses, and print-on-demand special publications. This roundtable luncheon offers a relaxed environment for early career researchers and students to ask questions about the SHA publication program and explore the different options available. |
12:00pm - 1:15pm | RL-8: How to Take Climate to Congress Location: Riverview 1 Hosts: Sarah Miller, FPAN, and Marcy Rockman, Lifting Rocks - Climate and Heritage Consulting Legislation can be dry to read, but it shapes what is valued, funded, and where power and responsibility lie. So thinking about what we want our legislation to say and sharing these ideas with the US Congress and other policymakers is an important muscle for archaeologists to exercise. This roundtable will host a conversation about current climate and heritage policy and build ideas and steps for SHA to take in 2025. |
12:00pm - 1:30pm | LUNCH 2 |
1:30pm - 2:45pm | GEN-07 (UW): We Grabbed an Alligator and We Fought Another Round: Submerged Military Sites Location: Galerie 1 |
1:30pm - 3:00pm | GEN-05 B (T): Mapping Mortuary Landscapes: GIS, Fieldstone Cemeteries, and Marginalized Burial Practices from Colonial to Contemporary Times Pt 2 Location: Galerie 6 |
1:30pm - 3:00pm | SYM-123 (T): Public Archaeology and CRM in Louisiana: Making Historical Archaeology Matter Location: Studio 9 |
1:30pm - 3:15pm | GEN-18 (T): Revolution and Resistance: Commemorating Diversity and Material Culture in Colonial Boston and Beyond Location: Galerie 4 |
1:30pm - 3:15pm | SYM-277 (T): At the Intersections of History: Collaborative, Public Archaeology along the Chisholm Trail in Bolivar, Texas Location: Studio 4 |
1:30pm - 3:30pm | FOR-486 (UW): Submerged Landscapes: Discussion On Underwater Archives Of The Past Environmental Changes And Methods To Unlock Their Mysteries Location: Galerie 5 |
1:30pm - 3:45pm | GEN-13 (T): Cutting-Edge Techniques in Archaeology: From GPR and Magnetometry to AI and Stable Isotope Analysis Across Diverse Landscapes Location: Studio 2 |
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 |
1:30pm - 3:45pm | SYM-155 B (UW): The Intersection Between Natural and Cultural Heritage and the Pressing Threats to Both, Pt 2 Location: Galerie 3 |
1:30pm - 4:15pm | POS-04 (T): Uncovering Forgottern Forts, Secret Bases, and Hidden Spaces Location: Studio Foyer |
1:30pm - 4:15pm | SYM-162 B (T): Landscapes of Care: Exploring Heart-centered Practice in Historical Archaeology Pt. 2 Location: Galerie 2 |
1:30pm - 4:45pm | SYM-134 (T): Community Centered Archaeology in Colorful Colorado Location: Studio 8 |
1:30pm - 5:00pm | SYM-192 (T): Critical Issues in Contemporary Archaeology & Historical Archaeology: Limits, Opportunities, Challenges Location: Studio 10 |
2:00pm - 4:00pm | ACUA MTG: ACUA Board Meeting, General Session + Interested Public Location: Acadia |
3:15pm - 5:00pm | GEN-01 (T): Fortified Frontiers: Analyzing Battlefield Archaeology and Material Culture Location: Galerie 1 |
3:30pm - 4:45pm | GEN-01 (UW): Decolonizing Narratives Underwater: Submerged Indigenous Sites and Research Location: Galerie 6 |
5:00pm - 6:00pm | SHA MTG: SHA Business Meeting Location: Acadia The SHA will hold its annual Business Meeting on Friday, January 10, 2025 from 5:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Join the SHA Board and congratulate the winners of the Robert L. Schuyler Student Travel Awards, the Ed and Judy Jelks Student Travel Award, the Harriet Tubman Student Travel Grant, the ACUA George Fischer Student Travel Award, the ACUA and Recon Offshore Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Student Travel Conference Award, the GMAC Diversity Field School Competition, the Jamie Chad Brandon Student Paper Prize, the 2025 Mark E. Mack Community Engagement Award, and the ACUA Annual Photo Competition. |
6:00pm - 8:00pm | MTG: Society of Black Archaeologists Meeting Location: Studio 9 |
6:30pm - 7:30pm | PRE-AWARDS: Pre-Awards Cocktail Hour Location: Mardi Gras Foyer No fee for conference registrants; cash bar. |
7:30pm - 8:30pm | AWARDS BANQUET: SHA Awards Banquet Location: Mardi Gras Ballroom Enjoy a three-course dinner with the 2025 recipients of the John L. Cotter Award, the Daniel G. Roberts Award for Excellence in Public Historical Archaeology, the Carol V. Ruppé Distinguished Service Award, and the J.C. Harrington Medal in Historical Archaeology. Cost: $65.00 per person. Pre-registration required. Choice of entrée: Roasted Chicken on smoked gouda grits with green beans, roasted sweet peppers, and thyme jus or Quinoa jambalaya with blackened tofu, broccolini, and roasted sweet pepper coulis (vegan and gluten-free) |
8:30pm - 11:59pm | AWARDS CEREMONY: SHA Awards Ceremony and Dance Location: Mardi Gras Ballroom Join us for the presentation of the SHA’s John L. Cotter Award, the Daniel G. Roberts Award for Excellence in Public Historical Archaeology, the Carol V. Ruppé Distinguished Service Award, and the J.C. Harrington Medal in Historical Archaeology. Following the awards ceremony, plan to dance the night away with your friends – new and old! |