- 29
- 68 683
Pacific Northwest Archaeological Society
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 7 ส.ค. 2014
The Edziza Ice Patch Work, Central B.C. Canada - Duncan McLaren
Dec 5, 2024
The thawing ice patches of Mount Edziza Provincial Park, B.C. Canada, have unveiled a cache of ancient artifacts dating back 7,000 years.
The thawing ice patches of Mount Edziza Provincial Park, B.C. Canada, have unveiled a cache of ancient artifacts dating back 7,000 years.
มุมมอง: 231
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Dentalium Brooms & Herring Rakes, Dan Meatte
มุมมอง 1502 หลายเดือนก่อน
Dentalium Brooms & Herring Rakes, Dan Meatte
The History of "Woolly Dogs" revealed by Ancient Genomics and Indigenous Knowledge
มุมมอง 4317 หลายเดือนก่อน
May 9, 2024 By Audrey T. Lin, U.S. Smithsonian, Liz Hammond-Kaarremaa, Vancouver Island University, Ian McKetchnie, University of Victoria and many others..
Living off the Land: Ed Carriere, Suquamish Elder and Master Basketmaker and Dr Dale Croes, WSU
มุมมอง 1139 หลายเดือนก่อน
2/29/2024
Oldest Human Artifacts from the Rimrock Draw Rockshelter, Oregon - Dr Patrick O'Grady Univ of Oregon
มุมมอง 6Kปีที่แล้ว
December 14, 2023 Oldest Human Artifacts (18,000 year old) with Camel teeth and extinct bison blood from the Rimrock Draw Rockshelter, Oregon By Dr. Patrick O’Grady, Anthropology, University of Oregon Archaeologists just concluded their 2023 field school season at Rimrock Draw Rock Shelter, Eastern Oregon, continuing to push back North America’s timeline through recovery of stone tools and mega...
Archaeological Evidence of Early Peoples at Cooper's Ferry/Nipéhe in Western Idaho - Dr. Loren Davis
มุมมอง 975ปีที่แล้ว
October 26, 2023 By Dr. Loren G. Davis, Anthropology, Oregon State University Archaeological excavations conducted at the Cooper's Ferry/Nipéhe site in Western Idaho's lower Salmon River canyon revealed a long record of repeated occupation beginning by ~16,000 years ago. This record includes pit features containing the earliest stemmed projectile points in the Americas. In this presentation, we...
The Story of the Oyster in the Pacific Northwest - David George Gordon and Samantha Larson
มุมมอง 179ปีที่แล้ว
June 1st, 2023 Join authors David George Gordon and Samantha Larson for an in-depth introduction to the Pacific Northwest’s most beloved bivalve, the oyster. Their presentation will begin with the earliest evidence of oyster aquaculture from 11,500 years ago and concludes with contemporary efforts to cultivate oysters, both native and introduced, along our Northwest coasts. Along the way, they’...
High Plains Mammoth Hunters By Dr. Madeline Mackie, Weber State University
มุมมอง 2.4Kปีที่แล้ว
Apr 13, 2023 Since the first discovery of stone projectile points in association with extinct fauna, fluted point kill sites have been the subject of intense interest. Recent excavations at the La Prele Site have identified the remains of Columbia Mammoth along with associated activity areas which contain artifacts including fluted point fragments, channel flakes, faunal remains, ivory, bone ne...
Dr Kelly Monteleone: Our Submerged Past: The importance of a submerged fish weir in Shakan Bay,
มุมมอง 362ปีที่แล้ว
Southeast Alaska, specifically the continental shelf and islands on the west side of Prince of Wales Island, had a drastic sea-level rise at the end of the Last Pleistocene/Early Holocene. There was up to 176 m of sea-level rise, from -165 m to 11 m, in approximately 7000 years: an enormous change in a relatively short time. This submerged coastline would have been the along the route for early...
A Quarter of a Million Salal Berries and 2.5 Million Acorns from NW Coast Archaeological Wet Sites
มุมมอง 2352 ปีที่แล้ว
By Dale R. Croes, Ph.D. WSU and PNWAS Three Central Northwest Coast wet sites have begun to highlight the significance of berries and nuts, particularly salal and acorns, to ancient subsistence practices. At the Ozette site, mudslide encased houses and middens dating to 300-450 years ago produced flotation samples of 250,000 seeds of Salal. At the Sunken Village site, located on Sauvie Island, ...
Oregon’s Beeswax Wreck: New Summer Finds and Project Updates
มุมมอง 2.1K2 ปีที่แล้ว
10/13/2022 For more than a decade, Scott has led a team of volunteers passionate about the detective work of finding the wreck. “It’s almost like a case or a criminal investigation, because we’re pulling together all these bits and clues and trying to sort them and weigh them,” he says. NOW they have found a piece of the hull of the shipwreck in Oregon caves and are being followed on national n...
Dr. Jennifer A. Raff, A Genetic History of the Americas
มุมมอง 2.9K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Jennifer Raff builds a great case, in line with our Chehalis River Hypothesis theme, using both archaeological and genetic evidence that the path to the Americas follows the Coastal Migration Theory. She sees Beringia not as a bridge but a homeland inhabited for millenniums by ancestors of the First Peoples of the Americas, tying in well with the PNWAS talk by Dr. John Blong, WSU (see on our PN...
David Bustos, Working to Preserve Some of the Oldest Traces of Early American History
มุมมอง 8162 ปีที่แล้ว
David Bustos, Resource Programs Manager, White Sands National Monument "A Race Against Time: Working to Preserve Some of the Oldest Traces of Early American History" White Sands National Park has one of the largest concentrations of late Pleistocene megafauna and human fossil trackways in the Americas. Unfortunately, the fossil prints, that range in age from 21,000 to 18,000 years before presen...
Dr Megan Walsh, Combining Paleoecology, Geology, and Archaeology
มุมมอง 1.3K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr. Megan Walsh, Central Washington University COMBINING PALEOECOLOGY, GEOLOGY, AND ARCHAEOLOGY: What Interdisciplinary Research Can Teach Us About Holocene Human-Landscape Interactions in the Pacific Northwest Understanding the role fire played in maintaining ecosystems prior to Euro-American settlement is key to restoring landscape resiliency and viability in the Pacific Northwest. To do this...
Dr John Blong, WSU, Late-Glacial Hunter-Gatherers in the Central Alaska Range
มุมมอง 21K3 ปีที่แล้ว
December 9, 2021 Dr John C. Blong, Washington State University "Late-Glacial Hunter-Gatherers in the Central Alaska Range and the Role of Upland Ecosystems in the Peopling of Alaska" Upland central Alaskan ecosystems are typically thought of as less productive and more challenging for humans to live in than lowland ecosystems. It can also be difficult to conduct archaeological research in high-...
Dr. Dale Croes - Ancient Northwest Coast Cordage and Knots
มุมมอง 6843 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr. Dale Croes - Ancient Northwest Coast Cordage and Knots
Dr James Dixon: Ice Age Migration and Settlement along the Northwest Coast of North America 05/06/20
มุมมอง 16K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr James Dixon: Ice Age Migration and Settlement along the Northwest Coast of North America 05/06/20
Gary Wessen: Makahs, Quileutes, and the Precontact History of the Northwestern Olympic Peninsula
มุมมอง 1.4K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Gary Wessen: Makahs, Quileutes, and the Precontact History of the Northwestern Olympic Peninsula
Victor Kucera - Occupying the American Continent through SW WA
มุมมอง 9343 ปีที่แล้ว
Victor Kucera - Occupying the American Continent through SW WA
Dr Dennis Jenkins: Archaeology and Science at the Paisley Caves, Oregon
มุมมอง 9K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr Dennis Jenkins: Archaeology and Science at the Paisley Caves, Oregon
Patrick Pringle - Late Glacial Tanwax Flood - Sept 25, 2020
มุมมอง 9804 ปีที่แล้ว
Patrick Pringle - Late Glacial Tanwax Flood - Sept 25, 2020
Have repeatedly heard Paisley Cave mentioned in many utube presentations . At last I now have excellent info. Sounds believable to me. Excellent presentation and speaker. Thank you.
Would the high vantage viewpoints be just for spotting animals, or were there human rivals they would be concerned about? Also, I get the reason for the inquiry, but in the alpine I expect most people would eat the snacks or critters will. I've left a hundred walking staves over the years, but I'd be Ötzi before I'd leave any trail mix behind 😁
I've heard of remains and artifacts used to show traditional territory, but that was the first I'd ever heard of using archaeology to support mining history and rights. Is the First Nation looking to do modern mining, or more to prevent it?
“Why do you have a gun” Buddy, you try going out into the wilderness without one, don’t ask stupid questions
May not be living off the land, but don't want to die from it either!
Very interesting. Excellent!
Wonderful work, from a great basin archaeologist in Nevada. Bravo!
Very interesting.. especially the sturgeon fishing. We need more of this stuff.. well a few us do.. thanks brother that was very informative..
You should know you where there 😅😅
It’s not full screen 😢😢😢
Humans on the Earth are much more complex in origin and history
Archaeology in North America: Archaeology in the Americas absolutely needs to go back several million years; modern humans have been in the Americas for a very long time. MANY good sources for this thinking. Proof here is in the living people of today, psychical mentality. It is not too hard to understand the idea of paranormal thought.
There were MODERN humans in North America and the Americas hundreds of thousands of years ago, possibly over several million years. This is based on memories from earlier past lives and some other similar sources. Evidence of the assertion can be found on the Moon and other areas. The books of Charles Berlitz are a source for such ideas.
Great show. In 1992, Tim Triesch and I produced two maps "Shipwrecks of Grays Harbor" and "Shipwrecks of North Puget Sound". You may have seen our maps floating around over the years. I have finished the research for a third map "Shipwrecks of the Salish Sea" and, god willing I will have time to produce it this coming year. While researching the first map, we kept coming across things that lead us to believe there may have been a Spanish wreck near Moclips. In a small restaurant/bar in Moclips, there was a mirror in the bar depicting a Spanish Galleon wrecking on the Copalis Rocks. The only information we could find about it was "it was etched by a local native for the bar"... I also came across a Spanish coin at a show in Ocean Shores. Another interesting tidbit was found in Cosmopolis at a bar named "the Liberty". Owned by a colorful character, "Bronco". He showed Tim and I what he claimed was a set of stirrups of spanish origin from a spanish ship.
Was it because water of the lake probably came down to expose the caves for use, much like the Caves at Lovelock? So glad to see evidence humans were roaming around our area long before 14,000 years ago. The hair is looking brown not Black. Is there any other evidence of other species? Oh I see Western Stem? I want to research them now, I am not hearing anything here about the people who lived there in the caves
Yet another video of White people telling us Native folk where we came from using a theory that has been disproven. I'll get the popcorn.
I would think that if a family or two happened to walk up soon after a different family had brought down a proboscidian, they’d probably be invited to join. If for nothing else, help with prep and smoking/drying. Not to mention the sheer amount of food, that was probably more than the group that took the animal could handle or transport.
We now have a solid human habitation date of about 18k years ago, at Rimrock Draw rock shelter, in eastern Oregon. ... and we have an even more reliable date of ~21k years ago at White Sands, in New Mexco. So have to push this western coastal migration story _back_ in time -- there were people in N. America during the Last Glacial Maximum
To bad this Amercian's brain is devoid of the existence of CANADA.
In January of 2010 both Linda S Cummings of Paleo Research and Dennis Jenkins were contacted via email regarding specific claims of 'floral' evidence leading to the conclusion of specific foods at the site being consumed by the prehistoric inhabitants. of Paisley Caves, The issue is that the presence of Aster pollen does not mean the folks are eating sunflower, or that Apiaceae pollen presence means that folks are eating Biscuit Root. If something changed after Jan 2010 and you now have direct evidence for the claim please advise. Below is a quote from Dr Jenkins. "Hi Linda and Scott, That is correct. I showed a slide of biscuit root and said that we had recovered a substantial quantity of Apiacea pollen from one of the coprolites that could represent a plant such as biscuitroot, a plant that Native Americans in the region continue to dig today. I did not say that we had recovered that particular plant. I have forwarded your comments to the author (Rex Dalton) inquiring whether he thought an errata statement should be published. We shall see what he says. I thank both of you for your interest in this matter. Sincerely, Dennis" Jenkins 2010 And yet again the slides are presented in such a way that suggests you have evidence of specific foods.(DNA, Starch grains, phytoliths, plant bulb tissue, plant fragments, calcium oxalates etc etc)
Thanks so much for this! I'm a fiber artist and biologist, and live in the area, and I've been interested in this dog since they rediscovered Mutton. I hope they can bring the woolly dog back! Was the coat double or did it lack guard hairs? Spitz dogs have double coats, and a lack of guard hairs would reduce work to prep the fiber. Did the hair shed or was it poodle/bichon-like in that it just grew longer and longer until sheared? The Ozette dogs look like they have hair of this type. Both types are spinnable; the undercoat from a double coated dog makes an angora type yarn, and the poodle-like hair makes a mohair type yarn. (Goat breeds have a similar division of hair types)
Fascinating presentation...thanks so much.....
I actually taught myself about fir bark being a hot burner. I have a few stumps I pulled mine off. My plan was since I figured it would be slow burning since that's literally it's evolved purpose, was to make charcoal for my garden. I'm on year two of growing Ozettes and trying to use local materials for mounding just to see if taters might have been among trade goods inland and were just replaced with European cultivars over time. For fun lol But this makes me feel good that my instincts were right. It makes a great cooking fire and remnants would be tossed in the refuse where plants tend to pop up from seeds so why not mix it in? As always Ed, you are an absolute treasure. Thank you so much for sharing your family history and knowledge. I learned a lot today, more than just I had a good idea lol Again, thank you. So far I am using as the seasons provide. Started with moss and dried fern duff with punky wood. Then green plum growth. Now I'm using nettles and should be getting saxifrage soon. Violet leaves made up some as well as alder and willow. Not sure if I'll be using fire weed or not. Basically any excess from basking making is welcome lol
The more likely scenario with the Whitesands footprints was that instead of evolving in Berengia a large group of paleo Americans left earlier refugia and settled in the Southwest.
I love seeing unbiased, good science on display. Well done.
Thank you so much for sharing a bit of Mr Carriere's life work and the living cultural heritage of the Salish sea.
We have so many artifacts on our century farm that they appear as gravel yet every individual rock has been altered into a preform or an abrader or an atlatl, etc. I’ve found globs of pine pitch with and without stone and one with a human tooth. The quantity is overwhelming. There are thousands upon thousands of items just on the surface of the ground. Near Woodburn, Oregon.
Soil Geologist advisors?
When Lemuria flooded by being attacked the people were brought to the American Pacific coastal regions and the Hawaiian Islands and other lands. Does your research have any knowledge of this
Well if you noticed, its western folk telling native folk who they are and where they came from. It doesn't matter about the truth, what matter is they have money in their pockets.
What a remarkable stroke of good fortune for archaeology to find that collapsed basalt wall at such depth! Will this give researchers a new method of investigation at future paleolithic sites? Or is it just a matter of dumb luck?
Hey Dale what the fuck. I came here to listen to O Grady yet I had to endure your gravel non sensible voice ramble for fucking 12 minutes. This ain’t about you fella
Good god... academia needs a new computer... and a kid who knows how to make TH-cam videos... It's sad that the most interesting archeology videos are always this quality... how can you trust an educational system that doesn't know how to transfer files?.. A+ for content though.
It's academia. It works ish. The money funds actual work, not a MacBook pro ;) :p Also, I'm pretty sure WA state is stuck in 1998 outside of the greater Seattle / Tacoma area. So it's actually quite advanced lol
@@bensabelhaus7288 I'm just a cranky old man but I have to admit this video was better than most of these types of presentations. I was able to watch the whole thing... Archeologists should discover Linux so they can throw those Mac Books or whatever in the dumpster where they belong.
Thank you for all you do. Looking forward to February :)
i actually found the balast of this wreck off manzanita its on a video and they didnt recognise it, but it was obviusly ballast since it was the only stone in the area and the commmetned wow its shaped like a ship!?
I love the DNA lamp in the background.😊
Have found some beautiful beautiful rabbit island barbed points in that area. Some of the prettiest Elko side notches ever too. When YOU do it it’s called excavation but when WE do it, y’all call it loooooting. Especially that area. Between some people I know there are probably 700-1000 hours worth of diggin near those caves (and left no trace of course) and Some of the most beautiful collections of stuff near those Caves are in the collections of every day people who love to preserve history
I turned this off at "we have some good news... and we have a new President Elect"
how to you decide where to start digging and how deep to dig?
All the best events shipwreck, earthquake, tsunami, and lost survivors! Another great lecture thank you very much.
So does the southwest new mexico white sands footprints still make this true? Don't they have to be in north amercia 22k years ago to leave foot prints?
More than one route existed, separating groups geographically 500 miles apart. th-cam.com/video/behemjDuPmo/w-d-xo.html
Yes they came way they also came right through the rocky's, They also came down the front range all populations are cut off from each other.
Well They were making bow and arrow in alamosa 59k years ago, come touch the artigacts.
Man hunted the mammoth as a lifestyle, Following, Throwing big heavy spears down on them. Thats why Archaic transition occurred. Because they transitioned from being Eskimos, to Mammoth hunters, To archaic transition to Woodland. This occurred, because, There were no plains, until the full melt. I do believe man domesticated the wolf early, There would be no archeological evidence of this of course, unless it was found tied to a sled in a glacier. But when man came down from the Mountains, it was to the areas that were all anceint inland ocean. Now huge spears became unusable on smaller game. So they created archaic period from their memory's of Eskimos life. But This changed as the Ice receded, opening up areas east and west of the now ancient inland sea. Once this opened up. People moved east. They had moved south to create the missippiian cultures. Now they also push back north and eastward. Creating the plains cultures. Woodland. And now everyone has the right DNA.
I live in High desert of alamosa Colorado. These people lived on my land. Man hunted the mammoth as a lifestyle, Following, Throwing big heavy spears down on them. That's why the Archaic transition occurred. Because they transitioned from being Eskimos, to Mammoth hunters, To archaic transition to Woodland. This occurred, because, There were no plains, until the full melt. I do believe man domesticated the wolf early, There would be no archeological evidence of this of course, unless it was found tied to a sled in a glacier. But when man came down from the Mountains, it was to the areas that were all anceint (Inland ocean.) Now huge spears became unusable on smaller game. So they created archaic period from their memory's of Eskimos life. But This changed as the Ice receded, opening up areas east and west of the now ancient inland sea. Once this opened up. People moved east. They had moved south to create the missippiian cultures. Now they also push back north and eastward. Creating the plains cultures. Woodland. And now everyone has the right DNA.
Thank you for posting this. I'm down in Oregon and enjoyed this lecture very much. Please do more. I have property south of Eugene with Oak trees but I can't recall ever seeing acorns on these. I'll have to look closer next sumer.
Congratulations on the new grand baby 👶 ❤
Very cool. The Kelp Highway open by 16 kya, complete with Grizzly rest stops.
brown bear mandible in the Victoria BC museum excavated from a cave on the Queen Charlottes is almost 18 inches long and over 8,000 years old. The QC was grassland then (grizzly country) and connected to the mainland. As described, that bear would b e looking into your 2nd. story window.
Wonderful nuggets of information. 😂
It is known of the presence of the company of the dog in this early colonization of America
There were obviously 3 migrations. 1 very early likely by boat from the west along the Allution Islands etc. The traditional land bridge migration, and an odd population coming from the north east .
There is 3 migrations coming thru the Bering landbridge the ancestral paleo Americans, Athabaskan, and paleo inuit!! There is NO evidence of a foreign migration coming from the Northeast because the ancestral Paleo Americans came through Alaska and Pacific Northwest first by boat down the West coast to South America and then thru the ice free corridor to the interior of North America: