M. Gabriel Hrynick Curriculum Vitae

UNB Department of Anthropology Office Phone No. (506) 458.7045 Fredericton, NB, Canada E3B 5A3 Fax No. (506) 453.5071 Annex C Room 32A (Office) [email protected] Singer Hall 148 (Lab)

EDUCATION 2015 PhD, University of Connecticut, Anthropology 2011 MA, University of New Brunswick, Anthropology 2009 BA (summa cum laude), University of Maine, Anthropology

ACADEMIC POSITIONS 2019–Present Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton 2016–2019 Assistant Professor of Anthropology, University of New Brunswick, Fredericton 2015–2016 Visiting Assistant Professor in Anthropology, Bates College

RESEARCH GRANTS (SELECTED) (*indicates external funding) *2020, Linda S. Cordell Research Fellowship, Robert S. Peabody Institute. Research funding and stipend to support archival research at the Robert S. Peabody Institute in Andover, Mass. (Co-PI with Arthur Anderson. Deferred to 2021 due to COVID-19) *2019 National Geographic Society NGS-56106R-19: “ of the Wabanaki Response to European Contact” (PI, 22,545 USD) *2019 Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Insight Grant: “The Protohistoric Period in the Wabanaki Homeland” (PI, 116,968 CAD) *2017 National Geographic Society, Committee for Research and Exploration: "Food, Place, and People: Late Maritime Woodland settlement in the Quoddy Region of Northeastern North America” (collaborator, with Katherine Patton [PI], Susan Blair, and Ramona Nicholas, 13,571 USD) 2017 Grand Lake Meadows Endowment Fund: “Foundational Economic Connections Between the Grand Lake Meadows and the Greater Northeast” (PI/PD 10,500 CAD) 2016 Harrison McCain Foundation Young Scholar Award (PI/PD 25,000 CAD) *2015 Dr. Douglas Jordan Testing, Dating, and Conservation Fund: “Stable Isotopic Evidence for Seasonality at the Devil's Head Site" (PD/co-PI, 1050 USD) *2014 Reed Foundation Ruth Landes Memorial Research Grant: “Religious Practice in Algonquian Domestic Life: An Archaeological Study of Pre-European Religious Ritual in the Wabanaki Homeland” (PD/PI 11,000 USD, Declined in order to accept NSF DDIG) *2014 National Science Foundation Dissertation Improvement Grant 1436296: “Domestic and Relational Perspectives on the Middle and Late Maritime Woodland Period Transition on the Maritime Peninsula.” (PD/Co-PI 17,719 USD) 2013 University of Connecticut, Department of Anthropology, Summer Research Fellowship for preliminary stakeholder consultation and archaeological site visits in the Maine Quoddy Region. (PD/PI 3,028 USD)

1

2012 University of Connecticut, Department of Anthropology, Summer Research Fellowship for archival research at the Canadian of Civilization and associated radiocarbon dating. (PD/PI 3,140 USD)

AWARDS 2019 Elected to the College of Fellows of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society 2018 Nominee, Allan P. Stuart Award for Excellence in Teaching (UNB) 2018 Nominee, 2017-2018 Arts Faculty Teaching Award (UNB) 2017 Nominee & Shortlist, 2016-2017 Arts Faculty Teaching Award (UNB) 2015 Dissertation passed “with distinction,” University of Connecticut, Anthropology 2015 University of Connecticut Provost’s Letter for Teaching Excellence 2015 Draper Dissertation Fellowship, University of Connecticut Humanities Institute (declined in order to accept position at Bates College) 2015 Covenant Insurance Co. Summer Fellowship, University of Connecticut College of Liberal Arts and Sciences 2014 Robert Dewar Graduate Fellowship, University of Connecticut 2014 Dean’s Graduate Fellowship in Social Sciences, University of Connecticut, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences 2014 Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship, University of Connecticut Graduate School

PUBLICATIONS PEER-REVIEWED /VOLUMES In Review Holyoke, K.R., and M.G. Hrynick (editors) The Far Northeast: 3000 BP–Contact. Canadian Museum of History/University of Ottawa Press Mercury Series. [All chapters through peer review and revision; volume with series editor]

Accepted Betts, M.W., and M.G. Hrynick Archaeology of the Atlantic Northeast. University of Toronto Press. [Publication scheduled for Spring 2021]

2017 Betts, M.W., and M.G. Hrynick (editors) North American East Coast Shell Midden Research. Journal of the North Atlantic, Special Volume No. 10.

PEER-REVIEWED JOURNAL ARTICLES AND CHAPTERS In Review Anderson, A.W., A.K. Patton, and M.G. Hrynick. Evidence for Prehistoric Barnacle Consumption on Cobscook Bay, Washington County, Maine, USA. Submitted to Archaeology of Eastern North America

Accepted Hrynick, M.G., and M.W. Betts “…and we showered with a thousand praises the woman who had been the fire’s guardian…”: Ancestral Wabanaki Gender and Placemaking in the Woodland Period. Submitted to The Far Northeast: 3000 B.P. to Contact, edited by K.R. Holyoke and M.G. Hrynick. Canadian Museum of History Mercury Series. University of Ottawa Press, Ottawa. (Chapter accepted after peer review; volume anticipated 2021)

2

Accepted Holyoke, K. R., and M.G. Hrynick. Continental thoughts, Maritime Peninsular Perspective: What can the Far Northeast Say about “the Woodland”? Submitted to The Far Northeast: 3000 B.P. to Contact, edited by K.R. Holyoke and M.G. Hrynick. Canadian Museum of History Mercury Series. University of Ottawa Press, Ottawa. (Chapter accepted after peer review; volume anticipated 2021)

2020 Spahr, T.W., A. Anderson, M.G. Hrynick, G.-J. Hudgell, and A.E. Spiess. A Report on a late Woodland period dugout canoe from Cape Porpoise, Maine, USA. Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology DOI: 10.1080/15564894.2020.1774446

2019 Hrynick, M.G., and M.W. Betts. Architectural Features. In Place Making in the Pretty Harbour: The Archaeology of Port Joli, Nova Scotia, edited by M.W. Betts, pp. 129–159. Canadian Museum of History Mercury Series, University of Ottawa Press.

2019 Farley, W.A., A.N. Fox, and M.G. Hrynick A Quantitative Dwelling-Scale Approach to the Social Implications of Maize Horticulture in New England. American Antiquity 84(2):274–291.

2018 Betts, M.W., M.G. Hrynick, and A. Pelletier-Michaud The Pierce-Embree Site: A Palaeoindian Findspot from Southwestern Nova Scotia. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 45(2):255–262.

2018 Hrynick, M.G. Maritime Woodland Period Dwelling Surface Construction on the Coast of the Maritime Peninsula: Implications for Site Reuse and Intra-Site Space. Archaeology of Eastern North America 46:1–16.

2017 Hrynick, M.G., W.J. Webb, C.E. Shaw, and T.C. Testa Late Maritime Woodland to Protohistoric Culture Change and Continuity at the Devil’s Head site, Calais, Maine. Archaeology of Eastern North America 45:85–108.

2017 Hrynick, M.G., and M.W. Betts A Relational Approach to Hunter-Gatherer Architecture and Gendered Use of Space at Port Joli Harbour, Nova Scotia. Journal of the North Atlantic Special Volume 10:1–17.

2016 Hrynick, M.G., and D.W. Black 2016. Cultural Continuity in Maritime Woodland Period Domestic Architecture in the Quoddy Region. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 40(1):23–67.

2015 Holyoke, K.R., and M.G. Hrynick Portages and Lithic Procurement in the Northeastern Interior: A Case Study from the Mill Brook Stream Site, Lower Saint John River Valley, New Brunswick, Canada. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 39(2):213–240.

3

2014 Hrynick, M.G., and M.W. Betts Identifying Ritual Structures in the Archaeological Record: A Maritime Woodland Period Sweathouse from Nova Scotia, Canada. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 35:92 105.

2012 Hrynick, M.G., M.W. Betts, and D.W. Black A Late Maritime Woodland Period Dwelling Feature from Nova Scotia’s South Shore: Evidence for Patterned Use of Domestic Space. Archaeology of Eastern North America 40:1–25.

NON-REFEREED ARTICLES & ENCYCLOPEDIA ENTRIES (REVIEWED BY EDITORIAL BOARDS) 2019 Anderson, A., and M.G. Hrynick A Reported Hafted Biface from Pennamaquan Lake, Washington County, Maine. Maine Archaeological Society Bulletin 59(2):1–8.

2016 Fable, J., W. Farley, and M.G. Hrynick Mean Ceramic Dating and Historic Period Occupation at the Devil’s Head Site, Calais, Maine. Maine Archaeological Society Bulletin 56(1):1–15.

2013 Betts, M.W., and M.G. Hrynick E’se’get Archaeology Project, 2012 Field Season. Archaeology in Nova Scotia Newsletter 4:8–19.

2012 Hrynick, M.G., and B.S. Robinson Quantifying Gravel from a Ceramic Period Living Surface in Downeast Maine. Maine Archaeological Society Bulletin 52(2):27–43.

2012 Hrynick, M.G., and D.W. Black Bocabec Archaeological Site. The Canadian Encyclopedia. . [Translated to French: Site archéologique Bocabec, .]

BOOK REVIEWS 2017 Hrynick, M.G. Review of Unsettling Mobility: Mediating Mi’kmaw Sovereignty in Post-contact Nova Scotia by Michelle A. Lelièvre. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 41(2):343–346.

2015 Hrynick, M.G. Review of History in the Making: The Archaeology of the Eastern Subarctic by Donald H. Holly Jr. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 39(1):152–155.

TECHNICAL REPORTS 2019 Hrynick, M.G., A. Anderson, K. Patton, W.J. Webb, C. Brouillette, T. Lamb, and A. Pelletier-Michaud. 2019. Report on the 2017–2018 Universities of New Brunswick, Toronto, and New England Fieldwork in Washington County, Maine. Report submitted

4

to the Maine Commission and the Passamaquoddy Tribal Historic Preservation Office.

2017 Betts, M.W., and M.G. Hrynick Final Permit Report: COASTAL Archaeology Project, 2017 Permit #:A2017NS046. Report submitted to the Nova Scotia Museum, Halifax.

2015 Hrynick, M.G., W. J. Webb, D. Leslie, T. Testa, J. Fable, W. Farley 2014 Archaeological Investigations at the Devil’s Head Site (97.10), Washington County, Maine. Report submitted to the Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Augusta.

2014 Hrynick, M.G., and W. J. Webb 2013 Archaeological Testing at the Reversing Falls Site (80.15 ME) and the Devil’s Head Site (97.10 ME), Washington County, Maine. Report Submitted to the Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Augusta.

2013 Betts, M.W., and M.G. Hrynick Permit Report: E’se’get Archaeology Project 2012 Field Season. Report Submitted to Nova Scotia Museum, Halifax.

2011 AMEC Environment & Infrastructure (D.J. Dignam and M.G. Hrynick) Heritage Resources Follow-Up Program: Tower Road Dam Project, Turtle Creek, Albert County, New Brunswick. AFRP 2011NB58 & 2011NB59. Report Submitted to Archaeological Services New Brunswick, Fredericton.

2011 AMEC Environment & Infrastructure (D.J. Dignam and M.G. Hrynick) Final Report: Archaeological Field Evaluation, New Brunswick Department of Transportation, Route 11 Twinning Project (Section 2), 2011 Field Season, Kent County, New Brunswick. AFRP 2011NB12. Report Submitted to Archaeological Services New Brunswick, Fredericton.

2011 Holyoke, K. R., and M. G. Hrynick Final Report on the Mill Brook/Washademoak Lake Shoreline Survey 2010. ARFP 2010NB72. Report Submitted to Archaeological Services New Brunswick, Fredericton.

PRESENTATIONS AT PROFESSIONAL MEETINGS SESSIONS ORGANIZED 2019 Holyoke, K.R., and M.G. Hrynick The Far Northeast: 3000 BP to Contact. Session organized at the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, Quebec City.

2017 Willison, M., W. Farley, and M.G. Hrynick Always a McBridesmaid, Never a McBride: Papers in Honor of Kevin McBride. Session organized at the 84th Annual Meeting of the Eastern States Archaeological Federation, New London.

5

2014 Hrynick, M.G., and M.W. Betts East Coast Shell Middens. Session organized at the 81st Annual Meeting of the Eastern States Archaeological Federation, Solomons.

PAPERS AND POSTERS PRESENTED 2019 Hrynick, M.G., A. Anderson, K. Patton, and J. Webb. Recent Archaeological Work in the Quoddy Region, Coastal Washington County, Maine. Paper presented at the 86th Annual Meeting of the Eastern States Archaeological Federation, Bucks County.

2019 Anderson, A., and M.G. Hrynick, and T. Stoddard. A New Look at Mid-20th Century Archaeological Fieldwork in Cobscook Bay, Maine. Paper presented at the 86th Annual Meeting of the Eastern States Archaeological Federation, Bucks County.

2019 Spahr, T., A. Anderson, M.G. Hrynick, G.-J. Hudgell, and A. Spiess. A Late Woodland Dugout Canoe from Cape Porpoise, Maine. Paper presented at the 86th Annual Meeting of the Eastern States Archaeological Federation, Bucks County.

2019 Hrynick, M.G., and M.W. Betts. “…and we showered with a thousand praises the woman who had been the fire’s guardian…”: Ancestral Wabanaki Gender and Placemaking in the Woodland Period. Paper presented at the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, Quebec City.

2019 Holyoke, K.R., and M.G. Hrynick. We Call it the Maritime Woodland: 3000 BP to Contact. Paper presented at the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, Quebec City.

2019 Hrynick, M.G. Late Woodland Roots of Protohistoric Change on the Maritime Peninsula. Paper presented at the 2019 General Meeting of the Association of Professional Archaeologists of New Brunswick.

2019 Hrynick, M.G., A. Anderson, Arthur, K. Patton, C. Brouillette, and T. Lamb. 2019. The Reversing Falls Site (80.15 ME), Pembroke, Maine: an Eroding Middle Woodland Site in a Unique Geological Setting. Paper presented at the 54th Annual Northeastern Section of Meeting of the Geological Society of America, Portland.

2018 Pelletier-Michaud, A., A. Anderson, and M.G. Hrynick The Distribution and Origin of “Hinkley Point Metasediment,” a Distinctive Toolstone from the Maine-New Brunswick Quoddy Region. Paper presented at the 85th Annual Meeting of the Eastern States Archaeological Federation, Watertown.

2018 Hudgell, G.-J., E. Cowie, R. Bartone, A.E. Spiess, and M.G. Hrynick

6

The Lamontagne Paleoindian Site and the Michaud (Auburn Airport) Cluster, Auburn, Androscoggin County, Maine. Paper presented at the 85th Annual Meeting of the Eastern States Archaeological Federation, Watertown.

2018 Betts, M.W., M.G. Hrynick, C. Cottreau-Robins, H. MacLeod-Leslie The COASTAL Archaeology Project: A Shared Authority Partnership to Address the Coastal Erosion Crisis on Nova Scotia’s South Shore. Paper presented at the 51st Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, Winnipeg. (Also an invited participant in the Canadian Museum of History-sponsored Erosion Workshop).

2018 Dignam, D., D.W. Black, T. Dow, K.R. Holyoke, and M.G. Hrynick Backdirt and Bureaucracy Revisited: The APANB and Archaeological Practice in New Brunswick. Paper presented at the 51st Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, Winnipeg.

2018 Hrynick, M.G. The Devil’s Head Site in Maine: the Organization of the Protohistoric Wabanaki World. Paper presented at the 83rd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Washington, D.C.

2018 Betts, M.W., and M.G. Hrynick Introducing COASTAL in Nova Scotia: Community Observation Assessment, and Salvage of Threatened Archaeological Legacy. Paper presented at the 83rd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Washington, D.C.

2017 Farley, W., and M.G. Hrynick Another Paper about Woodland Period Sedentism: Domestic Architecture in New England and the Maritime Peninsula. Paper presented at the 84th Annual Meeting of the Eastern States Archaeological Federation, New London.

2017 Blair, Susan E., C.E. Shaw, M.G. Hrynick, A. Pelletier-Michaud, W.J. Webb, and D.W. Black “Certain Inevitable Conclusions”: Edwin Tappan Adney, George Frederick Clarke and the Lane’s Creek “Sweat Bath.” Paper presented at the 50th annual meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, Ottawa.

2017 Hrynick, M.G., S. Blair, K.A. Patton, and W.J. Webb Wabanaki Foodways in the Protohistoric Quoddy Region: Hunter-Gatherer Continuity, Change, and Specialization in a Changing Social Seascape. Paper presented at the 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Vancouver.

2016 Hrynick, M.G., and W.J. Webb The Devil’s Head Site and the Late Maritime Woodland to Protohistoric Transition in Maine’s Quoddy Region. Paper presented at the 83rd Annual Meeting of the Eastern States Archaeological Federation, Langhorne.

7

2016 Leslie, D. E., and M. G. Hrynick Stable Isotope Applications to Season of Occupation at Archaeological Sites: A View from Maritime Woodland. Paper presented at the Conference on New England Archaeology Annual Meeting.

2016 Holyoke, K.R., S.E. Blair, and M.G. Hrynick Hunter-Gatherer Watercraft During New Brunswick’s Woodland Period: Social Implications. Paper presented at the 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Orlando.

2016 Hrynick, M.G. Athwart the ‘Intellectual Fault Line:’ International Questions in Maine-New Brunswick Archaeology. Paper presented the general meeting of the Association of Professional Archaeologists of New Brunswick, Fredericton.

2015 Hrynick, M.G., and D.W. Black Dwelling Features and Culture Change during the Maritime Woodland Period in the Quoddy Region. Paper presented at the 47th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, St. John’s.

2015 Fable, J.M., W.A. Farley, and M.G. Hrynick Go North, Young Man: An Archaeological Exploration of Late 18th and Early 19th Century American Industry and Opportunity on the Contested Maine Frontier. Paper presented at the Northeast Anthropological Association Meeting, Rindge.

2014 Hrynick, M.G. Non-midden Features at Shell-Bearing Sites: Living at the Devil’s Head Site, Calais, Maine. Paper presented at the 81st Annual Meeting of the Eastern States Archaeological Federation, Solomons.

2014 Leslie, D. E., and M. G. Hrynick Shellfishing, Seasonality, and Stable Isotopes: A View From the Maritime Woodland. Paper presented at the 81st Annual Meeting of the Eastern States Archaeological Federation, Solomons.

2013 Hrynick, M.G. Maritime Woodland Period Architecture at Port Joli Harbour, Nova Scotia. Paper presented at the 80th Annual Meeting of the Eastern States Archaeological Federation, South Portland.

2013 Hrynick, M.G. Developing Research Questions about Maritime Woodland Period Coastal Architecture. Paper Presented at the Inaugural Meeting of the Association of Professional Archaeologists of New Brunswick, Metepenagiag.

2012 Hrynick, M.G.

8

Historiographical Considerations for Archaeological Reports by Nineteenth-Century Natural Historians: Considering George Frederic Matthew and Henry David Thoreau. Paper Presented at the 45th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, Montreal.

2012 Holyoke, K.R., and M.G. Hrynick The Mill Brook Washademoak Lake Siteless Survey: Hunter-gatherers, Riverine Landscapes, and Fixed Resource Locales. Paper Presented at the 45th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, Montreal.

2011 Hrynick, M.G., M.W. Betts, and D.W. Black Woodland Period Domestic Architecture on the Coast of the Maritime Peninsula: A Case Study From Nova Scotia’s South Shore. Paper presented at the 44th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, Halifax.

2011 Holyoke, K.R., and M.G. Hrynick The Mill Brook/Washademoak Lake Shoreline Survey. Poster presented at the 44th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Archaeological Association, Halifax.

PUBLIC PRESENTATIONS (SELECTED) 2019 “The Archaeology of Cobscook Bay and an Introduction to the Maine Midden Minders Project” (with A. Anderson, A. Kelley, and B. Newsom). Presentation at the Cobscook Community Learning Center, 18 October 2019.

2016 “Building the Dawnland: An Architectural History of the Wabanaki Homeland at and Before Contact”. Archaeological Institute of America New Brunswick Annual Public Lecture Series.

2016 “Archaeology at Reversing Falls and the Pennamaquan Estuary.” Presentation to the Pembroke Historical Society, Pembroke.

2016 “Maritime Woodland and Protohistoric Period Occupations at the Devil’s Head Site, Calais, Maine.” Presentation to the Maine Archaeological Society, Augusta, Maine.

2013 “E’se’get: Discoveries from Port Joli.” Keynote address, with Matthew Betts, at AcadiaFirst Nation’s Ancient Mi’kmaw Culture Re-Emerges, Liverpool, Nova Scotia, 21 June 2013.

RECENT INVITED PRESENTATIONS TO UNIVERSITY GROUPS (SELECTED) 2019 University of Maine Archaeology Field School 2019 UNE NORTH: The Institute for North Atlantic Studies of the University of New England 2019 University of Toronto Archaeology Centre 2019 University of Albany – SUNY, Department of Anthropology

COURSES TAUGHT UNIVERSITY OF NEW BRUNSWICK

9

The Human Past: Archaeological Approaches (1000-Level); Introduction to Archaeology and Biological Anthropology (1000-Level); Archaeological Traditions of North America (3000- Level); Archaeological Field School (3000-Level); Archaeological Lab School (3000-Level); Archaeology of Northeastern North America (3000-Level online); Hunters and Gatherers (4000- Level); Archaeology of Atlantic Canada (4000-Level); Theory and Method Honours Seminar in Archaeology (5000-Level); Anthropology Graduate Seminar (6000-Level)

BATES COLLEGE Introduction to Archaeology (100-Level); Introduction to Human Evolution (100-Level); Introduction to Archaeological Field Work (Spring field school); Hunter-Gatherers (200-Level)

UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT Other People’s Worlds – Writing Intensive (1000-Level); Introduction to Anthropology (1000- Level); Contemporary Native Americans (3000-Level); North American Prehistory (3000-Level)

STUDENT ADVISING SUPERVISOR In progress Christopher Brouillette, M.A. in Anthropology, U. of New Brunswick In progress Trevor Lamb, M.A. in Anthropology, U. of New Brunswick 2018 Christopher E. Shaw, M.A. in Anthropology, U. of New Brunswick (Co- supervised with S. Blair)

COMMITTEE MEMBER 2020-Present Dana Yakabowskas, PhD in Anthropology, University of Albany – SUNY, Department of Anthropology

2020 Mallory Moran, PhD in Anthropology, College of William and Mary

EXAMINER 2019 Kelly Chaves, Ph.D. in History, U. of New Brunswick 2017 Alexandre Pelletier-Michaud, M.A. in Anthropology, U. of New Brunswick 2017 Melissa Slader, M.A. in Anthropology, U. of New Brunswick

UNDERGRADUATE ADVISING 2016–Present Honours and Majors Advisor, Anthropology, University of New Brunswick 2016 Honours thesis supervisor, Christopher Shaw 2015–2016 Advisor, Archaeology and Material Culture General Education Concentration, Bates College

UNIVERSITY SERVICE 2020–Present Arts Faculty Scholarships and Prizes Committee 2020 Search Committee for an Anthropology Department Chair 2020 Department of Anthropology Search Committee for an environmental anthropologist

10

2020 UNB SGS campus wide selection committee for the SSHRC CGS-Masters competition 2019 Adjudicator University Research Fund Competition 2019–Present Lecture Committee 2019 Adjudicator, Harrison McCain Young Scholars Awards 2016–Present Undergraduate Advisor, Department of Anthropology, UNB 2017–2019 Arts 1000 Committee 2017 Co-chair of the Department of Anthropology’s timetabling committee 2017 Anthropology Department Level 1 Committee for a promotion to full professor 2017 Anthropology Department Chair Search Committee 2017–Present Contract Academic Instructor Committee, Dept. of Anthropology 2017 Co-Drafted a successful MacNutt Lecture Nomination 2016 Contract Academic Instructor Level I Committee

RECENT PEER REVIEW (AD HOC) Archaeology of Eastern North America; Canadian Journal of Archaeology; Journal of the North Atlantic; National Science Foundation; Rowman & Littlefield; Harrison McCain Young Scholars Award; Thames & Hudson

PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES MEMBERSHIP Association of Professional Archaeologists of New Brunswick Canadian Archaeological Association Eastern States Archaeological Federation Maine Archaeological Society Maine Historic Preservation Commission Prehistoric Archaeologists Approved List, Level II Register of Professional Archaeologists (No. 990093)

SERVICE TO PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES 2019 – 2020, Register of Professional Archaeologist Standards Task Force 2017 – 2020, Standards Board Alternate, Register of Professional Archaeologists 2017 – Present, Vice President, Association of Professional Archaeologists of New Brunswick 2017 – Present, Archaeological Advisory Board, the Abbe Museum (Maine’s Smithsonian Affiliate), Bar Harbor

MEDIA COVERAGE (SELECTED) “UNB students help unearth 700-year-old canoe. CBC New Brunswick. 9 Nov. 2019. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/unb-students-unearth-canoe-1.5352826

Interviewed on Information Morning – Fredericton with Terry Seguin about a ca. 700 year old canoe that UNB field school students assisted in excavating in Maine, 7 Nov. 2019.

“2000-year-old artifact found in Belleisle Bay,” Telegraph Journal 5 Sept. 2019, p. B3h (quoted expert)

11

A ‘fascinating’ discovery: Canoe believed to be the oldest found in Maine. Seacoast Online (article promoted by Archaeology Magazine, among others), 6 June 2019

“Sea-level rise threatens coastal history,” Quoddy Tides Newspaper, 23 Sept. 2016, p. 27.

Interviewed, with Matthew Betts, on Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Radio 1 Halifax, “Information Morning” about pre-Contact architecture on Nova Scotia’s South Shore, 20 June 2013.

FIELD AND LABORATORY EXPERIENCE 2019–Present Regional Representative, Maine Midden Minders Project, Downeast Maine 2013–Present Principal Investigator, Research in coastal Washington County, Maine. 2017–Present Field research with Arthur Anderson at 5.06 ME (intermittent field and lab research) Summer 2017 Faculty, UNB/Parks Canada Fortress Louisbourg Fieldschool, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia 2016–Present Co-Principal Investigator, COASTAL Project, Coast of Southern Nova Scotia 2009–2016 Research Collaborator, Canadian Museum of Civilization, E’se’get Archaeological Research Project, Port Joli Harbour, Nova Scotia and environs. Summer 2013 Archaeologist, Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center Battlefield Archaeology Project, Mashantucket and Old Saybrook, CT. Summer 2012 Archaeologist, Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center Battlefield Archaeology Project, Mashantucket, CT, and environs. Summer 2011 Archaeologist, Field Supervisor, and Research Permit Holder, AMEC Environmental and Infrastructure, New Brunswick. Fall 2010 Research Collaborator, Washademoak Lake/Mill Brook Stream Pedestrian and Canoe Survey, New Brunswick. Summer 2010 Field Technician, Northeast Archaeology Research Center, Farmington, Maine. (Project hire basis.) Summer 2009 Field Technician, Northeast Archaeology Research Center, Farmington, Maine. (Project hire basis.) 2008–2009 Research Assistant, University of Maine Prehistoric Archaeology Laboratory, Orono, Maine and intermittent field work at Machias Bay, Maine. Summer 2008 Field Technician, TRC Solutions, Ellicott City, Maryland. (Project hire basis.) Summer 2008 Student, University of Maine Field School, Machias Bay, Maine. Summer 2007 Student, Towson University Field School, Cumberland, Maryland.

RESEARCH INTERESTS Archaeology and ethnohistory of Atlantic Canada and New England; Hunter-gatherer relational cosmology; Domestic architecture and use of domestic space; Coastal hunter-gatherers; Riverine transport strategies; Cultural resource management and archaeological survey; History of 19th Century archaeological research in the Northeast

REFERENCES

12

Dr. Matthew Betts of Eastern Archaeology Canadian Museum of History 100 Laurier St, Gatineau, Quebec, Canada K1A 0M8 [email protected] 819.776.8419

Dr. Amy Scott Associate Professor of Anthropology University of New Brunswick 13 Macaulay Lane Annex C Fredericton, NB, Canada E3B 5A3 [email protected] 506.458.7994

Dr. Arthur Spiess Chief Historic Preservationist, Prehistoric Archaeology Maine Historic Preservation Commission 1845 Capt. Isaac Gage House, 55 Capitol Street Augusta, ME 04333 [email protected] 207.287.2789

13