First Class Faced, Rose to Challenges a Sacred Invitation to Unity
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Archaeology As Restoration Ecology: a Model from Sunwatch
ARCHAEOLOGY AS RESTORATION ECOLOGY: A MODEL FROM SUNWATCH INDIAN VILLAGE/ARCHAEOLOGICAL PARK (33My57) A thesis presented to the faculty of the College of Arts and Sciences of Ohio University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Science Sara Rose DeAloia August 2004 This thesis entitled ARCHAEOLOGY AS RESTORATION ECOLOGY: A MODEL FROM SUNWATCH INDIAN VILLAGE/ARCHAEOLOGICAL PARK (33My57) BY SARA ROSE DeALOIA has been approved for the Program of Environmental Studies and the College of Arts and Sciences by Elliot Abrams Professor of Anthropology Leslie A. Flemming Dean, College of Arts and Sciences DeALOIA, SARA ROSE. M.S. August 2004. Environmental Studies Archaeology as Restoration Ecology: A Model from SunWatch Indian Village/ Archaeological Park (33My57)(87 pp.) Director of Thesis: Elliot Abrams This research is intended to demonstrate how SunWatch Indian Village/Archaeological Park presents possibilities for how restoration ecology and archaeology can augment and inform each other by looking at both the site and the environmental restoration at the site from an historical ecology perspective. There are two major themes of this work: first, the application of archaeological data to modern environmental issues and second, the importance of viewing landscapes as both natural and cultural phenomena which interact in a series of complex relationships throughout time. I present a comprehensive overview of the site, providing the paleothnobotanical data collected by previous researchers in order to show how such archaeological data can be used to inform restoration work. The research ends with a presentation of how SunWatch can provide a model for doing this work in other places, as well as a series of questions and criteria necessary for determining when and where it is appropriate. -
Wendell Berry: Life and Work
University of Kentucky UKnowledge Environmental Sciences Science, Technology, and Medicine 7-20-2007 Wendell Berry: Life and Work Jason Peters Augustana College Click here to let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Thanks to the University of Kentucky Libraries and the University Press of Kentucky, this book is freely available to current faculty, students, and staff at the University of Kentucky. Find other University of Kentucky Books at uknowledge.uky.edu/upk. For more information, please contact UKnowledge at [email protected]. Recommended Citation Peters, Jason, "Wendell Berry: Life and Work" (2007). Environmental Sciences. 7. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_environmental_sciences/7 19771-10A Wendell Berry Life & Work Cvr 5/10/10 biography / nature Peters “Anyone unacquainted with Wendell Berry—man of letters, farmer, recipient of numerous awards, modern-day Jeremiah, and iconoclast of contemporary Berry Wendell culture—will fi nd no better overview of his life and ideas than this collection Wendell of reminiscences, literary criticism, and tributes. Th is is a book to be read with a pencil so that passages can be savored and pondered.”—Library Journal LIFE AND WORK “Th e wonderful thing about this collection of essays is that it demonstrates just how varied and far-reaching Berry’s infl uence has been and how meaningful his work is to his readers in so many diff erent ways.”—Resurgence Berry Edited by Jason Peters Wendell Berry’s essays, novels, and poems have long given voice to a provocative but consistent philosophy, one that extends far beyond its agrarian core to include elements of sociology, the natural sciences, politics, religion, and philosophy. -
University Catalog 2020-2021 Academic Calendar - Calendar 11/2/20, 9:28 AM
University Catalog 2020-2021 Academic Calendar - Calendar 11/2/20, 9:28 AM Academic Calendar All Campus Dates Pittsburgh Campus Only Mix-in: All, None August 2020 Begins Ends Campus 8/5/2020 Wednesday Office of International Services (OIS) Graduate and 8/5/2020 Wednesday Professional Student Orientation Pittsburgh Campus 8/5/2020 Wednesday Summer 12-WEEK, 6-WEEK-2, 4-WEEK-3 sessions 8/5/2020 Wednesday grades must be approved by instructors by 11:59 Pittsburgh p.m. Campus 8/8/2020 Saturday Official date for awarding degrees 8/8/2020 Saturday All Campuses 8/8/2020 Saturday Summer Term Ends: Final examinations scheduled 8/8/2020 Saturday during last class meeting All Campuses 8/9/2020 Sunday Residence halls close 8/9/2020 Sunday Pittsburgh Campus 8/12/2020 Wednesday Summer Term grades must be approved by 8/12/2020 Wednesday instructors by 11:59 p.m Pittsburgh Campus 8/12/2020 Wednesday International Undergraduate Student Orientation 8/14/2020 Friday Pittsburgh Campus https://25livepub.collegenet.com/calendars/pitt-academic-calendar?date=20200805&media=print Page 1 of 10 Academic Calendar - Calendar 11/2/20, 9:28 AM 8/13/2020 Thursday New Faculty Orientation 8/13/2020 Thursday Pittsburgh Campus 8/13/2020 Thursday Residence halls open 8/13/2020 Thursday Pittsburgh Campus 8/14/2020 Friday New Teaching Assistant Orientation 8/14/2020 Friday Pittsburgh Campus 8/16/2020 Sunday Welcome Week 8/18/2020 Tuesday Pittsburgh Campus 8/17/2020 Monday New Graduate and Professional Student Orientation 8/17/2020 Monday Pittsburgh Campus 8/18/2020 Tuesday New -
Sociology/Anthropology Newsletter, Spring 2017
SOCIOLOGY/ANTHROPOLOGY NEWSLETTER SPRING 2017 In this issue: Spotlight on Student GREETINGS FROM THE DEPARTMENT CHAIR Success 2 Warm spring greetings to all of our staff, students, faculty, and alumni! Outstanding Seniors This past year has witnessed a bounty of change, challenge, hope, and promise across 2016 3 seemingly every dimension of social life. And, while the university continues its efforts to manage WSU’s fiscal challenges, our department marches on and continues to focus Distinguished Alumni 4 upon our central mission--delivering a rich array of quality courses and degree programs to our amazing students. SOC/ATH Graduates 5 Programmatically, this past fall we added a new and very popular undergraduate Dean’s List 6 Sociology Certificate in Diversity and Social Inequality (see page 9). This credential highlights students’ proficiency in these high demand arenas and should be a strong selling point our students can showcase for prospective employers. We also created a parallel Anthropology Field graduate Diversity and Social Inequality credential for high school educators seeking to teach Sociology under the School 7 state’s College Credit Plus program. ATH Society 8 Other curricular enhancements in 2016-2017 included the development of new courses for our Anthropology and Sociology programs including two new archaeology courses offered by Dr. Lance Greene – America’s Buried Past and Diversity and Social the Archaeology of Conflict, as well as a new Sociology course, Pop Culture- Race, Class, and Sexuality created by Dr. Inequality Cert 9 Julianne Weinzimmer. Another big highlight was the successful return of the Archaeology Field School (see page 7) which garnered a good bit of well-deserved media attention for Dr. -
Archaeologist Volume 57 No
OHIO ARCHAEOLOGIST VOLUME 57 NO. 1 WINTER 2007 PUBLISHED BY THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF OHIO The Archaeological Society of Ohio BACK ISSUES OF OHIO ARCHAEOLOGIST 1956 thru 1967 out of print Term 1968 - 1999 $ 2.50 Expires A.S.O. OFFICERS 1951 thru 1955 REPRINTS - sets only $100.00 2008 President Rocky Falleti, 5904 South Ave., Youngstown, OH 2000 thru 2002 $ 5.00 44512(330)788-1598. 2003 $ 6.00 2008 Vice President Michael Van Steen, 5303 Wildman Road, Add $0.75 For Each Copy of Any Issue South Charleston, OH 45314. The Archaeology of Ohio, by Robert N. Converse regular $60.00 Author's Edition $75.00 2008 Immediate Past President John Mocic, Box 170 RD #1, Dilles Postage, Add $ 2.50 Bottom, OH 43947 (740) 676-1077. Back issues of the Ohio Archaeologist printed prior to 1964 are generally 2008 Executive Secretary George Colvin, 220 Darbymoor Drive, out of print but copies are available from time to time. Write to business office Plain City, OH 43064 (614) 879-9825. for prices and availability. 2008 Treasurer Gary Kapusta, 32294 Herriff Rd., Ravenna, OH 44266 ASO CHAPTERS (330) 296-2287. Aboriginal Explorers Club 2008 Recording Secretary Cindy Wells, 15001 Sycamore Road, President: Mark Kline, 1127 Esther Rd., Wellsville, OH 43968 (330) 532-1157 Mt. Vernon, OH 43050 (614) 397-4717. Beau Fleuve Chapter 2008 Webmaster Steven Carpenter, 529 Gray St., Plain City, OH. President: Richard Sojka, 11253 Broadway, Alden, NY 14004 (716) 681-2229 43064 (614) 873-5159. Blue Jacket Chapter 2010 Editor Robert N. Converse, 199 Converse Drive, Plain City, President: Ken Sowards, 9201 Hildgefort Rd„ Fort Laramie, OH 45845 (937) 295-3764 OH 43064(614)873-5471. -
Experimental Reconstruction of Fort Ancient Architecture at Sunwatch Indian Village/Archaeological Park
Abstracts of Presentations at the 2010 OAC Fall Membership Meeting The Reese Center, The Ohio State University-Newark 6 November 2010 William E. Kennedy and Jill Krieg Dayton Society of Natural History Experimental Reconstruction of Fort Ancient Architecture at SunWatch Indian Village/Archaeological Park Architectural reconstruction at SunWatch Indian Village/Archaeological Park has been conducted for nearly three decades, primarily in the forms of permanent structures, stockades, and other large features. These reconstructions serve as interactive educational displays, but also as an experimental laboratory. The use of primarily natural local materials has yielded an unparalleled body of knowledge that has both enhanced and skewed our collective understanding of Fort Ancient architecture and ecology. In this paper, we will present anecdotal and experimental data, explain lessons learned, describe ongoing experiments, and challenge some common assumptions about prehistoric architecture. Suzanne Sanders, Joshua Roth, Nathan Workman, and Jennifer Evans R. Christopher Goodwin & Associates, Inc. Good Middling Farmers: Archeological Investigations of the Nineteenth Century Clayton/Huston Farmstead, Richland Township, Fayette County Archeological and archival investigations were conducted for the Clayton/Huston farmstead in 2007 and 2009. Initially identified in 2007, the farmstead site (33FA1740) included three separate loci that reflected agricultural uses as well as two separate occupation periods in the nineteenth century. Archeological data recovery was conducted in 2009. Archival investigations indicated that domestic occupation and agricultural activity began in the early nineteenth century, at least by 1830, with the residence of the Clayton family on the property. Subsequently, William Huston occupied Locus 3, followed by his son Alexander until Alexander constructed and relocated to the extant Baker farmhouse adjacent to the site. -
Educational Enrichment Summer 2021 Special COVID-19 Addition
Educational Enrichment Summer 2021 Special COVID-19 Addition No school should not mean “no learning.” Keep your kids active physically and mentally this summer by providing them fun, interesting, and educational things to do. This summer enrichment guide has 3 major parts: summer theme suggestions (this year focusing on the out-of-doors and fun at home), websites to find activities and events over the summer months, and suggested destinations within a 2 ½-3 hour radius of St. Thomas More. We are already planning ways to have fun over the summer. Joe has chosen a Hiking theme (our outdoor focus) and Michael has chosen Cooking (fun at home). Hopefully this guide will help your family do the same! Julie Esposito ([email protected]) Summer Theme Ideas Joe informed me six years ago that he wanted to study fossils. Michael, not wanting to be outdone, promptly said that if Joe got to study fossils, he wanted to study bones. Thus was born our new tradition of summer themes. Each child choses a topic and we look for books, websites, activities, events, destinations, and adventures centered around the theme. Other themes we have explored included gardens, forts, insects, airplanes & aviation, astronomy & the night sky, archeology, games, international, and Indians. Here are some of the ways we accomplish this: Check-out and read library books on the chosen topic(s) Search the web for videos and kid-friendly websites Have family discussion on topics related to the theme and family game nights Attend programs/activities offered locally for kids that fit in with the theme Visit places in town or as day trips to the surrounding area that fit the theme Look for ways to incorporate the theme in our vacation travel plans Plan cooking/dining experiences around the theme COVID-19: Did you know that in all the countries tracking COVID-19 outbreaks, there has been only one major identified outbreak outdoors? 90% of outbreak incidents took place in homes, workplaces, restaurants, and indoor gatherings (i.e. -
Ohio Archaeology Book Author: Tom Law Ohio Archaeology: an Illustrated Chronicle of Ohio’S Ancient American Indian Cultures
June 27, 2014 Web artice: Ohio Archaeology book Author: Tom Law Ohio Archaeology: An Illustrated Chronicle of Ohio’s Ancient American Indian Cultures Producer: Voyageur Media Group, Inc. Project Director: Tom Law Editor: Rebecca A. Hawkins Author: Bradley T. Lepper Release: 2005 (1st edition); 2009 (2nd edition) Publisher: Orange Frazer Press, Wilmington, Ohio, (800) 852-9332; orangefrazer.com (see Nature). Summary Ohio Archaeology: An Illustrated Chronicle of Ohio’s Ancient American Indian Cultures is a fascinating journey of discovery into what scientists know about a series of American Indian cultures that flourished in the state for over 12,000 years. Author Bradley T. Lepper, Curator of Archaeology, Ohio Historical Society, explores the daily life, astounding achievements and mysterious legacies of the first "Ohioans," from the earliest Paleoindian hunters to the last Fort Ancient farmers before European contact. This beautiful 304-page, coffee table-style book contains over 340 color illustrations, including photographs of archaeological sites, excavations and research labs, museum artifacts, a series of original artworks, computer graphics of reconstructed sites, and maps and timelines for each of Ohio's six archaeological periods. Ohio Archaeology also presents 28 feature articles contributed by top regional scholars about specific archaeological sites and investigations (see Table of Contents). While the book focuses on recent archaeological discoveries, Ohio Archaeology also examines the past and future of the discipline. Historian Dr. Terry Barnhart contributes an intriguing essay about Ohio's important role in the development of American archaeology from the late 1700s to the early 1900s. The epilogue, "Legacies," closes with an introspective summary of the scientific and cultural issues being debated by archaeologists, American Indians and government officials in the 21st century. -
Ohio Museums by County Page 1 of 21 Name Town/City County Region Type Summary Serpent Mound Peebles Adams Southwest Archaeology Prehistoric Effigy Mound
Ohio Museums by County page 1 of 21 Name Town/City County Region Type Summary Serpent Mound Peebles Adams Southwest Archaeology Prehistoric effigy mound. museum and park Delphos Canal Commission Delphos Allen Northeast Transportation website, operated by the Delphos Canal Commission Museum Delphos Museum Delphos Allen Northeast Local history website Delphos Museum of Postal Delphos Allen Northeast Postal website, postal history, stamps, letters, artifacts and the Holocaust History Includes main local history museum, log house, Victorian mansion, Allen County Museum Lima Allen Northwest Multiple locomotive display, military/transportation building and children's museum ArtSpace Lima Lima Allen Northwest Art website, changing exhibits website, includes 3 houses with exhibits of decorative arts, natural Ashland County Historical Ashland Ashland Northeast Multiple history and insect collection, household items, local industries, Society Museum carriages Cleo Redd Fisher Museum Loudonville Ashland Northeast Local history information, operated by the Mohican Historical Society Wolf Creek Grist Mill Loudonville Ashland Northeast Mill website, historic grist mill website, housed in the former residence of the lighthouse keepers Ashtabula Maritime Museum Ashtabula Ashtabula Northeast Maritime and the Coast Guard Chief Blakeslee Log Cabin Ashtabula Ashtabula Northeast Historic house website, operated by the Ashtabula Historical Society Christ Church Museum Windsor Ashtabula Northeast Local history website, operated by the Windsor Historical Society -
Touring South Texas $3.95
RETHINKING PALEO-INDIANS • AMAZING MOUND BUILDING • HISTORIC TREE CARVINGS american archaeologySUMMER 2013 a quarterly publication of The Archaeological Conservancy Vol. 17 No. 2 TOURING South Texas $3.95 SUMMER 2013 americana quarterly publication of The Archaeological archaeology Conservancy Vol. 17 No. 2 COVER FEATURE 37 VISITING SOUTH TEXAS AND THE HILL COUNTRY BY RICHARD A. MARINI Twelve thousand years of history is on display in this summer road trip. 12 A DIFFERENT VIEW OF PALEO-INDIANS BY JENNIFER PINKOWSKI An archaeologist questions some of the ES C “truths” about these ancient people. VI R E S R 19 A HISTORY INSCRIBED ON TREES BY DAVID MALAKOFF IAN CYBE Myriad tree carvings offer a glimpse R of the life of Basque sheepherders. 25 NEW THINKING ABOUT POVERTY POINT ILLO OF RUPEST BY JULIAN SMITH B Archaeologists had assumed it took decades, perhaps even VELYN VELYN centuries, to build Poverty Point’s largest mound. But recent E research indicates it could have been done in a month. K AND K R 30 THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF CARLSBAD CAVERNS T MA T R BY TAMARA STEWART 30 ROBE The cultural resources at this World Heritage Site rival its amazing caves. 45 new acquisition THE CONSERVANCY ACQUIRES AN IMPORTANT WOODLAND SITE The Scotch Hall preserve has a large concentration of artifacts. 46 new acquisition A MOUND COMPLEX WITH GREAT RESEARCH POTENTIAL Backusburg Mounds could shed light on Kentucky’s prehistory. 47 THE POINT-5 PROGRAM BEGINS R 48 point acquisition 19 OBTAINING AN ICONIC PUEBLO JOHN BIETE Groundbreaking research was conducted at Carter Ranch Pueblo. -
Examining Potential Tourism Impacts of World Heritage Status: an Analysis of Fort Ancient, Ohio
Examining Potential Tourism Impacts of World Heritage Status: An Analysis of Fort Ancient, Ohio A thesis submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Cincinnati in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Community Planning in the School of Planning of the College of Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning by Zachary William Moore April 2015 B.A. Wright State University, 2013 Committee Chair: Carla Chifos, PhD, AICP Moore 1 ABSTRACT The subject of tourism, manifesting at varying scales ranging from local to global, has been a topic of much discussion and research among both academic and professional circles. Tourists who visit places which possess a special cultural, historic or natural value, referred to as heritage tourists, seek a unique, immersive and authentic experience. This type of experience can come into conflict with the homogenization and commercialization that often accompanies tourism development, and in the worst cases can lead to deterioration of heritage. This issue can also be exacerbated by a significant increase in visitation following a site’s designation as World Heritage, a prestigious brand which promotes cultural and natural heritage sites worldwide. This thesis analyzes and critiques projected economic and development impacts in Warren County, Ohio, resulting from the inscription of Fort Ancient, a Hopewell Native American hilltop enclosure, as a World Heritage site. The methodological framework comprises three parts: (1) an economic impact analysis, using IMPLAN; (2) build-out scenario production; and (3) build-out scenario visualization, using GIS. Predicted development outcomes, encompassing hotel/motel, restaurant, retail, and arts/entertainment sectors, are examined and discussed in conjunction with development patterns observed near three existing U.S. -
2005 Program + Abstracts
PROGRAM AND ABSTRACTS 51st Annual Meeting MIDWEST Archaeological Conference __________________________________________________________________________________ October 20-23, 2005 Dayton, Ohio Sponsored by Wright State University -and- Dayton Society of Natural History Midwest Archaeological Conference, Inc. Executive Committee President: Lynne G. Goldstein, Michigan State University President-Elect: Bonnie W. Styles, Illinois State Museum Treasurer: Robert J. Jeske, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Treasurer-Elect: Timothy Baumann, University of Missouri-St. Louis Secretary: Susan Martin, Michigan Technological University Executive Officer: George R. Milner, Pennsylvania State University Executive Officer: Mark F. Seeman, Kent State University MCJA Editor: William A. Lovis, Michigan State University MCJA Editor-Elect: Janet G. Brashler, Grand Valley State University Conference Organizing Committee Robert Riordan, Wright State University Lynn Simonelli, Dayton Society of Natural History William Kennedy, Dayton Society of Natural History Special thanks to Grant Knight and the staff of the Crowne Plaza Hotel Susan Schultheis Jamie Kelly And banquet sponsor: Gray and Pape, Inc. 2005 Midwest Archaeological Conference 1 Crowne Plaza Hotel, Second Floor Cover Illustration This year’s conference logo (and t-shirt logo) was designed by Bill Patterson of Patterson Graphics, Dayton, Ohio. The logos incorporate photographs of artifacts from the collection of the Dayton Society of Natural History and line drawings made by Mr. Patterson of a structure at SunWatch Indian Village/Archaeological Park and of the “Wolf-Man” pipe recovered from that site. The Dayton Society of Natural History curates the collection from SunWatch and from many other prehistoric sites in southwest Ohio. The DSNH was responsible for the excavation of SunWatch and continues to manage the site in its mission to promote knowledge about the prehistoric inhabitants of the region.