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Newsletter Norman F - The Society for Historical Archaeology NEWSLETTER NORMAN F. BARKA, Newsletter Editor DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY, COLLEGE OF WILLIAM AND MARY, WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA 23185 VOLUME 21 NUMBER 3 OCTOBER 1988 INDEX 1989 ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONGRESS Page The First Archaeological Congress and the 1989 Society for Historical Archaeology Conference on EDITOR'S NOTE. • • • • • • • 1 Historical and Underwater Archaeology will be held at 1989 ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONGRESS 1 the Baltimore Convention Center, Thursday, January 5, 1989 SHA PRELIMINARY PROGRAM 1 to Monday, January 9. The Archaeological Congress is ANNOUNCEMENTS/COMMENTS • • 14 sponsored by the Society for Historical Archaeology, REQUESTS FOR INFORMATION •• 15 Archaeological I nstitute of America, American PAST CONFERENCE. • . • . • • . 15 Philological Association, and the American Schools of FUTURE CONFERENCES/WORKSHOPS. 16 Oriental Research. Congress papers will be presented RECENT PUBLICATIONS •••••• 16 in interdisciplinary sessions by members from each of OVERSEAS CHINESE RESEARCH GROUP. 16 the participating societies. Information on all aspects URBAN ARCHAEOLOGY FORUM. 18 of the combined meetings will be sent to the SHA CURRENT RESEARCH membersh i pin October. Northeast. 19 I n addition to the Congress sessions, SHA Mid-Atlantic 21 members will present papers in regular SHA sessions. Southeast. • 32 The preliminary 1989 SHA program is presented on the Gulf States 34 following pages. The session numbers are those Midwest •• 35 assigned by the AlA Business Office for the entire Central Plains 35 combined meetings at Baltimore. Northern Plains and Mountain States. 36 Northwest. • • 37 Pacific West • • • • • 38 PRELIMINARY PROGRAM Southwest. • • • . • 39 1989 SHA CONFERENCE ON HISTORICAL Canada-Ontario. • • • 41 AND Canada-Western Region 42 UNDERWATER ARCHAEOLOGY Caribbean •••••. 42 BALTIMORE, MARYLAND Mexico, Central and South America. 43 Southern Africa 45 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1989 Underwater News. • 45 URBAN ARCHAEOLOGY GROUP MAILING LIST. 48 WORKSHOP: CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN URBAN ARCHA­ EOLOGY ORGANIZER: Urban Archaeology Group EDITOR'S NOTE MODERATOR: Carmen Weber The SHA Membership List, which normally should appear in this issue of the Newsletter, will be printed 2:00- 5:00 PM in the March 1989 issue instead. The reason for the Part I: Assessing and Evaluating Site Significance delay is a recent decision by the SHA Board to include (Baltimore City Life Museum) telephone numbers of members in the list in order to facilitate communication. Requests for telephone 7 : 00- 9: 00 PM numbers will be made with the dues notice for 1989 Part II: Guidelines for Urban Archaeology membership, to be mailed shortly. (Baltimore City Life Museum) - THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1989 1 :30 Gary Norman; Construction of Eighteenth­ Century Cheapside Wharf, Baltimore, Maryland 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM 1 :55 Paula Kai Dardaris; An Early Nineteenth SHA Executive Board Meeting Century Marine Railway at the Port of ACUA Executive Board Meeting Philadelphia 2:20 Ethel R. Eaton; A Predictive Model for 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM Urban Waterfront Sites Women's Caucus Group [II-F) Workshop: BETTER PAPER PRESENTATIONS 1 :30- 4:00 PM Sheli Smith and Monica Reed, Organizers and Chair­ FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1989 persons 12: 00- 1: 30 ROUNDTABLE LUNCHEONS [II-G) Symposium: Douglas C. Comer NEW DIRECTION IN FLORIDA UNDERWATER - Metaphor in Restoration Archaeology ARCHAEOLOGY Edward Jelks Roger C. Smith; Or~Janizer and Chairperson - Sitography: An Archaeogeographical Methodology Participants: Anne Giesecke 1 :30 Roger C. Smith; New Directions in Florida - State Shipwreck Legislation Underwater Archaeology Paul Johnston 1 :55 James S. Dunbar; The Archaeological - Job Opportunities in Nautical Archaeology Implications of Inundated Prehistoric Sites in Toni Carrel Florida - Vernacular Watercraft 2 :20 Herb Bump; Current Treatments in Use at John Broadwater the Florida Research and Conservation - Volunteers and Sport Divers in Underwater Archa­ Laboratory eology 2:45 K. C. Smith; Wind in the Sails: Progressive Suzanne Spencer-Wood Efforts to Educate Florida's Public About - New Theoretical Approaches in Archaeology Underwater· Archaeology Carolyn Pierce 3:10 Michael W. White; Cultural Resource - Hazardous Waste and Archaeology Management in Florida's National Marine Marley Brown Sanctuaries - Comparative Colonial Archaeology 3:35 Caleb Curren; Pursuing Pensacola's Maritime Judith Bense Past - Archaeological Significance in the Urban Context [ II-H) Symposium: INTERPRETING SPACE: THE USE OF FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 6, 1989 GEOGRAP.IIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS IN ARCHAEOLOGY [II-B) Contributed Papers: Stanton W. Green; Ol~ganizer and Chairperson THE HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY OF Participants: AMERICAN WATERFRONTS 1 :30 Stanton Green; Sorting Out Settlement in Gary Norman, Chairperson Southeaster n Ireland Participants: Published Quarterly in March, June, October and December Subscription Rates Individual ($30), Student, full-time ($25), Sustaining ($50), Patron ($100), Institutional ($50). All U.S. Funds. Newsletter Editor Norman F. Barka Typist: Jean Belvin Special News Editors: Governmental Affairs: Ronald Anzalone and Richard Waldbauer Overseas Chinese Paul Chace Archaeological Conservation Forum: Curt Moyer Recent Publications: Robert Fryman Urban Archaeology Forum : Susan Henry Current Research Editors: Northeast: Faith Harrington Northern Plains & Mountain States: Canada-Atlantic: Andree Crepeau Mid-Atlantic: J. Mark Wittkofski Steven G. Baker :anada-Quebec to be named Southeast: Maurice Williams Northwest: Priscilla Wegars :anada-Ontario: Jon Jouppien Gulf States: Charles Orser, Jr. Alaska: Ty Dilliplane :anada-Prairie: Peter Priess Midwest: Vergil E. Noble Pacific West: Glenn J. Farris Canada-Western: Donald Steer Central Plains: William Lees Southwest: James E. Ayres Caribbean: David R. Watters Europe, Asia: Norman F. Barka Mexico, Central and South :30uthern Afric.a: Patrice L. Jeppson America: Janine GaseD Underwater: Toni Carrell Editorial Address: The Society for Historical Archaeology Newsletter, Department of Anthropology, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia 23185. Business Address : The Society for Historical Archaeology, P.O. Box 231033, Pleasant Hill, California 94523. (new subscriptions, changes of address, subscription fulfillment matter,,). 1988 The Society for Historical Archaeology 3rd class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 2 1 :55 Stephen H. Savage; The Archaeological [II-S] Contributed Papers: Resource Management System and an FROM GRAVES TO GRAVESTONES: Application in the Creation of Predictive INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACHES TO Models GRAPPLING WITH MORTUARY DATA 2:20 Jane Smith. Ezra Zubrow. and Kathleen David M. Gradwohl. Chairperson Allen; Predictive Modelling of Very Long Partici pants: Term Processes Using GIS 1: 30 Gillian Bentley. Geoffrey Braswell. Sharon 2:"'5 Roy S. Stine; Application of Geographic Camm. Martin G. Dudek. Devra Keenan. Techniques in Archaeology Ymke L. A. Mulder. and Lillian Thomas; An 3:10 Scott R. Love; Making Geographic Informa­ Historic Test of Archaeological Mortuary tion Systems More Accessible to Cultural Assumptions: The Old Meeting House Resource Management Organizations Cemetery. Lincoln. Massachusetts 3:35 Discussant: W. Lynn Shirley 1: 55 David M. Gradwohl; I ntra-Group Diversity in Jewish Burial Practices and Cemeteries: An Ethnoarchaeological Perspective [l1-Q] Symposium: 2:20 Gaynell Stone; Ethnicity Revealed in Material INTERPRETING THE NINETEENTH-CENTURY Culture: Spatial and Cultural Choice in Long CITY: HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY IN Island Gravestones. 1680-1820 ALEXANDRIA. VIRGINIA 2:".5 Blythe E. Roveland; Monumental Lives and Steven J. Shephard. Organizer and Chairperson Monumental Deaths? Status and Mortuary Participants: Architecture in Upstate New York 1: 30 Pamela J. Cressey; The Nineteenth Century 3: 10 Robert K. Fitts; A Linguistic Analysis of Transformation and Spatial Development of New England Gravestones Alexandria. Virginia 3: 35 Peter S. Briggs: The Administration of 1 :55 Belinda Blomberg; The Formation of Free Death: United States Army Mortuary Black Communities in Nineteenth Century Practices and Their Relevance to Archa­ Alexandria. Virginia eology 2: 20 Donald A. DeBats; Spatial Analysis and Social "':00 Diane E. Beynon; Excavations at the Voegtly Attributes: Alexandria. Virginia in 1859 Church Cemetery: Pittsburg. Pennsylvania 2 :".5 Steven J. Shephard; Obtaining Water and Discarding Waste; Attitudes and Practices in [ 11- U] Contributed Papers: Nineteenth-Century Alexandria. Virginia THE HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY OF CLASS 3:10 Barbara H. Magid; Tradition and Innovation AND STATUS at a 19th Century Pottery Paul Shackel. Chairperson 3:35 Joanna T. Moyar; Interpreting the Results of Participants: Research: Is What We Don't Say 1 : 30 Linda F. Stine; Ethnicity. Status and Class: Significant? A Case Study from the North Carolina "':00 Discussant: Michael Parrington Piedmont 1: 55 Douglas W. Sanford; Status and Ethnicity in [II-R] Symposium: Process: Addressing Social Change in an EXAMINING NINETEENTH/TWENTIETH American Slave Society CENTURY RURAL ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES: 2:20 Ann \. Ottesen; The Rise of an Elite in Non­ A REGIONAL EXAMPLE FROM FORT DRUM. Plantation Georgia. 1850-1880 JEFFERSON AND LEWIS COUNTIES. NEW 2:".5 Uzi Baram; The William S. Clark Housesite in YORK Amherst. Massachusetts Alain C. Outlaw. Organizer and Chairperson 3:10 Mark Bograd; Whose Life Is It Anyway? Participants: Contextual Archaeology and the Study of 1 :30 Alain C. Outlaw;
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