Skip to main content
    • by 
    •   3  
      Military HistoryBritish Columbia historyCoast Salish Archaeology
Ethnohistory 2009 In 2003, construction began on a graving dock that would bring marine projects to the Olympic Peninsula and provide family-wage jobs. It appeared to be a good fit for the city of Port Angeles, Washington, and its... more
    • by 
    •   6  
      EthnohistoryCultural History Of GhostsPacific Northwest Coast archaeologyCoast Salish History
The research area discussed in this chapter encom­passes what is considered to be the traditional territory of the Lushootseed speaking Coast Salish People, who are sometimes referred to as the Puget Sound Salish (e.g., Thompson and... more
    • by  and +1
    •   12  
      Migration (Anthropology)Pacific Northwest Coast archaeologyPuget SoundProjectile Points
    • by 
    •   20  
      EthnohistoryMaritime HistoryNative Languages of the AmericasSalish Languages
Coast Salish First Nations wove their robes and blankets from yarn spun from processed wool fibres. A curious fact, usually mentioned in passing by early explorers, ethnographers, and settlers, is that, in the preparation of wool fibres,... more
    • by 
    •   6  
      Pacific Northwest EthnographyCoast SalishCoast Salish HistoryPacific Northwest History
    • by 
    •   4  
      Settlement archaeologyPacific Northwest Coast archaeologyArchaeology of shell middensCoast Salish Archaeology
My intent is to explore the significance of the ancient spiritual connection of the Coast Salish people to the peninsula of Point Roberts, Washington, utilizing such tools as Salish creation myths, legends, place-names and artifacts,... more
    • by 
    •   17  
      Mythology And FolkloreAncient HistoryNative American StudiesMythology
On Washington’s Olympic Peninsula, the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe (JST) is implementing cultural heritage approaches to reclaim tribal histories threatened by nineteenth century settler colonial narratives of ethnic erasure. Exiled from... more
    • by 
    •   20  
      Native American StudiesAnthropologyIndigenous StudiesCultural Heritage
Consistently, Coast Salish mortuary practices demonstrate one element in common, even as burial customs have developed over the course of the Marpole Period to the present day: resistance to authority and societal pressures. Building upon... more
    • by 
    •   20  
      Native American StudiesAnthropologyHistorical ArchaeologyColonialism
Salish Sea islands archaeology and precontact history are reviewed in light of Coast Salish history and the archaeological record. Our examination shows that (1) the ancestors of Salish people have occupied and used the archipelago... more
    • by  and +1
    •   13  
      Coastal and Island ArchaeologyPacific Northwest Coast archaeologyPuget SoundCoast Salish
Around 1500 years ago, the Coast Salish peoples of southwestern British Columbia began to inter their dead within funerary petroforms. These burials, consisting of patterned arrangements of stone and soil built over the dead, marked a... more
    • by 
    •   15  
      Spatial AnalysisPractice theorySpatial StatisticsRitual Theory
Edible root resources were widely cultivated and consumed by First Peoples throughout North America from the early to mid-Holocene to historic times. In recent decades, archaeobotanists, ethnobotanists, archaeologists, and traditional... more
    • by  and +1
    •   4  
      CamasNorthwest Coast ArchaeologyEarth OvenCoast Salish Archaeology
This study explores the long and close relationship between the Sts’ailes people and their cultural landscape in the Harrison Watershed in Southwestern B.C. Archaeological, geographic, environmental, ethnographic, and ethnohistoric data... more
    • by 
    •   6  
      Settlement PatternsCultural LandscapesSocial organizationNorthwest Coast Archaeology
This article documents nearly three years of investigations concerned with locating, mapping, and analyzing the spatial configuration of residential pithouse and plankhouse features in Chehalis territory. We propose that the Chehalis... more
    • by 
    •   3  
      Settlement PatternsNorthwest Coast ArchaeologyCoast Salish Archaeology
Expanding on the Burke Museum's " Puget Sound Traditional Foods " database, this project used archaeobotanical, ethnographic, and historical evidence to enhance our understandings of the co-production of people, plants, and place in the... more
    • by 
    •   8  
      EthnobotanyArchaeobotanyHistorical EcologyVegetation History and Archaeobotany
The research involved the efforts of a wet archaeological site specialist (Dale Croes) and a Master Basketmaker and Elder from the Suquamish Tribe (Ed Carriere), who joined together to replicate and scientifically analyze the... more
    • by 
    •   20  
      Experimental ArchaeologyIndigenous ArchaeololgyBasketry (Archaeology)Wetland Archaeology
In 2004 archaeologist Dale Croes and Native American basketmaker Ed Carriere began an unusual collaboration to study and eventually reconstruct ancient baskets from the Pacific Northwest. Suquamish Elder and Master Basketmaker Ed... more
    • by 
    •   15  
      Experimental ArchaeologyEthnoarchaeologyIndigenous ArchaeololgyBasketry (Archaeology)
By Gary Coupland, David Bilton, Terence Clark, Jerome S. Cybulski, Gay Frederick, Alyson Holland, Bryn Letham, and Gretchen Williams Archaeologists working in the Salish Sea (Strait of Georgia and Puget Sound) region of the Pacific... more
    • by  and +2
    •   7  
      Northwest CoastBeadsPacific Northwest Coast archaeologyNorthwest Coast Archaeology
This chapter presents the results of 2010 excavations conducted at Lhó:leqwet (aka Chocolate Bar) rock shelter (DhRl 2), a multi-use site located on the Harrison River in Chehalis (Sts'ailes) territory (Figures 1 and 2). Lhó:leqwet is... more
    • by  and +1
    •   4  
      Rock Art (Archaeology)Caves and Rock SheltersNorthwest Coast ArchaeologyCoast Salish Archaeology
During the pre-contact period, the Harrison River was a major cultural and economic area within the lower Fraser River region and an important transportation corridor linking the coast and interior. Early ethnographers recognized the... more
    • by  and +1
    •   3  
      Settlement archaeologyNorthwest Coast ArchaeologyCoast Salish Archaeology
Legacy is defined as something handed down from the past, like a gift, object, idea, or heritage of an ancestor. The idea of legacy is perhaps most often used in connection with the achievements of an individual, but the concept has been... more
    • by  and +1
    •   3  
      Northwest Coast ArchaeologyWild plant processing and procurementCoast Salish Archaeology
Around 1500 years ago, the Coast Salish peoples of southwestern British Columbia began to inter their dead within funerary petroforms. These burials, consisting of patterned arrangements of stone and soil built over the dead, marked a... more
    • by 
    •   16  
      GeographySpatial AnalysisPractice theorySpatial Statistics
    • by 
    •   8  
      ArchaeologyNorth American (Archaeology)North American archaeologyHousehold Archaeology
    • by 
    • Coast Salish Archaeology
    • by 
    •   9  
      Indigenous ArchaeololgyLithic TechnologyBasketry (Archaeology)Northwest Coast
    • by 
    •   8  
      ArchaeologyNorth American archaeologyHousehold ArchaeologyArchaeology of Identity
Households link micro and macro scales of social interactions, and both reflect and initiate social transformations , from the scale of the house to the region. Despite their potential interpretive efficacy, few studies scale up from... more
    • by 
    •   5  
      Social ChangeHousehold ArchaeologySettlement archaeologyNorthwest Coast Archaeology
Recently a heated dispute arose over proposed residential property development on Grace Islet on British Columbia’s south coast—an ancestral Coast Salish burial site where human remains and 16 burial cairns have been documented. . This... more
    • by  and +4
    •   28  
      Native American StudiesArchaeologyAnthropologyEthics
Este trabajo examina el concepto de centralización en el estudio de sociedades de pequeña escala, argumentando que el predominio de la noción antropológica de “Jefatura” y su énfasis en la centralización ha frenado el desarrollo de... more
    • by 
    •   11  
      ArchaeologyArqueologíaHunter-Gatherer ArchaeologyDescentralización
En 1897, Pedro Kropotkin escribió un análisis histórico del desarrollo del Estado, en el que examinó cómo varias sociedades expresaron o reprimieron los principios centrales del anarquismo. Propongo que las bases de la metodología de... more
    • by 
    •   10  
      ArchaeologyLandscape ArchaeologyArqueologíaArqueologia
In hunter-gatherer studies and the archaeology of small-to-intermediate scale societies, documenting the nature of changes in regional settlement is of considerable interest. The relationships among subsistence and social developments,... more
    • by 
    •   11  
      ZooarchaeologyLandscape ArchaeologyCoastal and Island ArchaeologySocial zooarchaeology
    • by 
    •   3  
      Underwater ArchaeologyCoast Salish HistoryCoast Salish Archaeology
Published excerpts of open letter from Chief Ernest Cambell to Premier Christy Clark and Mayor Gregor Robertson dated 18 April 2012 regarding the treatment of Musqueam heritage and the "Marpole Midden." // Original letter available... more
    • by 
    •   13  
      ArchaeologyAnthropologyCultural HeritageHeritage Studies
Hutchings and Williams’ proposed sequence for Salish Sea Islands is an ambitious effort. While we agree that a synthesis of the archaeology of the southern Salish Sea is long overdue, their summary fails to reflect the current state of... more
    • by  and +1
    •   4  
      Coastal and Island ArchaeologyPacific Northwest Coast archaeologyCoast Salish ArchaeologyPuget Sound Archaeology
    • by 
    •   7  
      Labor OrganizationsNorthwest CoastFaunal AnalysisPacific Northwest Coast archaeology
This is a podcast in an archaeological series conducted by members of the Cornell Institute of Archaeology and Material Studies (CIAMS) in Ithaca, New York. The discussion relates to questions from a talk given the previous day on... more
    • by 
    •   5  
      Collaborative ArchaeologyPacific Northwest Coast archaeologyMarxist ArchaeologyAnarchist Archaeology