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Why Underwater? The Importance Of Submerged Landscape Research For Understanding Pleistocene Peoples In The New World

  • 19 Mar 2024
  • 7:30 PM (EDT)
  • Room 117 (Semans Auditorium), Belk Visual Arts Center 315 N. Main St. Davidson, NC 28036 United States

Why Underwater? The Importance Of Submerged Landscape Research For Understanding Pleistocene Peoples In The New World

AIA Society: Central Carolinas (Charlotte)
Lecturer: Jessi Halligan

Perhaps most people think of shipwrecks when underwater archaeology is mentioned, but numerous formerly-terrestrial sites have survived drowning in our freshwater lakes and rivers and on our continental shelves. These sites can even be better preserved than their dry counterparts, and in some cases they can help us answer some of the most pressing questions about people in the past. Thousands of Pleistocene artifacts have been discovered in Florida’s rivers and springs, along with some of the best preserved early sites in the Americas. These sites are challenging archaeological models for the peopling of the Americas, and are providing us with information about the lifeways of early Indigenous peoples in the New World.


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