Great news - Sterlin Harjo's film This May Be The Last Time will be shown at the Sam Noble Museum on Wednesday, November 19th at 7:30 pm! Admission is free. Here is some more info on the film and the filmmakers.
There is also tribal hymn singing at the Jacobson House earlier in the afternoon, starting at 4:30.
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Monday, September 22, 2014
Archaeology Month
Archaeology month is almost here! For the latest on events, check out Oklahoma Archaeology Month on Facebook.
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
Archaeological Workshop for Educators October 11-12, 2014
Interested in using archaeology in your classroom? Through an education grant of the US Dept. of the Interior, the Oklahoma Anthropological Society will be holding a free archaeological workshop for elementary school educators October 11-12, 2014 at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Natural History Museum in Norman. Project Archaeology’s workshop is a supplementary science and social studies curriculum unit designed to familiarize educators in grades 3 through 5 (also easily adaptable for secondary subjects) with archaeology resources for the classroom that can enhance learning opportunities in math, science, art, and social studies.
Please see the attached flyer for more information and visit our website at:
http://projectarchaeology.org/programs/Oklahoma and click on “View Upcoming Courses”
This is a free workshop. Lesson plans and workbooks will also be provided free of cost. There will be no expense to teachers. Continuing education credits may be available.
Enrollment limited. Application deadline is September 26, 2014. There will be no onsite enrollment.
Please contact Ryan Howell at rhowell@blm.gov or 918-621-4100 for any questions.
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
OAS Spring Meeting and Spring Dig
Are you ready for the Oklahoma Anthropological Society spring meeting and spring dig?
The spring meeting will be on Saturday, May 17th, at the Oklahoma History Center. The theme will be The Steamboat Heroine: from the Red River to theOklahoma History Museum .
The spring dig will be at the Bryson Paddock site from May 24th to June 1st. Dr. Susan Vehik and Dr. Richard Drass will be directing excavations at the protohistoric Wichita village.
Find out more details on both events at http://www.ou.edu/cas/archsur/oas/.
The spring meeting will be on Saturday, May 17th, at the Oklahoma History Center. The theme will be The Steamboat Heroine: from the Red River to the
Oklahoma's only known shipwreck |
Friday, May 2, 2014
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
April 1st - Spiro at SNOMNH!
Join
us on Tuesday, April 1st at 7pm at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History for the monthly meeting of the Cleveland County chapter of the Oklahoma Anthropological Society. Dr. Scott Hammerstedt will be our presenter, giving a talk on 2013 Excavations at Spiro. We hope you can join us! Please spread the word and bring friends and family - all are welcome.
Scott will be talking about
recent and upcoming geophysical survey and excavations at the Spiro Mounds
archaeological site. Scott and other
researchers from Oklahoma and Arkansas conducted the first professional
excavations at Spiro in over three decades. The fieldwork was prompted by
remote sensing evidence that showed that likely prehistoric structures were in
danger of being lost to erosion.
This is very exciting research. Scott and his colleagues did more fieldwork over spring break and have a field school coming up this summer, so we will have more discoveries to look forward to. For more information, see the Spiro Landscape Archaeological Project on Facebook.
Also, this is not entirely pinned down yet, but it looks like the OAS spring meeting will be at the Oklahoma History Center on May 17th. The spring dig will be a little later than usual. It will probably in June at the Bryson Paddock site in Kay County, in conjunction with the field school.
Friday, March 14, 2014
Kite Day at Spiro March 15
Who doesn't love kites? :)
Check out the amazing Spiro Mounds archaeological site and have fun flying kites, all in one day.
Photo by Dennis Peterson.
Check out the amazing Spiro Mounds archaeological site and have fun flying kites, all in one day.
Friday, February 28, 2014
CANCELLED
This meeting is cancelled. Although the main roads look good, the museum parking lot is icy and though it may partially melt today, it will refreeze this evening. The next meeting will be Tuesday, April 1st, when we will hear about the recent and upcoming work at Spiro Mounds.
The OAS Cleveland County chapter will be having its next meeting on Tuesday, March 4th, at 7pm at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History. All are welcome!
The OAS Cleveland County chapter will be having its next meeting on Tuesday, March 4th, at 7pm at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History. All are welcome!
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Ancient American DNA
Major archaeology news! A team of researchers have sequenced DNA from a young boy from the Clovis era (~12,000 years ago). The major result: genetically, most contemporary American Indians are directly related to the Clovis people.
Ancient DNA Ties Native Americans from Two Continents to Clovis (Richard Harris, NPR, 13 February 2014)
Here is a link to the original article: The genome of a Late Pleistocene human from a Clovis burial site in western Montana (Rasmussen et al. 2014)
The remains, which were found on private land, were not subject to the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA). The researchers have consulted with local tribes in Montana, though, and a reburial is planned for later this spring.
Ancient Genome Stirs Ethics Debate (Ewen Calloway, Nature, 12 February 2014)
To learn more about the Clovis culture, check out the Center for the Studies of the First Americans at Texas A&M and the Wikipedia article.
Clovis point (In the workplace) Example of a Clovis fluted blade that is 11,000 years old Image courtesy of the Virginia Dept. of Historic Resources.
Ancient DNA Ties Native Americans from Two Continents to Clovis (Richard Harris, NPR, 13 February 2014)
Here is a link to the original article: The genome of a Late Pleistocene human from a Clovis burial site in western Montana (Rasmussen et al. 2014)
The remains, which were found on private land, were not subject to the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA). The researchers have consulted with local tribes in Montana, though, and a reburial is planned for later this spring.
Ancient Genome Stirs Ethics Debate (Ewen Calloway, Nature, 12 February 2014)
To learn more about the Clovis culture, check out the Center for the Studies of the First Americans at Texas A&M and the Wikipedia article.
Clovis point (In the workplace) Example of a Clovis fluted blade that is 11,000 years old Image courtesy of the Virginia Dept. of Historic Resources.
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
February - Indigenous Burmese
Note: If the University of Oklahoma closes due to weather,
we will reschedule this meeting for Tuesday, February 11th.
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