Post-Contact Archaeology of Michigan and the Upper Great Lakes Region - by Sarah L Surface-Evans & Misty M Jackson (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- An updated review of post-contact archaeology in the Upper Great Lakes region was long overdue.
- About the Author: Sarah L. Surface-Evans joined the Michigan State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO) as Senior Archaeologist in 2022 after a decade as a professor of Anthropology at Central Michigan University.
- 396 Pages
- Social Science, Archaeology
Description
Book Synopsis
An updated review of post-contact archaeology in the Upper Great Lakes region was long overdue. In this comprehensive reassessment of recent and ongoing developments in the field, Post-Contact Archaeology of Michigan and the Upper Great Lakes Region examines the breadth and diversity of the area's archaeological sites, highlighting the discoveries that are reshaping our understanding of post-contact archaeology. Gathering case studies that range from terrestrial and underwater cultural sites, to the period of the earliest European settlement to the present day, this volume spotlights how deeply interconnected excavation of the past, and current social justice initiatives are.
Review Quotes
"This book is a thorough, up-to-date, and engaging account of Great Lake history" - Robert A. Birmingham, University of Wisconsin-Waukesha
About the Author
Sarah L. Surface-Evans joined the Michigan State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO) as Senior Archaeologist in 2022 after a decade as a professor of Anthropology at Central Michigan University. Sarah specializes in community-based archaeological practice in the Great Lakes region. Her research and publications have investigated a variety of topics, including material expressions of health and wellbeing, the structure of space as an expression of power in settler-colonial landscapes, and the role of memory, nostalgia, and haunting in contested colonial histories. Her recent publications include "Exploring Well-Being at Three Great Lakes Lighthouses" in the International Journal of Historical Archaeology.