London OAS
The Ontario Archaeological Society is formed of a parent body and a number of local chapters in various cities in Ontario. The London Chapter represents the regional interests and concerns of the archaeological community in Southwestern Ontario, by providing field activities, social events, and advocacy opportunities. The chapter has sponsored a number of research projects over the years centered on local archaeology. For those interested in the archaeology of Southern Ontario a suggested reading list can be found at our website
Diverse histories of Ground Stone Gorgets in Southern Ontario
Asiiskusiipuw waak Munsiiwak (The Muddy River and the Munsee)
Van Egmond House: The Archaeology of 180 Years on the Huron Tract
Anishinabe Odjibikan: A Collaborative Effort to Implement Indigenous Archaeology
Ancient Human Footprints at White Sands National Park
Warfare on the Northern Plains
Cultivating Identity: The Ethnogenesis Of The Pawnee People | Dr. Carlton Shield Chief Gover
Social learning & scaling practices Great Lakes Late Woodland potting communities | Dorland #shorts
Buried Underground: The Excavation of Iron Age activity at Read's Cavern, SW U.K | Christopher Kerns
Social learning & scaling practices in Great Lakes Late Woodland potting communities | Dr. S Dorland
The Templeton Site: A Deeply Buried Paleoindian Site in Western Connecticut | Dr. Zachary Singer
Iroquois du Nord: A Review and What's New | Dr. Ronald Williamson
Hell Gap National Landmark: What we know, Don't Know, & Should Want to Find Out | Dr. M Kornfeld
"Vikings of the Sunrise": Recent Research on the Settlement of Oceania | Dr. Peter Sheppard
Architecture Against the State: Materializing Counter-Power in a Wendat Town | Dr. John Creese
Indigenous-Land Relationships in the Grand River Valley 1784-1851 | Dr. Gary Warrick
Changing Times: A Tale of Two Villages & how Archaeological Science is Rewriting Public History
Exploring Settlement Distribution & Demographic Change in the Early - Late Holocene Southeastern USA
Excavations of Siloh Indian Mounds 1999-2004 | Dr. David Anderson
Rubble History: Approaching Ruins of 19th Century German Migration to Texas | Dr. Patricia Markert
Kruger 2: Contributions to the Late Paleoindian Period in the Northeast | Dr Claude Chapdelaine
Addressing Colonial Guilt with Artefact-Centred Dialogue | Sierra McKinney