Modern archaelogical research in Maine has discovered that the coast was inhabited year-round for the last 5,000 years. Although erosion is destroying many of the best sites, shell heap research is yielding information on fishing, hunting, and commerce. Details
Up to 1,500 prehistoric archaeological sites in Maine are threatened by rising tides, and other preh...
In 2013, two Pleistocene megafaunal remains, a single mammoth tooth and a partial juvenile mastodon ...
The UNE site is a Ceramic Period shell midden located on the Saco River in Biddeford, Maine. Recent ...
Prehistoric archaeology of the Maine coast has reconstructed ecological changes and the relationship...
Two University of Southern Maine researchers, archaeologist Nathan Hamilton and geographer Matthew B...
Shell middens along the Maine coast archive up to 5000 years of cultural and climatic change, but th...
Archaeological shell middens on the coast of Maine are highly susceptible to the consequences of ero...
A pronounced gap in the record of prehistoric coastal adaptation on the Maine coast before 5000 14C ...
Ballast rocks, used as many as four thousand years ago and still found on a few foreign cargo ships,...
Maine Geological Survey, Open-File 79-23. Discusses evidence of sea-level rise shown by salt marsh ...
in Anderson, Walter A., and Borns, Harold W., Jr. (editors), Neotectonics of Maine: studies in seis...
With growing concerns around climate change and sea-level rise, tracking these changes and pinpointi...
More than 4,000 archeological sites in Maine document the maritime history of the state\u27s four su...
Maine Geological Survey, Open-File Report 81-1. Progress report on sea level rise study.https://dig...
in Berry, Henry N., IV, and West, David P., Jr., editors, Guidebook for field trips along the Maine ...
Up to 1,500 prehistoric archaeological sites in Maine are threatened by rising tides, and other preh...
In 2013, two Pleistocene megafaunal remains, a single mammoth tooth and a partial juvenile mastodon ...
The UNE site is a Ceramic Period shell midden located on the Saco River in Biddeford, Maine. Recent ...
Prehistoric archaeology of the Maine coast has reconstructed ecological changes and the relationship...
Two University of Southern Maine researchers, archaeologist Nathan Hamilton and geographer Matthew B...
Shell middens along the Maine coast archive up to 5000 years of cultural and climatic change, but th...
Archaeological shell middens on the coast of Maine are highly susceptible to the consequences of ero...
A pronounced gap in the record of prehistoric coastal adaptation on the Maine coast before 5000 14C ...
Ballast rocks, used as many as four thousand years ago and still found on a few foreign cargo ships,...
Maine Geological Survey, Open-File 79-23. Discusses evidence of sea-level rise shown by salt marsh ...
in Anderson, Walter A., and Borns, Harold W., Jr. (editors), Neotectonics of Maine: studies in seis...
With growing concerns around climate change and sea-level rise, tracking these changes and pinpointi...
More than 4,000 archeological sites in Maine document the maritime history of the state\u27s four su...
Maine Geological Survey, Open-File Report 81-1. Progress report on sea level rise study.https://dig...
in Berry, Henry N., IV, and West, David P., Jr., editors, Guidebook for field trips along the Maine ...
Up to 1,500 prehistoric archaeological sites in Maine are threatened by rising tides, and other preh...
In 2013, two Pleistocene megafaunal remains, a single mammoth tooth and a partial juvenile mastodon ...
The UNE site is a Ceramic Period shell midden located on the Saco River in Biddeford, Maine. Recent ...