Trevor C. Dow

Trevor C. Dow is a professional consulting archaeologist and an instructor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton. He is also the current president of the Association of Professional Archaeologists of New Brunswick. He has worked in CRM archaeology for two decades throughout Atlantic Canada, Ontario, British Columbia, and the Territories. His research interests include archaeology and heritage policy, legislation and permitting, the rise of the CRM industry, and the methods by which archaeologists disseminate new research and literature.


Kenneth R. Holyoke

Kenneth R. Holyoke is an assistant professor of archaeology in the Department of Geography and Environment at the University of Lethbridge, and coordinator of the CRM master’s program. His research interests include hunter-fisher-gatherer lifeways and mobility, lithic quarrying, sourcing, and exchange, as well as CRM/heritage policy, legislation, and ethics.


M. Gabriel Hrynick

M. Gabriel Hrynick is an associate professor of Anthropology at the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton, and an external associate at the University of Maine Climate Change Institute. His research interests include the study of coastal hunter-gatherers, especially their domestic and ritual structures and spaces. He is a fellow of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society.



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Bibliography of New Brunswick Archaeology: Works to 2022
Trevor C. Dow, Kenneth R. Holyoke, M. Gabriel Hrynick

2024 / Bibliographies & Indexes, Anthropology/General, Archaeology / $39.95
9781554472673 / Trade paper / 176 pp


New Brunswick Bibliography Series: No. 4

This bibliography reviews over three centuries of archaeological work that has taken place in what is now the province of New Brunswick. Each of the authors is engaged in research about this region, and their enthusiasm for compiling the bibliography reflects the belief that archaeology is crucial to learning about the past. As the authors state in their introduction, “We hope that this compendium will make it easier for others to begin research here in this region, and to find material that expands on New Brunswick’s role in broader conversations about anthropology and archaeology…. This bibliography is meant to be a beginning, but not the endpoint, to truly understanding the original inhabitants of New Brunswick, who did not recognize borders and whose peoples ranged far beyond them.”



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