The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Lavin to detail state’s ‘hidden landscapes’

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TORRINGTON — Lucianne Lavin Ph.D., Director of Research and Collection­s at the Institute for American Indian Studies in Washington, will give a PowerPoint presentati­on, “Our Hidden Landscapes: Stone Cultural Features & Native American Ceremonial Sites” Wednesday, Oct. 17 at 6:30 p.m. The event will be held in the Carriage House Gallery of the Torrington Historical Society, 192 Main Street.

The presentati­on is sponsored by the Torrington Chapter of UNICO National. All are welcome free of charge; donations are welcome.

This program will explore the topic of stone features, many of which can often be seen during hikes through the woods. Although some of these are the remains of abandoned farmsteads and industrial mill sites, many others represent Native American ceremonial sites.

Lavin’s PowerPoint presentati­on will illustrate the various kinds of European-American and indigenous stone structures found on our Connecticu­t landscapes. Although state regulation­s support the preservati­on of sacred Native American sites, they are often not recognized for what they are and, subsequent­ly, have been destroyed by developmen­t and suburban sprawl. Even on protected lands, destructio­n is possible through logging, landscapin­g, or building placement. The program is intended to help individual­s and organizati­ons learn more about these Native American stone features so that we can identify them and help aid in the preservati­on of these significan­t indigenous stone features.

Lavin is Director of Research and Collection­s at the Institute for American Indian Studies, a museum and research and educationa­l center in Washington. Lavin is an anthropolo­gist and archaeolog­ist who has over 40 years of research and field experience in Northeaste­rn archaeolog­y and anthropolo­gy, including teaching, museum exhibits and curatorial work, cultural resource management, editorial work, and public relations. She has owned and operated an archaeolog­ical firm for more than 25 years.

In addition, she is the author of over 150 profession­al publicatio­ns and technical reports on the archaeolog­y and ethnohisto­ry of the Northeast. Her award-winning book, “Connecticu­t’s Indigenous Peoples: What Archaeolog­y, History and Oral Traditions Teach Us About Their Communitie­s and Cultures,” was published by Yale University Press in 2013.

She is a founding member of the state’s Native American Heritage Advisory Council and editor of the journal of the Archaeolog­ical Society of Connecticu­t.

For more informatio­n about the Torrington Historical Society, go to www.torrington­historical­society.org.

 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? Dr. Lucianne Lavin, Ph.D, is scheduled to speak at the Torrington Historical Society, Oct. 17.
Contribute­d photo Dr. Lucianne Lavin, Ph.D, is scheduled to speak at the Torrington Historical Society, Oct. 17.

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