The Sentinel-Record

Bluff shelters topic of next Ouachita Chapter meeting

-

Joshua J. Lynch, an associate professor of anthropolo­gy at Arkansas Tech University in Russellvil­le, will present “The Gregoire Collection: A Fresh Look at a Survey of Ozark Bluff Shelters” at the next meeting of the Ouachita Chapter of the Arkansas Archeologi­cal Society.

The Society will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the board room at Arkansas School for Mathematic­s, Sciences, and the Arts, 200 Whittingto­n Ave. The free event is open to the public.

“Between 1968 and 1970, a large-scale archaeolog­ical survey was launched across public and private land in the Limestone valley, located in the central Boston Mountains of southweste­rn Newton County, Arkansas. In response to heavy looting and rapidly degrading site integrity, Thelma and Louis Gregoire surveyed miles of land along Big Piney, Steel, and Home Creeks, collecting remarkable cultural materials from archaeolog­ical sites in the plowed fields of the bottomland­s and more than 100 Ozark bluff shelters,” a Society news release said.

“Ozark bluff shelters of Arkansas and southern Missouri are renowned archaeolog­ical resources that help shape regional understand­ings of occupation histories and land use patterns from the early Holocene through the historic period. Dr. Joshua Lynch presents here an overview of the lithics, ceramics, and perishable materials recovered during the Gregoire survey, housed at Arkansas Tech University, and the developing research efforts taking shape at ATU to comprehens­ively investigat­e this unique collection,” it said.

Lynch earned a PH.D. in anthropolo­gy from Texas A&M University, where his dissertati­on research examined the diversity of ancient chipped stone points from Siberia and Alaska using experiment­al archaeolog­y and use-wear analysis. At ATU, he teaches courses in anthropolo­gy, archaeolog­y, and cultural resource management, the release said.

 ?? Submitted photo ?? ■ Joshua Lynch of Arkansas Tech University demonstrat­es the use of an atlatl, or spearthrow­er.
Submitted photo ■ Joshua Lynch of Arkansas Tech University demonstrat­es the use of an atlatl, or spearthrow­er.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States