Penobscot County (County) (Geographic Keyword)
1-8 (8 Records)
Guide to the catalog relating to the excavation of the Hathaway Site, Passadumkeag Maine. Resulting assemblages are curated at the University Maine
Hathaway Correspondence (2017)
Notes and letters relating to the 1968 and 1969 excavations of the Hathaway site and subsequent analysis of recovered materials.
Hathaway Field Images (2017)
PDF file containing digitized versions of 35mm slide images taken during the 1968 and 1969 excavations at the Hathaway site.
Hathaway Lab Images (2017)
PDF file containing digitized versions of 35mm images taken during laboratory analyses of materials excavated from the Hathaway site in 1968 and 1969
Hathaway Radiocarbon Age Determinations (2017)
Radiocarbon age determinations relating to the Hathaway site. Provided by laboratories at Yale University and the Smithsonian Institution.
The Passadumkeag Sequence (1975)
Renewed excavation at the Hathaway site revealed that there were no fewer than five temporal components at the mortuary locus of the site. Previous excavators, Warren Moorehead in 1912 and Wendell Hadlock and Theodore Stern in 1947 led those investigators to conclude that there was only a single component. Two of the components at Hathaway are assignable to the Late Archaic period, and parallel similar components at the Cow Point site in New Brunswick.
The Penobscot Expedition Archaeological Project: Field Investigations 2000 and 2001 - Report (Legacy 01-133) (2003)
This is the final report of a site assessment and multi-component remote-sensing survey of the Penobscot River, Penobscot County, Maine. The project was part of an ongoing effort to research, investigate, and document shipwrecks and other submerged archaeological sites associated with the Penobscot Expedition of 1779, and ultimately develop a management plan for their protection and preservation.
A Summary of Excavations at the Hathaway Site, Passadumkeag Maine, 1912, 1947 and 1968 (1969)
Summary of excavations carried out by Warren Moorehead (1912), Wendell Hadlock and Theodore Stern (1947), and Dean Snow (1968), incorporating descriptions of artifacts recovered during those excavations.