Programmes d’études en archéologie en Ontario
Voulez-vous étudier l'archéologie dans une université ontarienne? Ci-dessous nous vous présentons une liste des institutions qui vous présentent des programmes d'études au niveau du baccalauréat et d'études graduées en archéologie. On y trouve des renseignements sur les programmes, les professeurs et les ressources disponibles dans chacune des universités.
Si vous vous intéressez aux écoles de fouilles archéologiques, suivez ce lien (this link) pour une liste de possibilités en Ontario et ailleurs.
Déparetment: Anthropologie
Endroit: Thunder Bay, Ontario
Site web
1. Degrées en Archéologie ou Bioarchéologie sont offerts:
BA, BSc (3 ans), Hons. BA, Hons. BSc (4 ans) en Anthropologie
BSc ou HBSc en Géoarchéologie
2. Professeurs (Archéologie):
Dr. Scott Hamilton
Archéologie, traite des fourrures, zooarchéologie, archéologie de la Forêt boréale, géomatique. Nord de l'Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan.
Dr. Matthew Boyd
èéoarchéologie, archéobotanie, paléoenvironnement et paléoclimat du Quaternnaire, transition Pléistocène-Holocène, chasseurs-cueilleurs. Forêt boréale canadienne et Plaines.
(Bioarchéologie):
Dr. Carney Matheson
Bioanthropologie, ADN ancien, paléomicrobiologie. Moyen Orient, Australie, Mexique.
Dr. Tamara Varney
Bioarchéology (ostéologie, paléopathologie, paléo-nutrition, analyse d'isotopes stables, archéologie de cimetières historiques, anthropologie médicale. Antilles britanniques, Nord-est de l'Amérique du Nord.
3. Ressources – dans le Département:
a) Laboratoire de Géoarchéologie/Laboratoire paléoécologique et d'Archéologie environnementale
b) Physical Anthropology, Stable Isotope preparation Laboratory
c) Laboratoire zooarchéologique
4. Ressources – à l'extérieur du Département:
a) Laboratoire en Géomatique de l'université Lakehead
b) Laboratoire d'instrumentation de l'université Lakehead
c) Cartothèque de l'université Lakehead
d) Laboratoire d'ADN ancien de l'université Lakehead
Renseignements additionnels:
- Les étudiants intéressés par l'ADN ancien peuvent s'inscrire aux programmes de Sciences biomoléculaires appliquées (Applied Biomolecular Sciences) administrés par le Département de Biologie. Certains cours en Anthropologie moléculaire figurent dans ce programme et le Dr. Matheson est un membre de ce programme.
- Une Maîtrise interdisciplinare en Études environnementales (environnements et cultures nordiques) est offerte conjointement par les Départements de Géographie et d'Anthropologie. Certains de ces étudiants gradués se penchent sur des sujets archéologiques et anthropologiques.
- Des professeurs ont aussi supervisé des étudiants spécialisés du programme de la Maîtrise en Sciences (MSc) au sein des Département de Biologie et de Géologie.
Department: Anthropology
Location: Sudbury, Ontario
Website
1. Degrees in Archaeology or Bioarchaeology Offered:
BA, BSc (3 years); Honours BA, BSc (4 years)
2. Faculty (Archaeology):
Dr. Alicia Hawkins
North African Middle Stone Age and the Origin of Modern Human Behaviour; Iroquoian Archaeology; Lithic Analysis; Observer Bias in Archaeological Field Methods.
3. Facilities – In the Department:
Department archaeologists have archaeological laboratories where upper year students may work. The department has a modest but growing faunal reference collection oriented to Ontario species. We also hold reference specimens of a number of types of Ontario cherts. The department holds fossil casts of most important hominid species, and comparative human skeletal material.
Archaeological collections housed at the department include those from Cummins (Palaeoindian), LaVase (Woodland), Speigel (Middle Woodland) and Ellery (Wendat).
4. Facilities - Outside the Department:
Laurentian is a small institution and collaborations between departments are encouraged. To date, the main collaborations have been with the Earth Sciences department, where we have been able to make use of petrographic microscopes and we have carried out Fourier Transform Infrared spectroscopy analysis and ICP-MS analysis.
Additional Information:
a) Field school in Midland, Ontario offered every two years. Contact Dr. Alicia Hawkins for more information.
Department: Anthropology
Location: Hamilton, Ontario
Website
1. Degrees in Archaeology or Bioarchaeology Offered:
BA, MA, PhD
- Honours in Anthropology and Interdisciplinary Minor in Archaeology available for the BA program
- Funding available for eligible full time MA and PhD students
2. Faculty (Archaeology):
Dr. Aubrey Cannon
Archaeological theory, the archaeology of hunter-gatherer settlement and subsistence, marine-based economies, mortuary practices, and material fashion
Dr. Tristan Carter
East Mediterranean prehistory, the Aegean, Anatolia and northern Mesopotamia, Epi-Palaeolithic to Late Bronze Age, stone tools, production and consumption (raw material characterisation studies, lithic technology and use-wear)
Dr. Shanti Morell-Hart
Foodways, ethnoecology, paleoethnobotanical analysis, spatial analysis, Mesoamerica, ancient history, and gastronomic heritage.
Dr. Andrew Roddick
Social archaeology, ceramic analyses, archaeometry/compositional geochemistry, ethnoarchaeology, anthropologies of space and place, and South/Central/North American prehistory
(Bioarchaeology):
Dr. Tracy Prowse
Bioarchaeology, skeletal biology, palaeopathology, palaeonutrition, forensic anthropology, anthropological applications of stable isotope analysis, and Roman archaeology
Dr. Hendrik Poinar
Molecular evolutionary genetics, biological anthropology, ancient DNA, forensic, archaeological and paleontological remains
Dr. Megan Brickley
Bioarchaeology, forensics, human skeletal biology, paleopathology
3. Facilities – In the Department:
a) The Fisheries Archaeology Research Centre
b) Laboratory for Interdisciplinary Research on Archaeological Ceramics (LIRAC)
c) McMaster Ancient DNA centre
d) McMaster Archaeological XRF Lab (MAX Lab)
e) Outdoor Lab for Experimental Art and Archaeology
f) Archaeology Teaching Lab
g) Physical Anthropology Teaching Lab
4. Facilities - Outside the Department:
a) Gateway Data and GIS lab
b) Geographic and Information Systems Laboratory
b) Brockhouse Institute for Materials Research
c) McMaster Nuclear Reactor (MNR)
d) Research Group for Stable Isotopologues (MRSI)
5. Field School
a) Ontario Field school offered in the summer term. Contact burchme@mcmaster.ca for details
Department: Classics and Religious Studies
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Website
1. Degrees in Archaeology or Bioarchaeology Offered:
BA (3 years), Honours BA with specialization in Classical Studies (4 years)
MA in Classics
2. Faculty (Archaeology):
Jitse H.F. Dijkstra
Archaeology, Egypt in late antiquity, Coptic, Papyrology and epigraphy
3. Facilities:
a) Art and Archaeology Slide Laboratory
4. Field Schools:
Students can participate in Classical and/or approved field schools run by other institutions for credit. See this document for details
Department: Anthropology
Location: Peterborough (Symons Campus), Oshawa (UOIT/Trent in Oshawa Campus), Ontario
Website
1. Degrees in Archaeology or Bioarchaeology Offered:
BA (3 years), Hons. BA (4 years), MA
BA degrees can be complemented with emphases, which consist of groups of courses with a particular focus, including an Emphasis in Archaeology and Emphasis in Geographic Information Systems.
2. Faculty (Archaeology):
Dr. James Conolly
Canada Research Chair. Human palaeoecology; origins and spread of farming and farmers; settlement archaeology; lithic technology; geographical information systems and science; spatial and analytical statistics; computer modelling of population dynamics and cultural change.
Dr. Laure Dubreuil
Prehistory of the Middle East, Epipaleolithic, Natufian, Mesolithic, Neolithization process, Epigravettian of Italy, Neolithization of Europe, ground-stone tools, grinding implements, use-wear studies, experimental archaeology, technology, Design Theory.
Dr. Helen Haines
Introductory anthropology, technology and humanity, law and order in ancient and contemporary cultures, key ideas in archaeology and bioarchaeology, the Maya.
Dr. Paul Healy
Mesoamerica, Lower Central America, Caribbean, Ancient Maya, prehistoric societies.
Dr. Gyles Iannone
Socio-environmental Dynamics (global change, sustainability, collapse, and regeneration), Early Civilizations, Inequality, Mesoamerica (esp. Maya), Archaeology and Popular Culture.
Dr. Susan Jamieson
Northeastern and Boreal archaeology, sociopolitical evolution, lithic analysis, interaction and postcolonial theory, historical archaeology.
Dr. Eugene Morin
Human behavioural change during the Pleistocene, Neandertals, diffusion of agriculture, Western Europe, Eastern North America.
Dr. Marit Munson
Archaeology and art of the US Southwest, rock art, ceramics, gender, group identity, aboriginal art of North America.
Dr. John Topic
Andean archaeology and ethnohistory; Complex societies, warfare, and urbanism; Spatial models, regional analysis, and field methods.
(Bioarchaeology):
Dr. Anne Keenleyside
Bioarchaeology, palaeopathology, palaeonutrition, Greek, Roman, Black Sea, Mediterranean.
Dr. Jocelyn Williams
Population movement and seasonal use of the environment; nutrition and health; food as reflection of social factors; stable isotope analysis; Peru and Mesoamerica.
3. Facilities – In the Department:
a) TUARC - Trent University Archaeological Research Centre.
b) Isotope Lab (Williams)
c) Ontario Archaeology Lab (Jamieson)
d) Bioarchaeology Lab (Keenleyside)
e) Material Culture Lab (Shared)
f) Lithic Use Wear Lab (Dubreuil)
g) Early States Lab (Ianonne)
h) Zooarchaeology Lab (Morin)
i) Art and Archaeology Lab (Munson)
j) Andean Archaeology Lab (Topic)
k) GIS Lab (Conolly)
l) Human Palaeoecology Lab (Conolly)
m) Mesoamerica Lab (Healy)
4. Field Schools:
a) Social Archaeology Research Program (SARP) Maya Archaeology at Minanha, Beliz
b) Ontario Field School
Department: Anthropology
Location: Toronto (St. George Campus) and Mississauga (University of Toronto at Mississauga [UTM]), Ontario
Website (St. George Campus), Website (UTM)
1. Degrees in Archaeology or Bioarchaeology Offered:
BA, Bsc, MA, MSc PhD
- Forensic Archaeology Program offered at UTM
- Funding available for eligible graduate students
2. Faculty (Archaeology):
Dr. Edward B. Banning
Archaeology, Middle Eastern prehistory, Neolithic to Early Bronze, archaeological method and theory, archaeological survey; Jordan, Levant
Dr. Michael Chazan
Paleoarchaeology, lithic analysis, history of archaeology, Near Eastern archaeology; Near East, France, South Africa.
Dr. Gary Coupland
Archaeology, complex hunter-gatherers; Western North America, North West Coast
Dr. Gary W. Crawford
Archaeology, agricultural origins, paleoethnobotany, human ecology; Eastern North America, Japan, China, Korea (Mississauga campus)
Dr. T. Max Friesen
Archaeology, zooarchaeology, hunter-gatherers, culture contact, ethnohistory; North America, Arctic
Dr. Heather M. L. Miller
Archaeology, prehistory and history complex societies, ancient technology, material culture, social organization, regional inter-connections, agriculture; South Asia (Mississauga Campus)
Dr. David G. Smith
Archaeology, ceramics, agricultural origins; Northeast North America (Mississauga Campus)
Dr. Edward R. Swenson
Archaeology, complex societies, theory and method, religion and ideology; Andes, Latin America
Dr. Alice Yao
Archaeology; China and mainland Southeast Asia; complex societies, intercultural exchange and imperialism, mortuary ritual, and material culture
(Bioarchaeology):
Dr. Esteban J. Parra
Biological anthropology, molecular anthropology, human genetics, biomedical science; Americas (Mississauga Campus)
Dr. Susan K. Pfeiffer
Biological anthropology, skeletal biology of past peoples; Southern Africa, North East North America
Dr. Tracy Rogers
Forensic anthropology: sex determination, human variation in modern populations, crime scene analysis (Mississauga Campus)
3. Facilities – In the Department:
a) Archaeology Centre
4. Field Schools:
a) Forensic field school
b) Introduction to Archaeological Field & Laboratory Methods
Department: Anthropology
Location: Waterloo, Ontario
Website
1. Degrees in Archaeology or Bioarchaeology Offered:
BA (3 year); Honours BA (4 years)
2. Faculty (Archaeology):
Dr. Robert Park
Archaeological anthropology, cultures of the Far North (the Canadian Northwest Territories, Nunavut, Greenland and Alaska) and Northeastern North America
Dr. Robert I. MacDonald
Ecological archaeology, archaeological site potential modelling, and geographic information system (GIS) applications in archaeology, cultural resource management
Dr. David Lubell
Human-environmental relationships, palaeoecology, palaeoeconomics and bioarchaeology, lithic analysis. Late Pleistocene-early Holocene prehistory of the western Mediterranean and southern Europe
Dr. Christopher Watts
Monumentality, landscape practices, materiality, and relational ontologies, particularly among Woodland Period (ca. 900 BCE – CE 1550) communities in the lower Great Lakes.
(Bioarchaeology):
Dr. Nancy Barrickman
Biological anthropology and anatomy, life history, ontogeny, cooperative breeding, energetic budgets, and the evolution of brain size and complex behaviour
3. Facilities – In the Department:
4. Facilities - Outside the Department:
5. Field Schools:
Department: Anthropology
Location: London, Ontario
Website
1. Degrees in Archaeology or Bioarchaeology Offered:
BA, MA, PhD (including, at the MA level, an Applied Archaeology Stream, which supports both full and part time student enrolment).
Funding available for eligible full time MA and PhD students.
2. Faculty (Archaeology):
Dr. Christopher Ellis
Paleo and Archaic, Hunting and Gathering Societies, analysis of stone artifacts, Peopling of the Americas. Ontario, Great Lakes, Northeast.
Dr. Neal Ferris, Lawson Chair of Canadian Archaeology
Woodland and Historic, Settlement-subsistence, ceramics, colonialism, Applied Archaeology/CRM, archaeology as policy and heritage, contemporary issues of archaeological practice. Ontario, Great Lakes, Northeast. Cross-Appointed to the Museum of Ontario Archaeology.
Dr. Peter Timmins
Woodland - Iroquoian, applied archaeology/CRM, Indigenous Archaeology. Ontario, Great Lakes, Northeast.
Dr. Lisa Hodgetts
Zooarchaeology, Hunter and Gatherers. Canadian Arctic, Newfoundland, Norway.
Dr. Jean-Francoise Millaire
GIS, Settlement patterns, ritual practices, textiles, early complex societies. Peru and the Andean region.
(Bioarchaeology):
Dr. Alexis Dolphin
Osteology - Dental Anthropology - Trace Elements - Maternal & Child Nutrition/Health - Biocultural; Norway, Mexico, Belize.
Dr. El Molto
Biological Archaeology. Egypt, Baja Mexico.
Dr. Andrew Nelson
Human Skeletal Biology, Paleoradiology, Hominid Evolution, Paleopathology, Archaeometry, Mummy Studies. Peru, Egypt.
Dr. Christine White
Isotopic Anthropology, Skeletal Biology. Mesoamerica, Peru, Egypt.
3. Facilities – In the Department:
a) Zooarchaeological lab (extensive comparative faunal remains from Ontario and Arctic)
b) Digital Media Lab (GIS, audio-video recording)
c) Geophysical facilities (GPS, dual array magnetometer, mag sus, resistivity meter, GPR)
d) Centre for Research and Teaching of Native Languages
e) Great Lakes Archaeology Lab (Ellis)
4. Facilities - Outside the Department:
a) Museum of Ontario Archaeology/Lawson Site Late Woodland Village: Research Institution affiliated with the Department. Joan Kanigan, Executive Director. Specializes in the promotion and research of Ontario Archaeology. Extensive holdings including the Wilf and Elsie Jury Collections. Multiple Publication Series.
b) Sustainable Archaeology at Western: Located at the Museum of Ontario Archaeology. Extensive holding of compiled Ontario collections and site data (research and CRM), digital imaging and object analysis facilities (3D modelling and printing, microCT, digital X-ray, immersive environments), and First Nations collaboration program. Dr. Neal Ferris, Director.
c) Guañape Research Centre and Field School. Base camp and research operations for long term archaeological fieldwork in the Virú Valley, Peru.
d) Laboratory for Stable Isotope Science. In the Earth Sciences Department, UWO.
Department: Archaeology and Classical Studies
Location: Waterloo, Ontario (Main Campus) and Brantford, Ontario (Brantford Campus)
Website
1. Degrees in Archaeology or Bioarchaeology Offered:
BA (3 years); Honours BA (4 years)
- Honours BA in North American Archaeology and Honours BA in Near Eastern and Classical Archaeology available.
2. Faculty (Archaeology):
Dr. P. M. Michèle Daviau
Iron Age towns, ceramic technology, the archaeology of Jordan, Near Eastern Archaeology, Egyptian Archaeology
Dr. Gerald Schaus
Greek Archaeology with a special interest in Archaic Greek pottery; Greek history; Greek colonization, Greek and Roman sports, Classical Civilization
Dr. John Triggs
Historical archaeology, industrial archaeology, archaeological field and laboratory methods, post-excavation analysis, statistical methods, and occasionally human osteology
(Bioarchaeology):
Dr. Bonnie Glencross
bioarchaeology and human biology with specialized teaching and research interests in health and disease in the past. American Southeast, American Northeast, Anatolia.
3. Facilities – In the Department:
4. Facilities - Outside the Department:
5. Field Schools:
a) Ruthven Field School, Ontario
Department: Anthropology
Location: Toronto, Ontario
Website
1. Degrees Offered:
BA, Honours BA and International Honours BA in Anthropology offered
The graduate program in Social Anthropology offers MA and PhD degrees
2. Faculty (Archaeology):
Dr. Kathryn Denning
Archaeology and material culture, socio-cultural anthropology, biological anthropology, history and philosophy of science, social theory
Notes on the program:
While the main focus at York is on social anthropology, past course topics have included: Early Civilizations: Complex Societies of the New and Old Worlds; Archaeology and Society: Local Pasts in a Global Present; The Social Lives of Places and Things: Material Culture and the Archaeology of the Contemporary Past; Humanity's Journeys: Introduction to Palaeoanthropology and Archaeology.
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