03/17/2026
On March 17th, 2010, a great group of students joined a professor/the NCPAL Director in planting a time capsule by the New College Public Archaeology Lab at an event hosted by the New College of Florida administration. The sign is still there. Just another 34 years before excavating and opening the time capsule
02/25/2026
There's a mystery just north of College Hall, possibly a cistern. After Facilities called professor Baram, Professor Pirone got Isaac and Arianna and the GPR out to take a look. Stay tuned...
02/24/2026
Students from Professor Baram's Method and Theory in Archaeology course came to NCPAL to see the lab's ethics, replicas, and projects and to engage in flint knapping (with some flakes as evidence), Spanish Moss weaving, making a fire (unsuccessfully), and atlatl throwing (with some amazing feats of distance and strength). There will be an open house during Florida Archaeology Month in March for the campus community
02/07/2026
an oldie (this is an archaeology page after all) from FPAN: Super Bowls of Florida
Looking forward to the on Sunday? Why not take a gander at some beautiful bowls from prehistoric Florida, these ones are all housed at the Smithsonian Museum. We have a long tradition of amazing pottery in Florida!
02/03/2026
For those around Englewood, a free/open to the public presentation on the Archaeology of Lemon Bay on Saturday February 7th at 11 am at the Englewood Charlotte County Library. Lemon Bay (southern Sarasota County and Charlotte County) includes Paulsen Point Mound; to its west is the Manasota Key OffShore Site and to its south the lands of the Calusa. We'll cover those and more. And say a few words about lemons
11/23/2025
return of an annual tradition
for your relatives who wonder why you studied archaeology....
11/20/2025
Since we're in Florida, have to share this story about the first Thanksgiving.
Massachusetts claims 1621
Florida claims in 1565 at St. Augustine
Whatever: give thanks
Science for the season đŠđ„§đœ Most of us imagine the Pilgrims celebrated the first Thanksgiving in 1621, but there's just one catch.
The nationâs real first Thanksgiving took place more than 50 years earlier near the Matanzas River in St. Augustine, Florida, when Spanish explorer Pedro MenĂ©ndez de AvilĂ©s and 800 soldiers, sailors and settlers joined local Native Americans in a feast that followed a Mass of Thanksgiving.
đ Story: https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/science/before-the-pilgrims-floridians-celebrated-the-real-first-thanksgiving/
Archaeologist Kathleen Deagan and other Florida Museum researchers have been studying the artifacts and records left by Florida's early colonists in St. Augustine and the surrounding region for decades.
âThe holiday we celebrate today is really something that was invented in a sense,â Kathy said. âBy the time the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth, the people who settled Americaâs first colony with MenĂ©ndez probably had children and grandchildren living there.â
Instead of flat-top hats and oversized buckles, conquistadors wore armor and colonists dressed in 16th-century Spanish garments. There wasnât any cranberry sauce or pieânot even turkey. Instead, the meal consisted of an assortment of food, from salted pork and red wine shipped from Spain to yucca from the Caribbean.
Gifford Waters (pictured) said the meal probably took place near the mouth of present-day Hospital Creek on the Matanzas River, where today the Mission of Nombre de Dios and the Fountain of Youth Archaeological Park â the site of MenĂ©ndezâ original encampment and the first colony â are located. The feast followed a Thanksgiving Mass, which Kathy said was a common practice of sailors after a tumultuous expedition.
Besides salted pork and red wine, those in attendance ate garbanzo beans, olives and hard sea biscuits. The meal may have also included Caribbean foods that were probably collected when Menéndez stopped to regroup and resupply at San Juan Puerto Rico before continuing to Florida, Kathy said. If the Timucua contributed, it would likely have been with corn, fresh fish, berries or beans.
đ Story: https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/science/before-the-pilgrims-floridians-celebrated-the-real-first-thanksgiving/
11/13/2025
The Director demonstrating atlatl techniques for students and staff
11/04/2025
Hurricanes are monster storms, some of which have changed historical trajectories. Archaeologists tell of the loss of the Luna Colony and the 1928 Lake Okeechobee Hurricane
Free and open to the public:
Rising: Surviving the Surge is a powerful film on Hurricane Ian (September 2022)
U*i Baram is on the panel after the showing at the Selby Public Library on Wednesday November 5th starting at 2 pm: no gloom and doom in the discussion
Florida Humanities asks that you register at https://floridahumanities.org/.../rising-surviving-the.../
10/30/2025
15 years ago, as part of the New College of Florida 50th anniversary celebration the New College Public Archaeology Lab opened with speeches and a ribbon cutting, and the amazing efforts of students from a long time ago
10/30/2025
Boo! Back in 2018...
The plastic skeleton in the pit
10/27/2025
On Tuesday October 28th, starting at 9:30 am come to New College's College Hall for a conversation with Jeff LaHurd and Lorrie Muldowney and U*i Baram. Free and open to the public. Light refreshments and a photographic exhibit of the construction of the Charles and Edith Ringing Mansion