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Pacific Northwest Archaeological Society (PNWAS) News Bulletins, 2007
Newsletter article   Open access

Pacific Northwest Archaeological Society (PNWAS) News Bulletins, 2007

Dale R. Croes
2007
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7273/000008099
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PNWAS NEWS BULLETIN 87 - 90 20072.32 MBDownloadView
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2007 PNWAS ACTIVITIES10.77 kBDownloadView
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Abstract

Anthropology Archaeology
These are the 2007 Pacific Northwest Archaeological Society (PNWAS) News Bulletins with activities of the society for that year. In 2007 we presented our rescue work at the Sunken Village wet site, Portland, Oregon. We also continued talks at REI featuring the state's settlement with Lower Elwha S'Klallam ("Enough is Enough!"), entitled: “THE $15+ Million TSE-WHIT-ZEN Site SETTLEMENT—Setting a Precedence for our whole County—and Future Plans!” Additionally, we had an update talk on the Wenas Mammoth excavations in eastern Washington, we featured a new book by Ruth Kirk and Dr. Richard D. Daugherty, Exploring Archaeology in Washington, and we conducted our summer excavations at the Qwu?gwes wet site in Olympia with PNWAS volunteers. We have included a spreadsheet for each year of PNWAS and attached News Bulletins for that year to document our 40-year history. As Director, Dale Croes compiled each of these News Bulletins. As originally stated in our founding in 1985, the Pacific Northwest Archaeological Society (PNWAS) is a membership organization that “offers a means for individuals and organizations to declare their support for the preservation of the rich archaeological resources in our region and help to bring public archaeology programs to people of the Pacific Northwest. Benefits of membership include timely information on Northwest archaeological research, a bi-monthly lecture series and opportunity to participate in professionally supervised research in the Northwest.” PNWAS was incorporated as a non-profit organization in the state of Washington and has remained true to these original objectives. Dale Croes remained the Executive Director throughout these 40 years, with a President, Vice-President and other Officers on the Board. The best way to view the overall history of PNWAS activities is to review the PNWAS News Bulletins, 1985-2025.

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