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“ONE OF THE NATION’S MOST IMPORTANT ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES”
NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARK
ABBOTT FARM
IN
TOPIC OF ARCHAEOLOGY PRESENTATION
The program takes pace at 2 PM, May 17 at
The subject of over 100 books and publication and the site of ongoing archaeological exploration, Abbott Farm is a focal point of research that traces several thousand years of human occupation from the Paleo-Indian period through the colonial to the present.
The site is named after Charles Conrad Abbott, a nineteenth-century
A National Historic Landmark, the highest designation bestowed by the Federal Government, Abbott Farm is recognized by the New Jersey State Museum as “one of the most significant prehistoric sites in the Northeast,” and named “one of the nation’s most important archaeological sites” by the National Park Service.
The May 17 program will be lead by three leaders of state archaeology: Richard Hunter of Hunter Research, Karen Flinn of the
Archaeologist Richard W. Hunter is the president of the Trenton based Hunter Research, Inc., which, in addition to providing a recent study on Abbott Farm, has led important
Karen Flynn is an assistant curator of Archaeology and Ethnology at the New Jersey State Museum, which boasts a long connection with research at Abbott Farm through its association with famed archaeologist and Abbott Farm research Dorothy Cross.
Michael Steward, a professor of anthropology at Temple University, the author of studies on the native populations of the
The event, presented by the Friends of the
The Friends of the
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