Quentin Mackie
University of Victoria
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Featured researches published by Quentin Mackie.
Archive | 2011
Quentin Mackie; Daryl W. Fedje; Duncan McLaren; Nicole Smith; Iain McKechnie
Coastal British Columbia is largely a rugged fjord-land archipelago. It has not always been so – over time, the coastline has changed configuration dramatically and the fauna and flora have seen multiple successions and extirpations. Through this, for the last 11,000 RCYBP years at least, resilient people made their living from the ocean and the land, shrugging off or taking advantage of environmental change. Similarly, archaeologists have worked the nooks and crannies of the coast for decades, surveying in the dense forest and digging in the deep middens, subject to similar environmental conditions as those they study and making quiet progress in regional culture histories. In more recent years, this area has been thrust to the forefront of research into the First Peopling of the American continents. As the Clovis First model began to be questioned, alternate modes and routes for the arrival of humans were brought in from the sidelines, including the hypothesized west coast route (e.g. Fladmark 1979). Not much research had been focused on this route, perhaps as Easton (1992) suggests, because of the terrestrial mindset of many archaeologists. Perhaps also, the prospects of finding sites on the deeply drowned landscapes or in the rugged, heavily forested hinterland was prohibitively daunting and led to a pessimistic outlook on success.
PLOS ONE | 2018
Duncan McLaren; Daryl Fedje; Angela Dyck; Quentin Mackie; Alisha Gauvreau; Jenny Cohen
Little is known about the ice age human occupation of the Pacific Coast of Canada. Here we present the results of a targeted investigation of a late Pleistocene shoreline on Calvert Island, British Columbia. Drawing upon existing geomorphic information that sea level in the area was 2–3 m lower than present between 14,000 and 11,000 years ago, we began a systematic search for archaeological remains dating to this time period beneath intertidal beach sediments. During subsurface testing, we uncovered human footprints impressed into a 13,000-year-old paleosol beneath beach sands at archaeological site EjTa-4. To date, our investigations at this site have revealed a total of 29 footprints of at least three different sizes. The results presented here add to the growing body of information pertaining to the early deglaciation and associated human presence on the west coast of Canada at the end of the Last Glacial Maximum.
Canadian journal of archaeology | 2001
Daryl W. Fedje; Rebecca J. Wigen; Quentin Mackie; Cynthia R. Lake; Ian D. Sumpter
Quaternary Science Reviews | 2018
Daryl Fedje; Duncan McLaren; Thomas S. James; Quentin Mackie; Nicole Smith; John Southon; Alexander P. Mackie
The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2017
Colton Vogelaar; Quentin Mackie
The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2017
Quentin Mackie; Colton Vogelaar; Daryl Fedje
The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2017
Alexandra Lausanne; Daryl Fedje; Quentin Mackie; Ian J. Walker
The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2017
Daryl Fedje; Duncan McLaren; Quentin Mackie
The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2017
Alexander P. Mackie; Nicole Smith; Colton Vogelaar; Quentin Mackie; Joanne McSporran
The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2017
Jenny Cohen; Quentin Mackie; Daryl Fedje