| Forum: Natural History |
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| Topic: Gannets |
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Posts: 186
Registered: November 2002
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Gannets
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Tue, 12 November 2002 23:34
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A neighbor of mine saw a flock of nearly a hundred gannets feeding on surface fish off Peaks Island yesterday. He was wondering what type of fish would still be around at this time of year to attract such a rare flock.
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| Topic: Dead pilot whale on Peaks Island |
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Posts: 186
Registered: November 2002
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Dead pilot whale on Peaks Island
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Tue, 19 October 2004 10:10

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In mid Septmeber a dead whale washed up on a beach at the northeast end of Peaks Island. I feared it was Poco, the stray beluga whale that has been ranging the coast all summer, but the whale was identified by experts as a pilot whale. Belugas do not have a dorsal fin. At the request of nearby residents who feared the stench of decomposition on such a massive scale, the whale was towed back out to sea.
While I understand the reasoning behind the strict laws reagarding who is allowed to possess remains of marine mammals, kknown as the Marine Mammals Protection Act (to prevent poaching, illegal trade, etc.), it seems that educational and scientific opportunities are lost when they present themselves like this, only to be cast away. A school or the new Gulf of Maine Research Institute (the Gulf of Maine Aquarium) should have been able to disect this whale or reassemble the skeleton of this once magnificent creature rather than send it to the deep as lobster bait.
Terry Goodhue, a vocational arts teacher at the North Haven Community School wanted to take advantage of the learnign possibilities when a whale washed ashore in Seal Cove off the Fox Islands Thorofare, but he was unable to do so because of the MMPA. See http://www.workingwaterfront.com/article.asp?storyID=2004072 6
I welcome any comments or opinions on this subject.
Here's the sad sight on Peaks.
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| Topic: Poco found dead on Monday, November 15, 2004 |
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Posts: 17
Registered: January 2003
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Poco found dead on Monday, November 15, 2004
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Thu, 25 November 2004 22:20

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Meeting Poco was for me the highlight of last summer. Today, with great sadness, I heard the news of his death. For more information, see this article in Portland Press Herald and this press release from National Marine Fisheries Service.
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| Topic: archaeological dig at Scotts Landing, Eggemoggin Reach |
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Posts: 186
Registered: November 2002
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archaeological dig at Scotts Landing, Eggemoggin Reach
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Fri, 06 March 2009 14:28
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Archaeologists unearth paleo-Indian artifacts at Island Heritage Trust site in the summer of 2006
from http://www.islandheritagetrust.org/scottslandingdig.html
Ancient Materials Come to Light in Scott's Landing Archaeological Dig
Holding artifacts that not seen the light of day for over 2,000 years, a group of amateur and professional archaeologists unearthed ancient materials from a shell midden illustrating life in the Early Archaic and Ceramic periods of Deer Isle's paleo-Indian ancestors at Scott's Landing this summer.
Blessed with good weather, over 20 amateur archaeologists and islanders dug and meticulously screened a small patch of the island's newest preserve in late June and early July. After a lecture and welcoming meal at Ann and Roger Hooke's the night before, Cox led his own archaeological team and the community participants through an enthralling but exhausting sun- up to sun-down field school on the shores of Eggemoggin Reach.
Cox's team has worked with him on many other digs so they were paired up with community members to learn proper archaeological field techniques and how to recognize materials such as stone tools, pottery, food remains, and cultural features such as hearths and tent floors. Cox and others taught the more inexperienced participants how to record and interpret results and protect fragile artifacts for future study.
From the photo of the materials, one can see how crucial it is when excavating a site that everything be carefully removed from a site and its location recorded with precision.
Many community members remarked on the effort expended and time needed to protect the detailed history and important information that is available in a professionally supervised dig.
IHT President and anthropologist Bill Haviland says in his book, Deer Isle's Original People, that "Once taken out of context, objects by themselves tell us next to nothing. Thus to dig around in archaeological sites looking for relics destroys them and the information they contain as effectively as if they were bulldozed into oblivion."
He goes to say that Paleo-indian sites are generally "very small briefly but repeatedly by small groups of people; perhaps 1 or 2 families together."
Often the sites were used for seasonal camping, fishing and harvesting for a highly mobile people who worked closely in clans and small units.
Steve Cox will be providing an in-depth public lecture about the findings of the Scott's Landing sometime in the fall of 2007.
Many thanks to Ken and Marnie Reed Crowell for their key role in creating this great opportunity for Deer Isle and the IHT and to the Bar Harbor Bank and Trust and the Island Education Foundation and other donors who underwrote the cost of the field school.
Dr. Steve Cox has over three decades of field school experience and has led excavations for the Maine State Museum and the Abbe Museum. He is currently an Adjunct Curator for the Maine State Museum.
Cox's team included Betsy Webster, Diane Kopec, Donna Madonna, Jacob Freedman, Laurie Labar, Robert and Sandy Lewis, Robin Marion, Stephanie Wagner, and Susan Blaisdell.
Community members were 18 year-old islanders Greta Avis and Brittany Pottle, Joanie Banks, teachers Pam Cohen and Stephanie Lee, Tom and Marilyn Mehalic, Cathy Hart, Wilson Museum Director Patty Hutchins, Ken Schweikert, and Marion Foss.

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