UW-Stevens Point museum offers articifact identification at free event
9/18/2012
 
Have your arrowheads, stone tools, pottery and other items identified, see prehistoric artifacts and talk with archeologists at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point Museum of Natural History as part of the inaugural Artifact Show and Identification Day on Saturday, Sept. 29.
Artifacts from Central Wisconsin and the Upper Midwest will be on display from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the museum, located on the first floor of the University Library. The free event will include artifact identification (no appraisals) by Ray Reser, museum director, and Jeffery Behm, professor of anthropology from UW-Oshkosh. Members of the public are invited to bring a few pieces or their entire collection. Behm will give a presentation at 3 p.m. on recent archaeological excavations conducted at the Markman Site, an early historic Meskwaki (Fox) Village on the Wolf River of Waupaca County.
“Central Wisconsin has long been a transitional area for plants and animals as well as a cultural crossroads for our region’s first peoples,” said Reser. “Stone tools, and much later ceramics, are some of the very few pieces of that distant past to help us understand and tell the story of what that world was like and how people adapted to rapidly changing climates and food sources. Our state also holds some of the oldest documented Mammoth and Mastodon kill sites in North America, providing a tantalizing glimpse of life on the edge of the retreating glaciers.”
Reser earned his doctorate in archaeology and paleoanthropology from the Australian National University and holds an undergraduate degree in geo-archaeology from UW-Stevens Point. In addition to his duties as museum director and curator of the archaeological and anthropological collections, Reser is a member of the Wisconsin Archaeological Survey, a registered professional archaeologist and a listed consulting archaeologist with the Wisconsin State Historical Society.
Behm, an expert in Midwestern archaeology, earned his doctorate in archaeology from UW-Madison. He is a member of the Wisconsin Archaeological Survey and a listed consulting archaeologist.
The UW-Stevens Point Museum of Natural History is an outreach and educational facility aligned with the College of Letters and Science and is the only public natural history museum in north central Wisconsin. The museum is open during regular library hours: Monday–Thursday, 7:45 a.m. to midnight; Friday, 7:45 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; and Sunday, 11 a.m. to midnight. Metered parking is located in Lot R, which is accessible from Portage or Reserve streets.
To contact the UW-Stevens Point Museum of Natural History, call 715-346-2858, email museum@uwsp.edu or visit www.uwsp.edu/museum.
Ray Reser is available for media interviews prior to and during the Saturday Artifact Show and Identification Day. Contact: 715-346-2858 (museum) or 715-346-4888 (office) or at rreser@uwsp.edu.
 

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