NOGAP Archaeological Resources
The NOGAP Bibliography
Compiled by R. Jane Dale, Jean-Luc Pilon, Luc Nolin and Ken
Swayze
Beginning in 1985, there was a steady flow of reports and
manuscripts stemming directly from NOGAP archaeological research
and management activities. This work was carried out by the
NOGAP Archaeology Project staff at the Archaeological Survey of
Canada, Canadian Museum of Civilization in collaboration with the
Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre in Yellowknife, the
Heritage Branch of Tourism Yukon in Whitehorse, and independent
contractors. Some of this information was translated into
conference papers, published articles and monographs. The
momentum generated during the first half of the project continued
to yield an ever-growing number of papers and published research
reports. Indeed, the second portion of the NOGAP Archaeology
Project placed an increased emphasis on the analysis of field
data and the dissemination of this knowledge.

NOGAP Radiocarbon Dates
Compiled by Luc Nolin and Jacques Cinq-Mars
This listing offers a compilation of conventional and Accelerator Mass Spectometry (AMS) dates obtained during the NOGAP Archaeology Project between 1985 and 1994.
Most are uncorrected dates calculated from mammal bones
or charcoal. They are presented, along with pertinent comments by the
researchers who submitted them, following a standardized format similar to the one
used in the journal
Radiocarbon. References to the researchers'
reports and/or publications follow a geographical breakdown which
organizes the dates within sub-units of the larger NOGAP area beginning in the west
near the Alaska border and ending in the east on Devon Island.
Selecting these
will bring you to a mirror site on the Canadian Archaeological Association's Web server
where the technical papers are located. Those documents are presented in the language
they were originally written in. To return to the Canadian Museum of Civilization's Web
site, simply use your BACK button.
Date created: September 12, 2001Last updated: September 12, 2001