Bereich 'Titel und Anmerkung zur Verantwortlichkeit'
Haupttitel
Allgemeine Werkstoffbezeichnung
- Text
Paralleler Titel
Andere Titelinformation
Titelangaben zur Verantwortlichkeit
Anmerkungen zum Titel
Erschließungsstufe
Identifikator/Signatur
Bereich "Edition"
Edition statement
Edition statement of responsibility
Class of material specific details area
Angaben zum Maßstab (kartografisch)
Angaben zur Projektion (kartografisch)
Angaben zu Koordinaten (kartografisch)
Angaben zum Maßstab (architektonisch)
Issuing jurisdiction and denomination (philatelic)
Bereich "Entstehungszeitraum"
Datum/Laufzeit
-
1971 (Anlage)
- Creator
- Laboratory of Archaeology, Department of Anthropology, UBC
Bereich 'Physische Beschreibung'
Physische Beschreibung
Publisher's series area
Haupttitel der Verlagsreihe
Parallel titles of publisher's series
Other title information of publisher's series
Statement of responsibility relating to publisher's series
Numbering within publisher's series
Note on publisher's series
Bereich "Archivische Beschreibung"
Name des Bestandsbildners
Verwaltungsgeschichte
The Laboratory of Archaeology was created by Dr. Charles Borden in 1949. Throughout the 1950s, LOA was located in the basement of the Mathematics Building. Initially LOA concentrated on teaching the archaeology of B.C. and the Old World to undergraduate and graduate students to the M.A. level.
1960s and 1970s
By the 1960s, LOA occupied extra storage space in the UBC Power House. The organization of collections and records into systematic storage began in 1964 when Miss Moira Irvine became the first curatorial assistant.
During the 1970s LOA acquired added laboratory and storage space in Brock Hall and the Department of Metallurgy and, with the addition of two professors, Richard Pearson and R.G. Matson, expanded its course offerings and began accepting PhD. students. Pearson specialized in the mesolithic, neolithic and later cultures in Eastern Asia and Oceania; Matson specialized in western North America, particularly the U.S. Southwest and southern B.C. In 1978, the faculty expanded again with the hiring of David Pokotylo, specialist in British Columbia archaeology.
In 1976 the Museum of Anthropology (MOA) opened and the Laboratory of Archaeology moved some of its functions into space on the lower floor. The following year, the remaining facilities of LOA moved to the Anthropology and Sociology Building next to the Museum.
In 2010 LOA obtained new research, collections, and archives spaces in the MOA building out of the CFI funded Partnership of Peoples project.