Private triangle mercantilism
A smuggler’s entrepôt during the Ancien Régime?
Project start: March 2017
Hypotheses at: May 2017
General framework – Sometimes a hole in the data is the data
A. Route Archaeology/History – Archives Search for Testable Evidence
“the bay of the privateers”
- Can local privateer activity be documented back to the 16th-18th century period?
- Company archives search – especially Dutch WIC & VOC companies, New England, New France, Canada, France, England, West Indies
- National archives – England, USA, Canada, France, Spain, Portugal, The Netherlands, Belgium, West Indies States, Hanseatic League
- Trading Patterns mapping – heat maps of the data – what are the hidden patterns of known smuggling trade flow?
Archival/Historical Research
- Acadian-New England vs. Imperial Trade
- Acadian and the American and French Revolutions of 1776-1796
- Roots of Revolutions – an exchange of goods, an exchange of the idea of liberty?
- Did Acadian independence and anti-tax-mindedness influence revolutionary thinking?
Using weather to narrow the archival search
- { coming soon }
B. Commercial Route Science Techniques
Geochemical Trace Sampling
Does geochemical analysis identify origin of the product (ex. NS Windsor Formation)?
- Geotrace samples to test for location of possible geological formation source
- Compare samples of pre-1697 C mortar, plaster, and whitewash in Nova Scotia, New England, Newfoundland, Acadia, West Indies
- Compare buildings, shipwrecks and artifacts of the period for surface deposition
- Do samples suggest a match?
Acadia/New France
- Investigate Acadian artifacts for lime and mortar deposition
- perform core sampling of historic dikes – lime deposition at 16th-18th century depth?
- Do samples suggest a match to Windsor Formation?
Private Triangle Trade
- North Atlantic Colonies (England/Britain, New Netherland, New Sweden, New France) + Africa + West Indies
- Research in Canada, USA, UK, France, The Netherlands, French West Indies, English West Indies
- Commercial and smugglers’ trading webs across the pre-industrial world during the Age of Sail
- Map evidence to test for trading patterns – heat maps of the data
- Do they suggest a trading relationship or pattern?
C. Remote Sensing Archaeology
- Sea-level rise can be reverse-engineered back to the 17th century.
- Use 16th-18th Century shoreline estimates and nautical charts to evaluate possible sites for field investigation.
- Match against air and satellite remote sensing imagery.
D. Site Archaeology using advice of Master Mariner with 16th-18th Century historical knowledge
16th-18th Century seasonal encampments
- Backdating sea-level drops back to 15th-18th century
- (estimate 0.4 to 1.4m) – [“sea”, p. ]
- Use this data to evaluate possible sites for field investigation
- Use air & satellite remote sensing x machine learning analysis to zero in on sites of interest.
- What are the likeliest sites that were above sea-level during the period?
- develop priority list of needs of that era
- with the help of sailing masters, and “hand’s-on” military/naval navigation experts of the Age of Sail
- with the help of “16th-18th Century mariner/trading” era experts
- with the help of historians in Nova Scotia, New England, UK, Bilbao (Spain) and La Rochelle (France)
- define necessities for 16th-18th century limestone processing
E. Field Archaeology options
- Backdating sea-level drops back to 15th-18th century
- Statistically analyze and field-check glacial striation paths from Mahone Bay deposit
- evaluate whether either culture used the hushing technique [See Lime Processing Methods – at Research Notes – coming soon]
- map unsubmerged depositional landforms in the region that could have boulder deposits
- map proximity of depositional features to Acadian and Mi’kmaq settlements and paths
- Statistically analyze (machine-learning, AI, etc) likely cultural patterns
- Kevin Vitale et al, Exploring Ancient Landscapes Under Lake Huron Using Cultural Algorithms.
- heat maps of trade across the region – do empty regions mark the unofficial trade?
E. Site Archaeology projects
- Ground-truthing & dive archaeology by professional archaeologists & diving volunteers.
- Obtain help from a ready pool of summer “dig site” volunteers & visitors.