TUARC Trent University Archaeological Research Centre (TUARC). We sponsor workshops and special courses on archaeology.

The Trent University Archaeological Research Centre (TUARC) was established in May, 2001, by the University Senate. The Research Centre is dedicated to the investigation and understanding of past cultures through studies of material culture and environmental evidence, analysis of field, laboratory, and archival data, and the education of students and interested community members by courses, public

ations, and lectures. TUARC was established with the following objectives:

Facilitate the conduct of professional, high calibre archaeological research;
Promote interdisciplinary archaeological research at Trent University, and link this with related research elsewhere;
Foster international linkages between Trent faculty and students and archaeologists outside Canada;
Encourage the study of archaeology by Trent University graduate and undergraduate students;
Educate the public to instill a better understanding and appreciation of archaeology and cultural heritage. TUARC is a unique research institute that manages academic and research facilities for professional archaeologists, researchers, graduate students, and volunteers. Research facilities include specialized laboratories for human osteology, Mesoamerican archaeology, Ontario archaeology, palaeo-DNA studies, South American archaeology, archaeoinformatics (including Geographical Information Systems [GIS], remote sensing, spatial and quantitative analysis) and zooarchaeology. TUARC assists with the publication of the findings of associated scholars, and organizes public lectures on recent archaeological discoveries and advances.

01/04/2023
Exploring the Roots of the Vine: The History & Archaeology of the Earliest WinesA TUARC Lecture• March 24, 2016 : 7:30 P...
03/10/2016

Exploring the Roots of the Vine: The History & Archaeology of the Earliest Wines
A TUARC Lecture
• March 24, 2016 : 7:30 PM
• The Venue, 286 George St. North
• Cost: Free
Wine is one of the most commonly enjoyed and alcoholic beverages in the modern world. But what is the antiquity and history of this otherworldly drink? When and how was it first developed? How did it spread from its point of origin? Dr. Stephen Batiuk will show how new archaeological field work and bio-molecular chemistry and genetics are helping unlock this story, pushing its origins back to the Neolithic period and to the region of Caucasia, modern Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, and how one of our earliest and best documented examples of an ancient migration probably led to the spread of wine and wine culture across the Ancient Near East, and then eventually across the rest of the Mediterranean World. Sponsored by Trent University Archaeological Research Centre (TUARC)

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1600 West Bank Drive
Peterborough, ON
K9L0G2

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