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Introduction

Contact: Archaeology

The Boston Harbor Islands is the most intact archaeological landscape in Boston with dozens of ancient Massachusett Native sites and historical archaeological sites. Erosion made worse by climate change is actively destroying this nationally-significant cultural landscape.

The Boston Harbor Islands Archaeological Climate Action Plan is a collaborative effort among Boston-area archaeologists, the Massachusett Tribe at Ponkapoag, and climate change experts to proactively address the loss of the cultural landscapes on the Boston Harbor Islands due to climate change.

The Challenge

Contact: Archaeology

There are dozens of known historical and ancient Native cultural archaeological sites on the Boston Harbor Islands. There are also many areas that have never been surveyed.  Most of these sites are located along island shorelines.  

Climate change is worsening erosion of the Islands in Boston Harbor due to increased storm severity, wave action, and flooding. Erosion is causing archaeological sites and cultural landscapes to fall into the harbor.

In 2022, the Boston Harbor Islands’ archaeological sites were listed as one of the 11 most endangered historic places by the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

While archaeological sites are sometimes protected from loss due to development or planned changes to the islands, there are no inherent protections of these sites from erosion.  

Most archaeology done on the Islands have focused on ancient Native sites, though to date, there have been almost no projects on the Islands where local Native people were directly involved in the design, excavation, or collections management of archaeological projects.

image of eroding bluff with a tree on top
Eroding shoreline at Thompson Island

Project Goals

Contact: Archaeology

Side by side comparison of a 2018 and 2020 image showing exposure of historic structure on eroded cliff
Comparison image of an early 20th century tunnel for supplying goods to fortifications on Lovells Island. This tunnel segment has since collapsed onto the beach following additional erosion.
  1. Combine existing erosional predictive models with archaeological site location data to determine which archaeological sites and unsurveyed areas on the Boston Harbor Islands are most at-risk of loss due to erosion
  2. Create a ranked list of archaeological mitigation priorities based on erosion threat and cultural significance (as determined by local Native People).
  3. Provide island managers with a detailed mitigation plan for each at-risk site including proposed scale/type of archaeological mitigation, estimated budget for mitigation, and methods for collaboration with Native People on Native sites.
  4. Evaluate field methods, laboratory methods, curation standards, terminology, and significance evaluation criteria with local Native People to decolonize archaeology
  5. Provide detailed methods for the project’s innovative assessment of erosion risk, collaborative archaeology, and community engagement that can be used as a model for similar projects throughout the world
  6. Seek additional funding to proactively survey the most at-risk sites on Boston Harbor before they are lost.

Determining the Erosional Rates of the Harbor Islands

Contact: Archaeology

The National Park Service through their Climate Change Response Program funded the Boston University Coastal Lab to assess erosion on the Harbor Islands.

Using Ground-Penetrating Radar, field observations, GIS analysis, and hydrodynamic modeling, the BU team was able to create a predictive model of erosion rates for the Boston Harbor islands.

For more information on this project, visit their Project Webpage

Chart showing input components of variables to determine rates and risks of erosion on the Boston Harbor Islands
Inputs from the Boston University geomorphological predictive modeling for erosion rates for the Boston Harbor Islands. Image courtesy of www.bucoastallab.com/boston-harbor

Archaeological Collections Work

Contact: Archaeology

10 stone objects on a white background. The upper six are Native Massachusett spear points, the bottom four are fragments of stone tools
Ancient Massachusett stone tools from the Boston Harbor Islands

Decades of archaeological work on the Boston Harbor Islands has resulted in the recovery of thousands of Native creations and historical artifacts. Most of these projects occurred during the period when digital data, including detailed artifact catalogs, were not made.  A team of archaeologists and Native people are actively engaged in the reexamination and cataloging of thousands of Boston Harbor Islands artifacts excavated by archaeologists led by Barbara Luedtke at the Fiske Center for Archaeological Research at UMass Boston.  This detailed information on what has already been found on the islands will greatly improve our knowledge of the sites on the islands, and help the Native collaborators on this project determine which sites are of greatest significance. This project will also address what the best practices should be for Native creations that have been removed from their original locations.

Project Timeline

Contact: Archaeology
accessboston lighthouse basic
money
experiential  five people
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Initial Idea

 2018

Initial Grant

 March 2021

Creating Team

 Spring 2023

Collections Processing

 Summer 2023

Creating the Plan

 Summer 2023-Spring 2024

Plan Review

Spring 2024

Plan Released

Spring 2024

Educating Partners

 Spring 2024

Additional 
Fundraising

 2023-2024

Site Surveys

Summer 2024 and beyond

 

Project Financial Support

Contact: Archaeology

The current Archaeological Climate Action Plan production and archaeological collections work are supported by generous grants from the Boston Community Preservation Committee.

The final Plan will produce dozens of individual site mitigation plans for the Boston Harbor Islands. The funds needed to conduct these surveys will be extensive.

If you are interested in financially supporting this project, please reach out to us at archaeology@boston.gov

plaque crediting financial support by the City of Boston's Community Preservation Fund or CPA
This projects initial Boston Harbor Islands Archaeological Climate Action Plan and related collections work is supported by a generous grant from the City of Boston's Community Preservation Fund.

Project Leadership

Contact: Archaeology

The following individuals are Co-Principal Investigators of the Boston Harbor Islands Archaeological Climate Action Plan

The digitization of the Barbara Luedtke collections at UMass Boston are led by:

  • Duncan Ritchie, Principal Investigator, The Public Archaeology Laboratory, Inc.
  • Heather Olson, Laboratory Manager, The Public Archaeology Laboratory, Inc. 

Archaeological Climate Action Plan Documents

Contact: Archaeology

COMING SOON: Boston Harbor Islands Archaeological Climate Action Plan (Public PDF)

Due to the need to protect sensitive archaeological site location data, the full Plan document is not available to the public. This public document includes all the information that is possible to share publicly, including methods and recommendations.

 

Permit Proposal: Reconnaissance Archaeological Survey for a collaborative Boston Harbor Islands Archaeological Climate Action Plan in Boston, Hingham, Weymouth, Quincy, Hull, and Winthrop, MA. Joseph Bagley, Elizabeth Solomon, Holly Herbster, and Zoe Hughes

2023 Permit proposal to the Massachusetts Historical Commission for a State Archaeological Permit to conduct a reconnaissance archaeological survey of 25 Boston Harbor Islands (Islands) to assess the risk to archaeological sites and cultural spaces due to erosion caused by climate change

 

Boston Harbor Islands

Contact: Archaeology
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