The Mantle Site Display

Wendat Village Public School opened in 2012 near the site of an early 16th century ancestral Wendat (Huron) village, called the Mantle Site, located within the West Duffins Creek system in the Town of Whitchurch-Stouffville, Ontario. The school was named in honour of the rich history of the site. Since its opening, the school has […]

The Toronto General Hospital Exhibit

Well before the Toronto International Film Festival’s (TIFF) Bell Lightbox cultural centre was built, the northwest corner of King St. and John St. in downtown Toronto was home to the first Toronto General Hospital. The two-storey hospital first opened in June of 1829 and soon afterward other buildings were constructed nearby, including a hospital for cholera patients, […]

The Bishop’s Block Exhibit

The Shangri-La Hotel opened in 2012 on the busy corner of University and Adelaide after two years of excavations by ASI at the site of Bishop’s Block. The excavation involved digging six trenches to expose the foundations and backyard features of four townhouses – three of the houses were constructed in 1832, while the fourth was constructed […]

Paul Kane: French River Rapids

Paul Kane is a treasured Canadian artist and his works are considered to be among the Royal Ontario Museum’s (ROM) most prized collections. Kane is celebrated for his artistic renderings of First Nations groups in Canada and northern portions of the United States in the 19th century, and many of his paintings and sketches are […]

The Mewinzha Gallery Exhibit

Located in the atrium of the Buffalo and Fort Erie Public Bridge Authority’s administration building is an exhibit entitled “Mewinzha – A Journey Back in Time.” The exhibit is located within the interpretive centre and showcases many Indigenous artifacts. The Mewinzha gallery was created to showcase the antiquity of the Peace Bridge site. According to […]

Archaeological History of English Teaware

This essay was compiled from the research collected for a display case exhibit at the main office of ASI. Much like the display case, this essay offers a general history of tea and teaware in English culture. It seeks to encourage critical understanding and further inquiry on how material culture provides important chronological markers for […]

Red Hill Valley Archaeological Project

The Joint Stewardship Board – made up of representatives from City of Hamilton and the Six Nations community – approached ASI about the possibility of bringing artifacts from the Red Hill Valley Parkway’s archaeological project to the City Hall display cases in the Council Chambers foyer at 71 Main St West in Hamilton. ASI happily prepared […]

AGO Canadian Collection: Stone Artifacts

The Art Gallery of Ontario’s Canadian collection includes the work of Tom Thompson and the Group of Seven,  Cornelius Krieghoff, Emily Carr, David Milne, Paul Emile Borduas, William Kurelek and Alex Colville. The AGO also houses an impressive collection (5,000 objects in total) of Inuit art, and famous paintings created by First Nations artists. The gallery […]

King’s Point Site

Sailboats gently bob in the sun, fastened to docks awaiting the perfect wind. Tourists cycle and walk where the lake meets the river. It has always been a spot where people come to enjoy the water. Hundreds of years ago – even thousands of years ago – where sailboats flutter by and tourists soak up the sun, Ontario’s First […]

Dollery Site

Urban archaeological fieldwork conducted in the hustle and bustle of the big city can be exciting. The potential exists to uncover some extremely complex sites created over decades and centuries of development, demolition and rebuilding. As people live their lives on small parcels of inner city land, the parcels are changed by their daily activities. […]