News

Nova Scotia Museum: Very Interesting on line "Acadian" published reports. Take a look, you may like this!

 

NOTE:  You may wish to check out the web pages listed below to have access to the reports. Your comments would be appreciated. 

 

Merci/Thanks.  

 

1. Excavations at Site BeDi-2 Belleisle Annapolis County 1972

https://ojs.library.dal.ca/NSM/article/view/3939/3605

 

2. Curatorial Report No. 48 Belleisle 1983: Excavations at a Pre-Expulsion Acadian Site, David Christianson, 1984

Actual report is not on line yet! However, a summary is in the below report!

https://ojs.library.dal.ca/NSM/article/view/3972/3633

 

 

3. Curatorial Report No. 65 Belleisle, Nova Scotia, 1680-1755, Marc Lavoie, 1987

 https://ojs.library.dal.ca/NSM/article/view/4045/3701

 

 

4. Curatorial Report No. 87 Looking into Acadie: Three Illustrated Studies, 1999

 https://ojs.library.dal.ca/NSM/article/view/4130/3781

 

 

 

September 3rd, 2017. Info added today! Click the Research top right tab, then the "past" tab, browse if you can through each items. Very interesting, It's about the 1983 Archaeology Dig at the Belleisle Marsh. (Approx. Locations 1983 a & b in the picture

Belleisle2004.Ghislain

 

Special thanks to Jean-Claude Savoie, a businessman from St. Quentin, NB, who commissioned Dr. Marc Lavoie, archaeologist at St. Anne Univ. in NS to excavate two homesteads in Belleisle in 2004 and 2005 believed to be Savoie houses and possibly a Gaudet house in Belleisle in 2004 and 2005. Dr. Lavoie was also involved in the Museum of NS digs in Belleisle of 1983.  Aerial photo of the Belleisle Marsh taken in May, 2004 by Ghislain Savoie.  

 

Take a Look at the ArcGIS Belle-Isle Map!

ArcGIS Belle-Isle Map!

This interactive map was created in 2013 by Scott Comeau, with historical input from Marc Lavoie, the Nova Scotia Museum of Natural History in Halifax, and Diane (Doucet) Surette.

You can easily browse on this site:

http://www.arcgis.com/home/webmap/viewer.html?webmap=9427439581f440669014f83cb92120a3

Once on the site, you can select from the top left the details box, then move to the basemap box, you can choose which map format you wish to use, once the map is open, if desired, you can blow the map by using the + or – menu on the left side.

Then locate either a house icon, church, windmill, or a red dot, move your mouse arrow on it, left click on it, you will get a description box with narrative information.

Please note:  the historical map of 1757 “Plan of the River of Annapolis Royal in Nova Scotia” is the base for the location of historical data of this web site map.

More information of the 1757 map can be found by scrolling down in the news and reading the article of May 12th, 2010.

 

Enjoy!