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Dr. John P. Hart

Curator Emeritus
john.hart@nysed.gov
518-474-3895

My research has focused primarily on the histories of maize, bean, and squash in New York and the greater Northeast and the interactions of human populations with these crops. Through collaborations with numerous colleagues both at the Museum and other institutions, this research resulted in new understandings of these histories and interactions. A primary focus has been on charred cooking residues adhering to the interior surfaces of pottery sherds in the collections of the Museum. These residues contain microfossil evidence (phytoliths, starch, lipids) of the plants cooked in the pots. In addition the residues can be directly radiocarbon dated through accelerator mass spectrometry. These methods and techniques have provided new evidence that is radically altering our understandings of the histories of agriculture in New York State. Theory building to develop understandings of these new histories is another focus. This research has broad implications for Native American history in New York and the greater Northeast.

Most recently I have been working with colleagues on Social Network Analyses (SNA) of northern Iroquoian sites dating from A.D. 1350 to 1650. SNA is a formal graphing method, which in archaeology is used to identify relationships between sites based on similarities of artifact assemblages. This research is helping to build new understandings of interactions between village populations and how these interactions changed through time during the last centuries before and then after European involvements.

Publications

2020

J. Hart, T. Abel, J. Vavrasek 2020, Radiocarbon-Based Chronology-Building in Northern New York. The SAA Archaeological Record 20, 67-72
J. Hart 2020, Reassessing an inferred Iroquoian village removal sequence in the Mohawk River Basin, New York, USA, Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 60, 101236. 10.1016/j.jaa.2020.101236
J. Hart 2020, Review of Origins of the Iroquois League: Narratives, Symbols, and Archaeology by Anthony Wonderely and Martha L. Sempowski, American Antiquity 85, 399-400. 10.1017/aaq.2020.1
J. Hart, R. Feranec 2020, Using Maize δ15N values to assess soil fertility in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century AD Iroquoian agricultural fields, PLOS ONE 15, e0230952. 10.1371/journal.pone.0230952

2019

J. Hart, T. Abel, J. Vavrasek 2019, Radiocarbon Dating the Iroquoian Occupation of Northern New York, American Antiquity 84, 748–761. 10.1017/aaq.2019.50
J. Hart, R. Feranec 2019, Fish and maize: Bayesian mixing models of fourteenth- through seventeenth-century AD ancestral Wendat diets, Ontario, Canada, Scientific Reports 9, 16658. 10.1038/s41598-019-53076-7
J. Hart, S. Winchell-Sweeney, Jennifer Birch 2019, An analysis of network brokerage and geographic location in fifteenth-century AD Northern Iroquoia, PLOS ONE 14, e0209689. 10.1371/journal.pone.0209689
J. Hart, R. Feranec 2019, The Dog That Wasn’t: An Historical Pig Burial on the Sixteenth-Century AD Klock Site, Fulton County, New York, Archaeology of Eastern North America 47, 1-6.
J. Hart, R. Feranec, T. Abel, J. Vavrasek 2019, Freshwater reservoir offsets on radiocarbon-dated dog bone from the headwaters of the St. Lawrence River, USA, PeerJ 7, e7174. 10.7717/peerj.7174
J. Hart 2019, Review of Jennifer Birch and Victor D Thompson (eds) The Archaeology of Villages in Eastern North America, North American Archaeologist 40, 121-124. 10.1177/0197693119865046