LUCIANNE LEVIN is Director Emerita of Research and Collections at the Institute for American Indian Studies, Washington, Connecticut. She has over 50 years of research and field experience in Northeastern archaeology, anthropology, and Native Studies. She is a founding member of Connecticut’s Native American Heritage Advisory Council , and retired editor of the journal of the Archaeological Society of Connecticut, a position she held for 30 years.
She received her M.A. and Ph.D. in anthropology from New York University and her B.A. from Indiana University. Dr. Lavin was awarded the Russell Award by the Archaeological Society of Connecticut and elected Fellow of the New York State Archaeological Association for exemplary archaeology work in their respective states. In 2018, she received a Certificate of Award for Women in American History from The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
Dr. Lavin has written over 200 professional publications and technical reports on the archaeology and ethnohistory of the Northeast. Her Connecticut’s Indigenous Peoples: What Archaeology, History and Oral Traditions Teach Us about their Communities and Cultures (Yale University Press, 2013) has won several awards and was selected by the American Library Association’s Choice Magazine as the “Outstanding Academic Title for 2013 in the North America Category”.
Her most recent book is Our Hidden Landscapes: Indigenous Stone Ceremonial Sites in Eastern North America (University of Arizona Press 2023).
Copies of the new paperback edition of the book will be available for purchase at a discounted price of $32 (cash or checks only).
Abstract of the Presentation
by Lucianne Lavin
A hike in the woods often reveals a variety of built stone cultural features. Many of these are the remains of abandoned farmsteads and industrial mill sites. Others, however, represent Native American ceremonial sites. The idea of Native Americans designing stone structures that represent sacred landscapes is fairly new to some Northeastern researchers, as it was historically – and erroneously -- thought that local Indigenous peoples did not build in stone and all such structures were the result of European-American farming activities. Some of it is, but some of it is not.
This PowerPoint presentation (and the recently published book on which it is based) introduces people to Southern New England’s Indigenous Ceremonial Stone Landscapes (CSLs) – sacred places whose principal identifying characteristics are stacked stone structures that cluster within specific physical landscapes. They are often unrecognized as the significant cultural landscapes they are, in dire need of protection and preservation.
State regulations (in Connecticut, at least) support preservation of sacred Native American sites (that is, those sites of ritual significance), and so it is important for members of land trusts and conservation organizations, as well as private property owners, to be able to recognize these sites within their properties and work to preserve them.