
Dennis Stanford. ATLANTIAR 2015 Conference.
Jauregizarrea. Arraiotz.
Parsons Island. Chesapeake Bay. Maryland. USA.
Basque Refugia,
after graphic
info from
Bruce Bradley.
Cinmar
knife.
22.760+ 90
RCYBP.
Basque Solutrean.
Clovis chronological expansion from the east coast to the west in North America. 13,000 BP.
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE
Dennis Stanford Memorial
Xabi Otero.
Jauzarrea.
The contents of the congress.
The sound of the mountains.
Tribute to Dr. Dennis Stanford.
Archaeologist. Anthropologist. Paleocultural Research Group.
Anthropology Department. National Museum of Natural HistorySmithsonian Institution. Washington. USA.
Dennis Stanford, a life researching life.
Archaeologist. Emeritus Professor, Department of
Archaeology, University of Exeter, United Kingdom.
Research Associate, National Museum of
Natural History, Smithsonian Institution.
Adjunct Professor, Augustana University,
Sioux Falls. Adjunct Faculty, National
Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore,
India.
People from the Basque Refugia
in North America.
Left. Location of the state of Texas
identified on the map of North America,
in front of the Gulf of Mexico.
Right. A Clovis point.
Smithsonian Institution.
Place location of Gault
between the Edwards Plateau
and the
Blackland
Prairies.
Texas flag.
The sea, in
green colour,
what 13,000 years
ago was mainland.
Plan of a boat .
An Umiak of Greenland. 19th and 20th centuries.
Plan of a boat
like the Umiak of Greenland, represented in one of
Gault's stones. The one in the photo below.
The plan of the boat that is on top, recorded
on the flat surface of a Gault stone 13,000 years ago.
Engraved stones of Gault with incised drawings
depicting boats.
Archaeologist.
Director of the Gault
Archaeological Site, Texas.
Expert on lithic technology of
prehistory collections of North,
Central and South America,
as well as the Near East and
of the Southwest of Europe.
Professor researcher at the State University
of Texas, San Marcos. USA.
Clovis Culture
and the Gault Archaeological Site.
Photographer. Graphic Designer. Publisher.
Director of JAUZARREA.
Coordinator ATLANTIAR Network Project
Global Researchers. ANPGR.
Jauzarrea fund for the study and
dissemination of Basque culture.
Arraiotz. Baztan Valley. Nafarroa.
(Basque Country).
Hypothesis and interpretation
of the engraved stones of Gault. Texas.
Images of boats in America.
from 13,000 years ago.
The St Lawrence
basin: Early
Iroquoian
territory, the
territory of
the Iroquois
League and the
Huronia, of the
Huron-Wendat
Confederacy.
Representative
symbols of
First Nations
from the
Saint Lawrence
river basin.
The Huronia territory, Ontario. Canada.
Representation
of the snake / dragon
in the middle ages.
Medieval image
of a dragon in
a ceramic mosaic
of Tiebas
Castle, in
Navarre.
Anthropologist. Archaeologist.
Paleoindian and Paleoecology Laboratory.
National Museum of Natural History.
Smithsonian Institution. Washington.
Cinmar underwater excavation,
and Parsons Island site.
Anthropologist. Archaeologist.
Specialist in Great Lakes Indigenous
history and archaeology.
Archaeological Services Inc.
Toronto. Ontario. Canada.
Biologist. Huron-Wendat Nation.
Directeur du Bureau Nionwentso.
NNation Huronne-Wendat. Wendake,
Qubec. Canada.
Wendat and the St. Lawrence Valley:
New Understandings of Travel,
Trade. The Wendat Homeland.
Anthropologist.
School of Anthropology and Social Sciences.
University of East London. United Kingdom.
Integrating archaeology and archaeoastronomy in
the Basque country with the Basque myths
of Herensuge Ð the Dark Moon goddess
and her serpent/dragon consort.
The mixed forest of beech and fir
trees of Irati, Navarre. An extensive
forest in the Basque Pyrenees.
One of the identified remains of
lineage R1b-L278 was found in the Pyrenees, another in the Alps and
another in Altai. The origin of this lineage dates back 23,000 years in Europe; where it has been extinct 7,000 years ago
(according to the data that is known today). Currently there are two documented samples of this lineage in South America.
Territorial limits known at present of the
First Nations of the Northeast of North America.
Location of the Basque Country in Europe, territory in
which is going to carry out the study of Modern Basque Mitogenome.
Relevant field of study:
multidisciplinary
reconstruction of
prehistoric migrations.
Institute of Social and
Cultural Anthropology.
University of Oxford.
United Kingdom.
Ancient European extinct
lineages that are present in
the current America.
Restaurants DIAMETRO 200 in Orona.
Geneticist. Senior Lecturer in Molecular Biology.
University of Huddersfield. United Kingdom.
A glimpse into the past: reconstructing the human
occupation of Southern Ontario
using ancient DNA.
Geneticist. Professor. Director
of the Department of Biological Sciences.
School of Applied Sciences.
Archaeogenetic and Evolution Centre.
University of Huddersfield.
United Kingdom.
Re-evaluating Basque genetic history.
Modern Basque Mitogenome Project.
Inuit in inuktitut.
Scale model of a Labrador Inuit kayak.
Jauzarrean bilduma.
Basque-Inuit settlement
of Petit Mcatina.
Basse Cte du Nord. Qubec.
Gulf of the Saint Lawrence.
MiÕkmaw star.
MiÕkmaw quillbox. Lunenburg County,
Nova Escocia. Jauzarrean bilduma.
MiÕkmaÕki, the ancestral and unceded territory of the MiÕkmaq nation, with the 7 districts of the
MiÕkmaq Grand Council: KESPEÕK, SIKNIKTUK,
EPEKWITK AQ PIKTUK, KESPUKWITK,
SIPEKNEÕKATIK, ESKIKEWAÕKIK
and UNAMAÕKIK AQ KTAQMKUK.
Anthropologist. Archaeologist.
Director of the Arctic Studies Centerl.
Curator of Arqueology at the National Museum
of Natural History. Anthropology Department.
Smithsonian Institution. Washington D.C. USA.
A Basques-Inuit Joint Venture on the Quebec Lower North Shore.
Gulf of the Saint Lawrence.
Ethnohistorian, specialist in oral history. Vice President of Indigenous Affairs and Director
of Unama'ki College. Hereditary Chief in the Mi'kmaq Grand Council.
Expert advisor in the Canadian Human Rights Commission, in the Federal
Court of Canada, in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, of the
Library and Archives of Canada and the National Gallery of Canada.
University of Cape Breton, Sydney, Nova Scotia. Canada.
The dissemination of Indigenous Knowledge in universities.
The Unama'ki Project with Jauzarrea.
The Fortress of Louisbourg. Unama'ki Territory, Mi'kmaq Nation, (Cap Breton Island).
Mirari Loyarte with 18th century costume designed and made by Claude Iruretagoyena and
Jon Olazcuaga. Made for the Jauzarrea's Basque Program in Louisbourg. Jauzarrean bilduma.
Exhibition. Matriculturalism in the World.
Yunnan Nationalities Museum, Kunming, Yunnann. China.
Pedarra.
Jauzarrean
bilduma.
Photo © Xabi Otero. Design and Infographics © Txoria Errekan-Jauzarrea
2019.
Visitor Experience Manager.
Fortress of Louisbourg National Historic Site. Cape Breton Island.
Parks Canada. Nova Scotia, Canada.
The Basques in Louisbourg. Interpreting their contributions to the settlement of the French colonial
town of Île Royale (Louisbourg).The Basque Program with Jauzarrea in Louisbourg.
Linguist. Vice-President of Euskaltzaindia (Academy of the Basque Language).
Researcher IKER RUMR 5478. Technical director linguistic Atlas of the Basque
Country CNRS: 2010, Euskal Hizkeren Atlas Linguistikoa.
Université de Pau Bayonne et des Pays de l’Adour. Lapurdi. Basque Country.
The correspondence in Basque language of Le Dauphin vessel
Bayonne-Louisbourg 1757. Presence of high percentage of Basque speakers
at Louisbourg in the 18th century.
Museologist. Interdisciplinary Studies (Medieval and Religion). Zumaia,
Gipuzkoa, Basque Country. Managing Director at Douglas Cardinal
Architect, Inc. Founding Director INTERC (International Network for
Training, Education and Research on Culture) and GMRN (Global
Matriculture Research Network).
Carleton University, Ottawa. Canada.
Twelve Matricultural Peoples of the World in an exhibit at Kunming 昆明,
China.Ashante (Ghana), Euskaldunak (Euskal Herria), Batwa and Mbuti
(Congo), Huaorani (Ecuator), Ki Khun U Hynñiewtrep (India), Ju/‘hoansi
(South West Africa), Urang Minang (Indonesia),
Na (Mósuō 摩梭) (China), Naabeeho (Navaho), Ahtna (Athabaskan) and Yakutsk Tinglit (USA).
Maite Itoiz & John Kelly.
Information:
www.jauzarrea.com
jauzarrea@gmail.com
15 years of work by JAUZARREA
Jauzarrea was first conceived in 2004 and became open to the public as a cultural fund in 2009. Since then,
we have held 6 international conferences and more than 140 lectures in Euskal Herria, as well as in the
US and Canada, Quebec and in Mi’kma’ki territory. We have created a collaboration network with 220
researchers from 77 universities, museums, and other scientific institutions from 30 nations.
Our goal is to know the work of international researchers directly, without intermediaries, and at the same time
show them the reality of our culture so that they may have a first-hand vision. When we invite them to coexist
among us we discover that, for the majority, this is their first occasion to be among the Basque people. During
their stay with Jauzarrea, we all engage in discussions that help clarify points of view, and even in some cases
help change attitudes. Thus, a synergy is created that benefits the establishment of mutual trust since the objective
from the beginning is to deepen the study and dissemination of Basque culture around the world.
We do this by generating the information based on the knowledge of the human being by recovering our
past. We commence to search the beginnings – by retracing the path undertaken in Africa – by reconstructing
the story of a journey of thousands of years in the making.
It has become clear to us that through relationships with other peoples of the world we get to know more
about our own culture and our language. We have still much to learn, and yet, since we are on such a
productive path, we thought to be appropriate to show the public some of the projects Jauzarrea has been
actively participating in, collaborating with, and directly generating in the last 15 years. This congress
showcases a sample of the engaged projects.
During Jauzarrea’s gatherings we have been able to generate a dynamism by which several disciplines interact
promoting ideas helping to consolidate new evidences to the Solutrean Solution Hypothesis. Jauzarrea submits a
contribution with the study of the Gault engraved stones which can provide interesting links regarding this topic.
In 2009, we indorsed a study of genetics on First Nations of northeastern North America.
Furthermore, we at Jauzarrea are going to promote and co-sponsor a major project on Basque genetics that
will be led by the prestigious archaeogenetics researchers from the University of Huddersfield, in England.
We have also created a Basque culture program for Parks Canada and Cape Breton University and Unama’ki
College which is already underway at the Fortress of Louisbourg in Nova Scotia, Canada, in the ancestral
territories of the Mi’kmaq.
We continue to likewise collaborate internationally by participating in the World Matricultures Exhibition
produced by INTERC (International Network for Training, Education and Research in Culture) AKA ‘Network
on Culture’ for Yunnan Nationalities Museum in Kunming, China.
New paths for future collaborations with the Smithsonian Institution