Online Book Reader

Home Category

Adventures of a Sea Hunter_ In Search of Famous Shipwrecks - James P. Delgado [102]

By Root 807 0

———. “The Gold-Rush Store Ship Niantic,” Maritime Life & Traditions 13 (spring 2002).

———. “Relics of the Kamikaze,” Archaeology 54:1 (January/February 2003).

Eliot, John E. “Bikini’s Nuclear Graveyard,” National Geographic, June 1992.

Erskine, Angus B., and Kjell-G. Kjaer. “The Arctic Ship Fox,” Polar Record 33, 185 (1997).

Keenleyside, Anne, Margaret Bertulli and Henry C. Fricke. “The Final Days of the Franklin Expedition: New Skeletal Evidence,” Arctic 50:1 (March 1997).

Lenihan, Daniel J. “The Arizona Revisited,” Natural History Magazine 100:11 (November 1991).

———. “Bikini Beneath the Waves,” American History Illustrated 28:3 (May/June 1993)

Murphy, Larry. “Preservation at Pearl Harbor,” APT Bulletin 9:1 (1987).

Nordby, Larry V. “Modeling Isabella: Behavioral Linkages Between Submerged and Terrestrial Sites” in James P. Delgado, ed., Underwater Archaeology Proceedings from the Society for Historical Archaeology. Reno, Nevada: Society for Historical Archaeology, 1988.

Pastron, Allen G., and James P. Delgado. “Archaeological Investigations of a Mid-19th Century Shipbreaking Yard, San Francisco, California,” Historical Archaeology 25:1 (1991).

Solnit, Rebecca. “The Rifts That Unite Us,” San Francisco Chronicle, September 8, 2002.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

My dad taught me about life and how to value people for who they are, not what they are.

Lynn Vermillion, the librarian at the California History Room at the San Jose Public Library, showed me the way to books and files from the first afternoon I asked my father to drop me off at the downtown library.

Constance “Connie” Perham, founder and curator of the New Almaden Museum, took me in as a fifty-cent-per-hour assistant at age fourteen and taught me that collecting the past meant nothing unless you could share it with others and make it relevant and exciting for them.

Ted Hinckley convinced my parents to send their precocious child not to the local community college but to university.

Tom Mulhern and Gordon Chappell of the Western Regional Office of the National Park Service, with help from Roger Kelly and Robert Cox, taught me about nominating historical resources to the National Register of Historic Places and about cultural resources management.

Allen Pastron let me join his crew at the bottom of a deep pit that had just reached the top of the hull of William Gray. That dig in 1979 lured me with the siren song of the sea, and the drama of a lost and buried ship now fills my archeologist’s soul. My work with Allen continues and remains my touchstone.

Doug Nadeau, Golden Gate National Recreation Area’s first chief of the Division of Resource Management and Planning, was the best boss that I’ve ever had the privilege to work for.

No-nonsense master diver Lawrence “Dutch” Bowen often said while training me, “There are bold divers, and there are old divers. There are no old bold divers.” Through the years, whenever I make some mistake underwater and nearly kill myself, Dutch’s basic training comes back to mind to save the day.

Dan Lenihan and Larry Murphy of the National Park Service’s Submerged Resources Center Unit taught me how to dive wrecks and how to “do” underwater archeology. Their philosophical discussions over the role of anthropology in underwater and maritime archeology, as well as a strong preservationist approach to saving wrecks from the ravages of treasure hunters, also formed a solid core in my education.

William N. “Bill” Still and Gordon P. Watts, the founders of the Program in Maritime History and Underwater Research at East Carolina University.

Dave Burley, Chairman of the Department of Archeology at Simon Eraser University, picked up where Still and Watts left off to show me what else I lacked in the quest to finish school and get that Ph.D.

George Belcher introduced me to the infamous Somers, and later the beauty and history of Vietnam and its people. He exemplifies the concept of cool as an international man of mystery.

Edwin C. “Ed” Bearss, Chief Historian of the National Park Service, assigned me to be Project Historian on the

Return Main Page Previous Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader