Cameron Frail, Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic

Cameron Frail, Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic
The morning light is calmed by high, dappled clouds, and the sea around Adams and Knickle wharf is an opaque turquoise. There’s an elation among the people gathered today as the 70th annual Dory Rowing Competition gets underway.

March 14 to 18, 2022
We are happy to welcome you back to the Nova Scotia Museum. We continue working to create a safe experience for you and our staff. Please note that public health guidelines will continue to be followed at our sites, wearing a non-medical mask is mandatory in our indoor spaces. Check out our “Know before you go” guides on each museum website to help prepare you for your visit.

2022 Honouree: The Landscape of Grand Pré World Heritage Site
To mark the 10th anniversary of the Landscape of Grand-Pré becoming a UNESCO World Heritage site, we will celebrate the rich heritage of this landscape which features an exceptional traditional agricultural settlement still in use today and an iconic place of memory for the Acadian diaspora.

Check Museum websites for their “Know before you go” guide to help prepare you for your visit.
Museum of Natural History
Halifax, Nova Scotia
naturalhistory.novascotia.ca
Christmas Eve |
Closed |
Christmas Day |

Ingredients
- 2 cups flour
- 1 cup salt
- 1 cup (approximately) cold water
Method

Updates from the field
Our team is still on site at archaeology dig at Fort Saint Louis National Historic Site, a seventeenth-century fur trade post situated in an Mi'kmaq coastal landscape.
Archaeology action shot! Wesley lifts our most complete clay tile this year and stows it safely in its own container. Next it will head to the lab to be cleaned and repacked. We re-use pill bottles for smaller, delicate finds too.

Photo 1: Katie Cottreau-Robins extracting a sample of charcoal from a deep corner of the unit. Charcoal can be sent for carbon-14 dating and give additional insight into the occupation period.
Photo 2: Volunteers Chris and Marian working away on two areas of Operation J.

A quick update, the team was rained out today. They hope to start finding artifacts this week.
Photo 1: SMU grad student Wesley flying his drone for some overhead images of our various excavation units

Items from the Nova Scotia Museum Collection
2021 marks the first year the Province of Nova Scotia officially recognizes Emancipation Day. Emancipation Day is marked throughout the Commonwealth as the anniversary of the abolition of slavery in the British Empire in 1834.
As most of us already know, the Bay of Fundy is home to the highest tides in the world, bringing in approximately 160 billion tons of water twice a day and exposing kilometers of muddy tidal flats. But have you ever wondered what could be living in these tidal flats?
By Carly Merriam

The Nova Scotia Museum is pleased to welcome you back to our sites!
- On June 15, 2021, Government announced that admission fees to all Nova Scotia Museum sites would be waived for the months of July and August, 2021.
- Free admission in July and August does not extend to enhanced visitor experiences, such as special tours or programming.

March 15 to 19, 2021
We are happy to welcome you back to the Nova Scotia Museum. We continue working to create a safe experience for you and our staff. Please note that public health guidelines will continue to be followed at our sites, wearing a non-medical mask is mandatory in our indoor spaces. Check out our “Know before you go” guides on each museum website to help prepare you for your visit.

Celebrated the third Monday in February, Nova Scotia Heritage Day is an annual reminder of our storied past and an opportunity to honour the remarkable people, places and events that have contributed to this province’s unique heritage.
Nova Scotia Heritage Day Honouree 2021 is Edward Francis Arab (1915-1944)

Yarmouth County Museum and Archives — no. 1993:67/4.235
Pages
