
"To see a world in a grain of sand"
William Blake: Auguries of Innocence
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SHALE PAGESLINKSSITE
Created: Dec. 3, 2000
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The Gabriola Historical and Museum Society publishes SHALE, which is edited by Nick Doe. This webpage contains an index of contributing authors, with links to the summaries of their articles.
Index of authorsAdams, AmandaAmanda came to Gabriola in the summer of 2002 to study the island's petroglyphs when she was collecting data for her thesis for her Master's degree in archaeology at UBC (awarded 2003). She currently lives in San Francisco. She is a former fashion model, was featured in Levi's 2005 national print campaign as an archaeologist, and in 2006 Greystone Books released her first book A Mermaid's Tale: a personal search for love and lore. Visions cast on stone-- a stylistic analysis of Gabriola's petroglyphs (Issue No.17)Barman, Dr. JeanJean is a well-known BC historian who teaches at UBC. She specializes in hitherto unacknowledged contributions of the "ordinary" people of BC to British Columbian society. She is the author of the books The West Beyond the West-- a History of British Columbia and Growing Up in British Columbia-- Boys in Private School, and is the co-author of Vancouver Past: Essays in SocialHistory and of Indian Education in Canada. Island Sanctuaries--early mixed-race settlement on Gabriola and nearby coastalislands (Issue No.2)LostNanaimo-- taking back our past (Issue No.8)Chisholm,Dr. BrianBrian teaches in the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at UBC and is also involved in archaeological research. Aboriginal burials on Gabriola Island (Issue No. 5,research note)Cryer, BerylBeryl Cryer was an amateur anthropologist who collected stories from First Nations people in the 1930s. She published them under the title "Indian Legends of Vancouver Island" in the Victoria paper of that time, The Daily Colonist. Last fight of the Cly-Altw (Issue No.4)Doe, NickNick is a Gabriolan who stares at rocks a lot and writes (usually) non-controversial papers on tides, obscure 18th century navigational techniques, and anything else that fascinates him. He is a retired engineer and the editor of SHALE. Additions and corrections to dates for archaeological sites around False Narrows (Issue No.21)Alcalá Galiano's sketchmaps of Gabriola (Issue No.1)Alignment and geometry of petroglyphs at DgRw-229 (Issue No.17)Alignment of the petroglyphs at sites DgRw-224 and -234 (Issue No.17)Alligatoring on the beach(Issue No.12)An ammonite for SHALE (Issue No.6, research note)Around the island in 1853 (Issue No.1)The art of voting scientifically (Issue No.4)A bigger, better ammonite for SHALE (Issue No.12, research note)Boat building at Silva Bay (Joseph Silva) (Issue No.22, research note)"Brown stuff" weathering and manganese in your drinking water (Issue No.14)Charting Gabriola—the survey of HMS Egeria, 1904 (Issue No.22)Context for Gabriola's archeology(Issue No.15)Curious nodules (Issue No.9)Dendrochronology (Issue No.8)Formation of Malaspina Galleries (Issue No.9)Gabriola's fractures--their origins (Issue No.20)Gabriola's greenhouse gases (Issue No. 5, research note)Gabriola's nose and tail (Issue No.22)Gabriola's shape--including some surmises (Issue No.20)Gabriola's submarine-fan formations(Issue No.7)Gabriola's trees-- a brief history (Issue No.2, with Paul Smith)Geology of Gabriola's roads(Issue No.9)George Vancounver visits Gabriola (Issue No.14)Great balls of stone-- concretions (Issue No.9)Groundwater budgets (Issue No.14)Groundwater notes (Issue No.11, with Norman Windecker)The Haida myth (Issue No. 2, Tall tales)Holes in sandstone at great heights (Issue No.22, research note)How Gabriola came to be (Issue No.7)Hul'qumi'num-- Gabriola's first language (Issue No.3)Inoceramus vancouverensis-- big clams (Issue No.4)It's about pointy rocks (Issue No.7)Just tell them it's Tafoni (Issue No.2, research notes)Malaspina Galleries-- what's in a name? (Issue No.8)Malcolm Lowry's stars (Issue No.22)A Most Unusual Petroglyph(Issue No.10)More About Runnels (Issue No.10)More Gabriola ammonite fossils (Issue No.22)More…groundwater notes (Issue No.18)Observations for the curious at sites DgRw193, 198 and 201 (Issue No.17)Observing the winter solstice at DgRw228 (Issue No.17)Old dogs (Issue No.3, research note)Orientation of fractures on Gabriola (Issue No.20)Origin of Gabriola's name (Issue No.13)Paleoastronomy at petroglyph site DgRw230 (Issue No.17)Petroglyphs and equinoxes (Issue No.14)Petroglyphs-- discovery and demise (editorial, Issue No.13)Petroglyph studies in the cemetery (Issue No.17)Review of books about the role of disease, particularly smallpox, in the history of the BC coast (Issue No.2)Review of books about treaty talks in BC and aboriginal self-government (Issue No.3)A Russian map of Gabriola-- 1849 (Issue No.3)Sandstone and shale-- Gabriola's origins (Issue No.1)The smoking economy (Gabriola tobacco exports) (Issue No.22, research note)So is this where the dinosaurs went? (Issue No.7, research note)Spheroidal weathering (Issue No.13)Stars in stone-- Ursa Major, Gemini and Orion petroglyphs at DgRw 230 (Issue No.18)Steinpilze-- rock mushrooms (Issue No.7)Stress on Gabriola (Issue No.20)Summer tides (Issue No.5, research note)Terra firma? GPS measurements around Gabriola (Issue No.20)The tabla of Toba Inlet (Issue No.11)Trace elements (Issue No.18, research note)Two tides a day? (Issue No.6)What Gabriola is made of (Issue No.7)What makes holes in sandstone (Issue No.9)Who named Saturna Island? (Issue No. 18)Why does a mirror reverse left-to-right but not up-to-down?—depicting asterisms (Issue No. 18, research note)Why does water in the sink drain away counter-clockwise--and why should we care? (Issue No.5, research note)Windy New Mexico(Issue No.22, research note)Winter tides (Issue No.10, research note)Earle, Dr. StevenSteve lives in Nanaimo and is Chair of the Department of Geology at Malaspina University-College. He maintains a general-interest earth science website with a Vancouver Island flavour.He also leads field trips which non-students are usually able to arrange to attend. The ups and downs of Gabriola's sea-level changes (Issue No.5)Geochemistry of Gabriola's groundwater (Issue No.7)Fafard, PhyllisPhyllis is a creative and knowledgeable gardener and an expert on Gabriola's wild flora, both indigenous and imported. Scotch broom--the golden gangster (Issue No.4)Gartshore, AnneAnne lives on De Courcy Island. The wild gardens of Ruxton Island (Issue No.5)Gehlbach, JenniJenni is a writer and editor who lives on Gabriola. Book review: "Passage to Juneau-- A Sea and its Meanings" by Jonathan Raban (Issue No.4)Gabriola's ambulance service-- the first 25 years, 1969-94 (Issue No.21)Gabriolans and the sandstone quarries (Issue No.19)Gabriola's dimension-stone quarry (Issue No.19)Gabriola's millstone quarry (Issue No.19)Gabriola's Industrial Past-- The Brickyard (Issue No.15)Gabriola's sandstone quarry-- the earliest days (Issue No.21)The origins of quarrying for sandstone on Gabriola (Issue No.19)Withey's Shipyard at Silva Bay (Issue No.22)Research notes: clarifying some mysteries remaining in Gabriola brickyard's history |
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