Difference between revisions of "Wilkes Owen"

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== Owen Wilkes 1940-2005 ==
 
== Owen Wilkes 1940-2005 ==
  
 
<html><a href="http://www.listener.co.nz/issue/3394/features/4074/owen_wilkes_.html"><img src="http://www.listener.co.nz/assets/resized/img/2005/i3394/Pic-OwenWilkes-0-369-0-300.jpg"> Picture from Listener obituary</a></html>
 
<html><a href="http://www.listener.co.nz/issue/3394/features/4074/owen_wilkes_.html"><img src="http://www.listener.co.nz/assets/resized/img/2005/i3394/Pic-OwenWilkes-0-369-0-300.jpg"> Picture from Listener obituary</a></html>
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Owen was born and raised in Christchurch and studied Geology at Canterbury University but did not complete the degree. He had a strong outdoor bent and it was through this that he took up an interest in archaoelogy. An early associate was [[Fomison Tony|Tony Fomison]]. In 1963 he joined [[Canterbury Museum]] as a field archaeologist. Excavations at Wairau Bar and Heaphy River resulted. At thois time and later he was filekeeper for the site recordign scheme for Canterbury, Nelson / Marlborough and Westland.
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He fell out with museum director Roger Duff in the course of archaeological work in the Cook Islands in 1964 and left the museum.
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Periods as a field researcher in entomology followed, as well as other field roles mostly outside archaeology but then a major shift to peace and environmental activisim. He was a formidable researcher often finding material that Governments thought they had kept secret.
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From 1995 onwards he returned
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'''[[Obituaries|Obituaries]]:'''
 
'''[[Obituaries|Obituaries]]:'''

Revision as of 22:59, 23 June 2008

Owen Wilkes 1940-2005

Picture from Listener obituary

Owen was born and raised in Christchurch and studied Geology at Canterbury University but did not complete the degree. He had a strong outdoor bent and it was through this that he took up an interest in archaoelogy. An early associate was Tony Fomison. In 1963 he joined Canterbury Museum as a field archaeologist. Excavations at Wairau Bar and Heaphy River resulted. At thois time and later he was filekeeper for the site recordign scheme for Canterbury, Nelson / Marlborough and Westland.

He fell out with museum director Roger Duff in the course of archaeological work in the Cook Islands in 1964 and left the museum.

Periods as a field researcher in entomology followed, as well as other field roles mostly outside archaeology but then a major shift to peace and environmental activisim. He was a formidable researcher often finding material that Governments thought they had kept secret.

From 1995 onwards he returned


Obituaries:

Ritchie, N. 2005 "Better To Go Now": Owen Wilkes 1940-2005. Archaeology in New Zealand 48(3):221-241.

Gordon Campbell 2005 Listener May 28-June 3 2005 Vol 198 No 3394. Online


Tributes:

http://www.converge.org.nz/pma/owentr.htm


Bibliography

1959 Wairau Bar. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter 3(l):3-4.

1960 Site survey ot west Nelson. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter 4(1):22-31.

1962 Notes from Canterbury. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter 5(2):110-111.

1964 Further work at South Bay. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter 1(3):129-132,128.

- and R J Scarlett

1964 Further Heaphy River excavations. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter 1(3):1128.

1967 Excavation of a moa-hunter site at the mouth of the Heaphy River. Records of the Canterbury Museum VIII (3): 177–208.

- and R J Scarlett and George Boraman 1963 New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter Two moa-hunter sites in north-west Nelson. 6(2):88-93.

- and G M Mason

1963 Dashing Rocks, Timaru: a preliminary note on excavations – site Slll/1.6 New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter (2):95-98.

1963 Tumbledown Bay - a Banks Peninsula moa-hunter site S94/30. New Zealand Archaeological Association Newsletter 6(2):98-100.