Upcoming Events

Primary tabs

Saturday, August 10, 2024

All day
 
 
6am
 
 
7am
 
 
8am
 
 
9am
 
August 2024 Mud Crab Sampling

August 2024 Mud Crab Sampling

Look for mud crabs with the Chesapeake Bay Parasite Project!

Saturday, August 3, 2024 - 10:00am - 2:00pm Monday, August 5, 2024 - 10:00am - 1:00pm Tuesday, August 6, 2024 - 9:00am - 2:00pm Saturday, August 10, 2024 - 9:00am - 2:00pm Monday, August 12, 2024 - 9:30am - 2:00pm
Event Location
Multiple locations
Advance Registration Required
Yes

Event Details

Three people smiling and posing with an eel over a sampling container on a wooden dock against a backdrop of water.

Help us find mud crabs so that we can learn more about how an introduced parasite (Loxothylacus panopaei or Loxo for short) is affecting them. Loxo is a parasitic barnacle that takes over the nervous system of affected mud crabs and makes the crab care for the parasite and the parasite's larvae.

Loxo is native to the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean and was first discovered in Chesapeake Bay in 1964. The parasite is now common in the Bay, but its abundance and spread vary greatly from year to year. Scientists in SERC's Marine Invasions Lab have been tracking the abundance of Loxo from sites around Chesapeake Bay since 2003 (watch a short video that features the project’s scientists).

Where?

Edgewater, MD (SERC dock)

August 3rd, 5th, 10th, 14th

Broomes Island, MD

(Len's Marina)

August 12th

Oxford, MD

(NOAA Cooperative Oxford Laboratory)

August 6th

Please note that transportation to Oxford and Broomes Island will not be provided.

For those who register, you will receive additional details (including directions, what to wear, what to bring, and a safety overview) in an email two days before the event.

Time?

The sampling time varies by day depending on how many traps the team is planning on processing.

The end time varies and is the maximum time a session will last. We may end earlier depending weather conditions and on the number of crabs in the collectors.

Who can participate?

We welcome volunteers age 14+, although all volunteers under the age of 16 must be accompanied by a participating adult.

Volunteers younger than 14 may be accepted on a case-by-case basis. All volunteers (including accompanying adults) must be included in the sign up.

No prior experience is expected or required. The project researchers will provide training day-of and will be there to answer all your questions.

9:00am - 2:00pm
 
10am
 
 
11am
 
 
12pm
 
 
1pm
 
 
2pm
 
Histories Revealed: Archaeological Talks at the Woodlawn History Center

Histories Revealed: Archaeological Talks at the Woodlawn History Center

Join us for a series of free talks by the Archaeology Lab!

Saturday, August 10, 2024 - 2:00pm - 3:00pm Saturday, September 14, 2024 - 2:00pm - 3:00pm Saturday, October 5, 2024 - 2:00pm - 3:00pm Saturday, November 9, 2024 - 2:00pm - 3:00pm Saturday, December 7, 2024 - 2:00pm - 3:00pm
Event Location
Woodlawn History Center - Smithsonian Environmental Research Center
Advance Registration Required
Yes

Event Details

Join us for one or all free talks in this series! You'll learn from members in the Environmental Archaeology Lab and get the chance to peruse the exhibits at the Woodlawn History Center, the oldest building in the Smithsonian's collection still in its original location. 

  • July 13, Before the Chesapeake: Native American History - The Chesapeake Bay is the drowned channel and floodplain of the Susquehanna River, reaching its current configuration about 3,000 years ago. Join Jim Gibb, head of the Environmental Archaeology Lab, for an illustrated talk about Native American history based on archaeological evidence prior to the formation of the Chesapeake Bay. He'll even have some artifacts on hand to share with attendees! 
     
  • Aug. 10, Shell-button Making - Learn about the local, historical shell-button industry and what the Lab has learned so far from census records. 
     
  • Sept. 14, After the Chesapeake: Native American History - In July we covered Native American history on Maryland’s coastal plain before the Chesapeake Bay formed 3,000 years ago. In this talk, Jim Gibb, chief archaeologist at SERC, examines more recent Native American history in the region from 1,000 BCE to just before the arrival of European settlers. We’ll look at the kinds of artifacts they made—particularly pottery and stone tools—and the range of settlements they built in the coastal plain and piedmont provinces.
     
  • Oct. 5, Cemeteries in the Chesapeake Region - How we treat the remains of deceased family and friends says much about us and the society we have created. Patterns of burials in cemeteries and the means by which we mark graves reveals aspects of the past that may not be recoverable through more conventional forms of historical research. This illustrated presentation will provide examples of what the Environmental Archaeology Lab has learned through archaeological investigation of cemeteries throughout the region, from simple mapping and archival research of a 19th/20th-century Irish Catholic cemetery in Baltimore City, to analysis of excavated human remains from a 17th-century family cemetery in Calvert County.
     
  • Nov. 9, Maryland Smugglers in the 1650s - By law and by colonial charter, Maryland was supplied with English and Irish goods shipped in English and Irish ships manned by English and Irish crews. And yet, Italian and Dutch artifacts—particularly ceramics—appear on Maryland archaeological sites dating to the 1650s and 1660s, several appearing in the Woodlawn exhibit. In this illustrated talk, the head of the Environmental Archaeology Lab, Jim Gibb, will make a case for smuggling…smuggling made both possible and necessary by events in the British Isles.
     
  • Dec. 7 - Archaeological Discovery of the 1660s Jesuit Chapel and Priests’ House at Newtown - As part of its 350th anniversary commemoration of its founding, the Parish of St. Francis Xavier in Newtown, St. Mary’s County, commissioned an archaeological search for its 1660s chapel. The Environmental Archaeology Lab found it and vidence of a previously unsuspected house for the Jesuit fathers and lay brothers. The chapel contrasts with that found at St. Mary’s City and reconstructed by the Historic St. Mary’s City Commission. In this talk, the Lab will highlight how differences reveal aspects of religious intolerance and Catholic resistance in the County during the late 17th and early 18th centuries.

Learn more about the Woodlawn History Center

Directions to SERC

2:00pm - 3:00pm
 
3pm
 
 
4pm
 
 
5pm
 
 
6pm
 
 
7pm
 
 
8pm
 
 
9pm
 
 
10pm
 
 
11pm