Allison Bain
Laval University
27 Papers
137 Citations
Allison Bain is an academic researcher from Laval University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Atlantic multidecadal oscillation & Effects of global warming. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 27 publications. Previous affiliations of Allison Bain include Buffalo State College.
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Papers
A seventeenth-century beetle fauna from colonial Boston
TL;DR: A rich, diverse assemblage of preserved Coleopteran (beetle) remains was analyzed from the Feature 4 Cross Street Back Lot site in Boston, Massachusetts as mentioned in this paper.
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Landscape Transformation During Ceramic Age and Colonial Occupations of Barbuda, West Indies
Allison Bain,Anne-Marie Faucher,Lisa M. Kennedy,Allison R. LeBlanc,Michael J. Burn,Rebecca Boger,Sophia Perdikaris +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors documented the history of landscape transformation on the island of Barbuda in the Lesser Antilles, Caribbean through cross-disciplinary research approaches and confirmed a h...
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Archaeoentomological and archaeoparasitological reconstructions at Îlot Hunt (CeEt-110) : new perspectives in historical archaeology (1850-1900)
Allison Bain
- 01 Jan 1999
TL;DR: A detailed study of the correlation between public and private health in 19th-century North America based on the analysis of a large number of samples from latrines in domestic and professional buildings in Ilot Hunt, Quebec is presented in this article.
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A sediment-based reconstruction of Caribbean effective precipitation during the Little Ice Age from Freshwater Pond, Barbuda
Michael J. Burn,Jonathan A. Holmes,Lisa M. Kennedy,Allison Bain,Jim D. Marshall,Sophia Perdikaris +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a high-resolution reconstruction of effective precipitation for Barbuda since the mid-16th century, based on biostratigraphic and stable isotope analyses of fossil ostracods and gastropods recovered from lake sediment cores from Freshwater Pond, the only freshwater lake on the island.
Asylum for Wayward Immigrants: Historic Ports and Colonial Settlements in Northeast North America
Allison Bain,Gary King +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the analysis of archaeologically recovered beetle remains suggests that many species may have journeyed across the Atlantic in ships' ballast, food stores, and other provisions.
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