Quebec couple killed in a lisbon funicular crash remember the archaeological heritage

Tributes flow to André Shepherd and his wife Blandine Pretend to be Their contributions to the archeology of the following Quebec The death of the couple in this week’s funicular accident in Lisbon.
The pair worked in the laboratory of archeology and ethnology of the Quebec Conservation Center in Quebec.
A founding member of the laboratory, Bergeron, had worked at the conservation center for his entire career, extending over four decades, while Daux, a French citizen with a permanent residence in Canada, has been there since 2001.
“They got married for 20 years (and) my brother retired and it was his birthday gift to go to Portugal,” said Eric Bergeron, who is currently in Lisbon with the couple’s two girls.
“Of course, they are devastated,” he said.
Bergeron and Daux were part of 16 people killed when a popular funicular derailed on Wednesday. 21 others were injured in the incident.
In an article on Facebook, the Quebec Association of Archaeologists said that Bergeron and Daux were well known and close to the community, highlighting their contribution to Vade Mecum in Quebec – a consultation guide – on archeology and catering.
“All archaeologists know the Vade Mecum they have written,” wrote the association. “André was the conservative to whom each archaeologist thought when a question arose on a sensitive field sample. How many times have we said or heard:” You should call André “?”
Eric Bergeron describes the conservation center where they worked as “one of the best kept secrets in the country” – and his brother as his idol.
“”They found wrecks of ships from the 1600s where he even worked on the Roman galithe at British Museum at the start of his career. He was therefore an expert in this area. He loved it was a passion for him, “he said.
Eric Bergeron says he learned the accident to the news and immediately worried the security of his brother André Bergeron and the wife of André, Blandine Daux, who visited Portugal to celebrate André’s 70th anniversary.
In 2016, Bergeron won the Ruggles prize, which recognized an exceptional contribution in the field of conservation in Canada.
Daux, for his part, was a restoration expert working with heritage objects, according to her LinkedIn. Before moving to Canada, she worked at French National Institute for preventive Archaeological Research (INRAP).
Quebec Civilization Museum In the capital of the province, said it often worked with the couple.
“Passionate about their work, they had an unconditional love of heritage and took his preservation to heart,” he wrote in an article on Facebook.
The investigation into the cause of the funicular accident is led by the Portuguese authorities and is underway.
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