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| Research interests |
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| My interests lie in understanding
early historic cultural changes in Native North American societies
and the motivations behind these changes. In my research I examine
change and continuity in Native American economic organization and
sociopolitical institutions during the initial decades following European
settlement in eastern North America. My current project investigates
the exploitation of white-tailed deer and the production and exchange
of deerskins by Native Americans in the southern Middle Atlantic and
Southeast. Merging two often distinct artifact categories, faunal
remains and nonlocal trade good assemblages, I explore how some Native
American groups altered their economic strategies in order to produce
deerskins for commercial trade and how, in certain instances, sociopolitical
systems were transformed in the process. |
Anth 441D:
Laboratory Analysis in Archaeology-Introduction to Zooarchaeology
Anth 484:
Internship-Curation of Archaeological Collections
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| Selected publications
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2006 Southeast
Animals. In Environment, Origins, and Population, edited
by D.H. Ubelaker, pp. 396-404. Handbook of North American Indians
Vol. 3. W.C. Sturtevant, general editor. Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D.C.
2005 Hunting for Hides:
Deerskins, Status, and Cultural Change in the Protohistoric Appalachians.
Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.
2004
“Their complement of deer-skins and furs”: Changing
patterns of white-tailed deer exploitation in the seventeenth-century
southern Chesapeake and Virginia hinterlands. In Indian and European
Contact in Context: The Mid-Atlantic Region, D.B. Blanton and J.A.
King (eds.), pp. 172-192. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.
2004
Zooarchaeological evidence for changing socioeconomic status within
early historic Native American communities in Mid-Atlantic North America.
In Behaviour Behind Bones: The Zooarchaeology of Ritual, Religion,
Status and Identity, S.J. O’Day, W. Van Neer, and A. Ervynck
(eds.), pp. 293-303. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
2003
Material culture of the Contact period in the upper Potomac Valley:
chronological and cultural implications (second author with R.D. Wall).
Archaeology of Eastern North America 31:149-175.
2002
Protohistoric
Monongahela trade relations: evidence from the Foley Farm phase glass
beads (first author with W.C. Johnson). Archaeology of Eastern North
America 30:97-120.
2000
More than "a few blew beads": The glass and stone beads from Jamestown
Rediscovery's 1994-1997 excavations. The Journal of the Jamestown
Rediscovery Center 1.
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