About the Center | |||
About the Center
History of the Center (top)The Center began as the Center for the Study of Early Man Dr. Bonnichsen not only had the vision to establish the Center, but took it to the heights of many accomplishments. Dr. Bonnichsen convened several conferences that set influential directions in the field including the 1989 First World Summit Conference at the University of Maine, and the 1999 international peopling of the Americas conference called “Clovis and Beyond” in Santa Fe. Dr. Bonnichsen founded the Center’s quarterly news magazine, the Mammoth Trumpet, and the Center's annual journal, Current Research in the Pleistocene. Dr. Bonnichsen also published 14 Center books. Also during this time, he was pursuing his own pioneering research and standing up for science in the Kennewick Man case. Professor Bonnichsen was known nationally and internationally for his interdisciplinary research projects, for overview syntheses of the field, and as a spokesperson for First American studies. Facilities (top)
Center Staff (top)
Center Director Dr. Michael Waters is the Director of the Center and Executive Director of the North Star Archaeological Research Program. He is known for his expertise in First American studies and geoarchaeology. Waters has worked on more than fifty archaeological field projects in the United States, Russia, Jamaica, and Yemen. His current research projects include the Gault Clovis site, Texas; Topper site, South Carolina; Gila River Indian Reservation, Arizona; Hueyatlaco site, Mexico; and Mud Lake Mammoth site, Wisconsin. He has authored or co-authored numerous journal articles and book chapters and is the author of Principles of Geoarchaeology: A North American Perspective. Waters received the 2003 Kirk Bryan Award and the 2004 Rip Rapp Archaeological Geology Award given by the Geological Society of America. ( Vita ) Phone: 979-845-4046
Center Associate Director Dr. Ted Goebel is the Associate Director of the Center. He is known for his expertise in First American studies and lithic analysis. Goebel has worked on many early sites in Russia and the United States. He is currently excavating at Bonneville Estates Rockshelter, Nevada, and he is planning future research in the Great Basin, Alaska, and Siberia. Dr. Goebel has authored or co-authored numerous journal articles and book chapters dealing with the peopling of the Americas. ( Vita ) Phone: 979-845-4046
Center Office Manager Ms. Laurie Lind, a Texas native, is the office manager for the Center for the Study of the First Americans. Her background in office and personnel management includes experience in the academic, federal government, and private sectors.
Phone: 979-845-4046
Center Editors
Editor of the Mammoth Trumpet Jim and Char Chandler, who together are C&C Wordsmiths, are free-lance desktop publishers and typesetters who have been preparing Mammoth Trumpet for press since August 1990. They have done the pre-press work for every issue of Current Research in the Pleistocene since 1992 and occasionally for other Center publications over the years. Jim has also been the editor of Mammoth Trumpet since December 1990. Email: wordsmiths@mc.net
Editor of the Current Research in the Pleistocene Dr. Ted Goebel is the editor of Current Research in the Pleistocene. He has been the editor since 2003.
Location and Contact Information (top)The Center is located on the second floor of the Anthropology Building. (Link to map) Mailing address is: Center for the Study of the First Americans
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