非常抱歉,
你要访问的页面不存在,
非常抱歉,
你要访问的页面不存在,
非常抱歉,
你要访问的页面不存在,
验证码:
职称:Assistant Professor
所属学校:Boston University
所属院系:College of Arts & Sciences
所属专业:Archeology
联系方式:(617) 353-2357
As an environmental archaeologist, John M. Marston studies the long-term sustainability of agriculture and land use, especially in the Mediterranean and western Asia. His research focuses on how people make decisions about land use within changing economic, social, and environmental settings, and how those decisions affect the environment at local and regional scales. A specialist in paleoethnobotany, the study of archaeological plant remains, Marston’s contributions to the field include novel ways of linking ecological theory with archaeological methods to reconstruct agricultural and land-use strategies from plant and animal remains. Recent interdisciplinary collaborations focus on comparative study of cultural adaptation to environmental and climate change in the past and present. His current field projects include work at three urban centers in Turkey (the Bronze Age site of Kaymakçı, the Iron Age site of Kerkenes, and the Bronze Age-Medieval site of Gordion) and one in Israel (the Bronze Age-Medieval site of Ashkelon). Marston’s recent research has been funded by the US National Science Foundation, Council of American Overseas Research Centers, American Philosophical Society, and Boston University.
Boston University , 2012-present Assistant Professor, Department of Archaeology, 2012-present Secondary Appointment, Department of Anthropology, 2012-present Peter T. Paul Career Development Professor, 2013-2016 Brown University , 2010-2012 Adjunct Instructor, Department of Anthropology, Spring 2012 Postdoctoral Fellow, Environmental Change Initiative & Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology, Fall 2011 Postdoctoral Fellow, Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World, 2010-2011 University of Massachusetts, Boston , 2012 Adjunct Instructor, Department of Anthropology, Spring 2012 University of California, Los Angeles , 2009 Adjunct Instructor, Department of Classics, Summer 2009