Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 43

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 43
THREE DECADES IN THE COLD AND WET: A CAREER IN NORTHERN ARCHAEOLOGY interdisciplinary collaboration possible. However, anniversaries and retrospec- tives are moments to recognize both teams and coaches and perhaps it is appropriate to now both honor and annoy McGovern while also focusing on the collective achievements of North Atlantic Archaeology and Paleoecology over the past three decades. McGovem eamed his BA at Columbia College in 1972 with a joint degree in Anthropology and Oriental Studies. He went on to graduate school at Columbia University, studying under Ralph and Rose Solecki, Shirley Gorenstein, and Bob Stigler, with early fieldwork in North American sites ranging from late Pleistocene to historic. He got his MA in 1973 from Columbia and an MPhil in 1975. He originally intended to do Paleolithic archaeology in SW Asia and worked with Andre Leroi-Gourhan and the Soleckis on Middle and Upper Paleolithic sites in France. He specialized in lithic analysis and leamed Farsi with hopes of joining projects in Iran. Geopolitics and an inspiring course in zooarchaeology taught by Dexter Perkins and Pat Daley combined to divert him to work in Britain and on animal bones. He participated in the major urban excava- tions at Winchester and York in the early 1970’s, and at York worked in James Rackham’s cutting edge zooarchaeology lab. Influenced by Ralph Solecki’s stories of arctic archaeology and a growing interest in both animal bones and the Middle Ages, and with the kind help of Ulrik and Jeppe Mohl, Knud Rosenlund, and Tove Hatting at the University Zoological Museum in Copenhagen, he began work on animal bone collections from Norse Greenland excavated by C.L. Vebaek in the 1940’-60’s. With help from Jorgen Meldgaard and Jens Rosing and doctoral support from the American Scandinavian Society Marshall Fund and the US National Science Foundation he was able to join the Danish-Greenlandic Inuit-Norse Project of 1976-77 and partic- ipate in the excavations of new stratified animal bone collections from the Westem Settlement. Together with the Vebaek materials, these new collections provided the basis for his doctoral thesis titled “The Paleoeconomy of Norse Greenland: Adaptation and Extinction in a Closely Bounded Ecosystem” (Columbia 1979). In 1977-80 he worked with fellow Columbia student Gerry Bigelow on Gerry’s doctor- al project at the medieval físhing farm at Sandwick South on Unst in Shetland. In 1981, 1982, and 1984 he was again work- ing in Greenland’s Westem Settlement, in 1984 leading the Sandnes Archaeological Rescue Project with Claus Andreasen and Jette Ameborg with support from US NSF, Denmark, and Greenland. In 1995 Tom also worked with Sophia Perdikaris, Christian Keller, Paul Buckland, Ian Simpson, and Reidar Bertelsen on her doctoral project in arctic Norway. Since 2008 McGovem has also participated in CUNY fieldwork led by Perdikaris in Barbuda in the West Indies, retuming to the prehistoric New World and the stone age as well as working on 18th-19th centu- ry sites with two of the current authors. While McGovem has done fieldwork in a range of periods and places, most of his field time has been spent in Iceland, beginning with collaborations on the 41
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