Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 44

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Side 44
SOPHIA PERDIKARIS, GEOROE HAMBRECHT AND RAMONA HARRISON major Stóraborg excavations in the early 1980’s and continuing to the present. In the late 1980’s he directed collaborative proj- ects in the West Fjords (Finnbogastaðir, Akurvík, Gjögur) and in the Northeast (Svalbarð), research which has been since taken further by his former doctoral stu- dents Dr. Ragnar Edvardsson (Icelandic State Heritage Agency) and Dr. Jim Woollett (University of Laval). Since 1997 he has worked closely with Icelandic and intemational teams work- ing in Mývatnssveit and Þingeyjarsveit in the long term “Landscapes of Settlement” project that has brought over a decade of sustained regional scale inter- disciplinary effort to bear on what has proven to be an exceptionally productive research area (some of whose results will be mentioned below). Since 1996 he has participated in a joint field school with the Archaeological Institute Iceland, the University of Oslo, CUNY, and the University of Aberdeen that began at Hofstaðir in Mývatn and has since shifted to Vatnsfjord in the West Fjords. In 2007- 10 McGovem served as principle investi- gator of the NABO International Polar Year program funded by US, Canadian, and Danish sources that conducted coor- dinated field projects in Shetland, Faroe islands, Iceland, and Greenland for three summers of intensive collaboration on a multi-island scale (reports available at www.nabohome.org). McGovern has taught at Hunter College of the City University of New York since 1979, and has been a full pro- fessor since 1987. Since 1979 he has also mn the very productive zooarchaeology /aboratory at Hunter, an International Council for Archaeozoology (ICAZ) rec- ognized center that since 1999 has collab- orated closely with the Brooklyn CUNY Zooarchaeology Laboratory directed by Perdikaris. Since 1993 he has served as coordinator for the archaeology program at the CUNY Doctoral Program in Anthropology. He has been married to Anne Osbome (now chair of the History Department of Rider University) since 1978 and both his children Dan and Eliza have participated in Icelandic and Barbudan archaeology projects (and Dan has also dug in Shetland and Greenland). The NABO Cooperative While McGovem has directed or assisted multiple field projects and laboratory analyses in the past three decades, his major contribution to North Atlantic scholarship and education has been in the creation and promotion of the interna- tional, interdisciplinary research cooper- ative NABO (North Atlantic Biocultural Organization, www.nabohome.org). This regional research cooperative was for- mally set up at an NSF supported work- shop in 1992 at Hunter College, but the idea was first fielded at a meeting at Bowdoin College in 1988 hosted by Gerry Bigelow and Susan Kaplan of the Peary-Macmillan Arctic Center (Bigelow 1991). “NABO” of course means “neigh- bor” in several Scandinavian languages, and the underlying idea behind the group has always been neighborly cooperation and pooling of resources to allow us to collectively accomplish ambitious large scale and long term projects beyond the capability of any single scholar, research team, or national research effort. Since 42
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Archaeologia Islandica

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