Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Qupperneq 46

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2010, Qupperneq 46
SOPHIA PERDIKARIS, GEORGE HAMBRECHT AND RAMONA HARRISON McGovem 1980; McGovem, Perdikaris, and Tinsley 2001; Krivogorskaya, Perdikaris, and McGovem; McGovem et al. 1988; Amorosi et al. 1996; McGovem 1981). Perhaps ironically, the greatest achievement of the NABO zooarchaeo- logical effort in the North Atlantic may have been to fully submerge zooarchae- ology into the broader goals of large multi-disciplinary teams involving histo- rians, archaeobotanists, geoarchaeolo- gists, geographers, ethnographers, modelers and data management experts as well as “normal” archaeologists. By conducting multi-year multi-investigator projects with a sustained focus on change through time in a common research area (Carole Crumley’s “Longitudinal Strategy” 1994), NABO teams have reg- ularly achieved fully interdisciplinary interactive collaboration on common large scale research problems rather than the more common multi-disciplinary par- allel-play collaboration that tends to pro- duce monographs with non-interacting chapters, scattered results, and no com- mon focus. Tom McGovem’s vision has been at the center of this effort. Through sheer force of good will, boundless ener- gy and an unwillingness to work alone Tom has helped create long-term collab- orative networks, that cross cut not only nationality (it is comparatively easy to get archaeologists or palynologists to see common ground whatever their native language) but the more difficult discipli- nary barriers (especially between the hard sciences and humanities). Like all good research, this approach has often produced more questions than answers. Rather than being finite and deterministic about research results, members of this initiative are open to discussion, critical questioning of results and are aware of the limitations and the potentials of their data. This flexibility allows for revisiting issues, sites, problems, data, analysis, questioning results, and driving the research towards improved interpretations. Probably the most obvious sign of this reflexively interdisciplinary and collabo- rative approach is that NABO papers and articles almost never have only one author. They are always written by the full team that produced the data, invari- ably including graduate students and jun- ior scholars in lead positions. Possibly the best example of this in print is a recent American Anthropologist NABO article in a solicited group of papers on the archaeology of global change, which had an author list of 18 scholars (McGovem et al. 2007). This article went on to win the American Anthropological Association’s prestigious Gordon R. Willey Award in 2010 for best interdisci- plinary archaeological publication in the past three years. Human Ecodynamics in Mývatnssveit: Some Surprises Sustained longitudinal projects and dedi- cation to long-term regional analysis that can produce full cross disciplinary inter- action have become a characteristic NABO approach in many islands and regions, but nowhere has this approach been more sustained than in Mývatnssveit in North Iceland. Here a series of interconnected projects have provided some surprising new perspec- tives on long term human-environment 44
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Archaeologia Islandica

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