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{{Wikify|date=May 2009}} |
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'''Dr. Juliet Morrow''' is an archaeologist and Professor of [[Anthropology]] at [[Arkansas State University]] in [[Jonesboro, Arkansas]]. |
'''Dr. Juliet Morrow''' is an archaeologist and Professor of [[Anthropology]] at [[Arkansas State University]] in [[Jonesboro, Arkansas]]. |
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==Education== |
==Education== |
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==Biography== |
==Biography== |
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Dr. Morrow was born Juliet Elizabeth Remley in St. Louis, Missouri April |
Dr. Morrow was born Juliet Elizabeth Remley in St. Louis, Missouri April 5, 1962 to John and Joyce Remley. Her father worked as a computer programmer and her mother was a stay at home mom who later returned to college and became a nurse. As a child her family moved extensively across the Midwest and Eastern United States settling in Missouri, Illinois, New York, and New Jersey. Through the course of these travels she also had numerous adventurous excursions into the great outdoors due to her father’s great passion for the outdoors. By her own recollection by the age of fifteen her family had visited nearly every National Park in the United States and many in Canada as well. Because of these experiences she developed her own passion for the outdoors. As a teenager she attended several outdoor adventure programs such as outward bound and an excursion with NOLS the National Outdoor Leadership School. She also completed a scuba diving certification course and received a PADI open water diver certification. Because of these experiences, when she enrolled at Washington University she majored in Geology, however, upon meeting Dr. Patti Jo Watson she discovered a desire to also major in Anthropology and so began a life long pursuit of relics from the past. Dr. Morrow is currently serving as station archeologist for the North Eastern Arkansas Archaeological Survey and also teaches Archaeology and Cultural Anthropology at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro, Arkansas. |
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==Key Sites== |
==Key Sites== |
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'''Martens''' – this site, located near St. Louis, Missouri, in the Chesterfield municipality is a Clovis Culture site estimated to have been inhabited around 9550 BC. Dr. Morrow’s doctoral research included an analysis of the stone tools from this site and other Clovis sites. Her dissertation is about the organization of early Paleoindian technology in the Confluence of the Mississippi, Illinois and Missouri Rivers. |
'''Martens''' – this site, located near St. Louis, Missouri, in the Chesterfield municipality is a Clovis Culture site estimated to have been inhabited around 9550 BC. Dr. Morrow’s doctoral research included an analysis of the stone tools from this site and other Clovis sites. Her dissertation is about the organization of early Paleoindian technology in the Confluence of the Mississippi, Illinois and Missouri Rivers. |
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'''The Sigman site''' - Located in Mississippi County, AR, near Yarbro, this is a multi-component Mississippian village that was buried via a sand blow of the 1811-1812 New Madrid seismic event and then exposed by land-leveling in 1998. Native American wall trench houses at the site were excavated by Morrow and many volunteers in advance of Earthquake geologists digging a trench to search for the port of entry of the sand blow. |
'''The Sigman site''' - Located in Mississippi County, AR, near Yarbro, this is a multi-component Mississippian village that was buried via a sand blow of the 1811-1812 New Madrid seismic event and then exposed by land-leveling in 1998. Native American wall trench houses at the site were excavated by Morrow and many volunteers in advance of Earthquake geologists digging a trench to search for the port of entry of the sand blow. |
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'''The Jarrett site''' – this is a small Middle Mississippian village (Wilson Phase) in Randolph County, AR that Morrow and volunteers excavated in 2001-2002. |
'''The Jarrett site''' – this is a small Middle Mississippian village (Wilson Phase) in Randolph County, AR that Morrow and volunteers excavated in 2001-2002. |
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Kreb’s Place – this is a large Middle Mississippian (Wilson Phase) village in Craighead County, Arkansas that Morrow and volunteers excavated portions of in 2008 while the site was being land-leveled. |
Kreb’s Place – this is a large Middle Mississippian (Wilson Phase) village in Craighead County, Arkansas that Morrow and volunteers excavated portions of in 2008 while the site was being land-leveled. |
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==Influence and Legacy== |
==Influence and Legacy== |
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==Selected Publications== |
==Selected Publications== |
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*2009, Paleoindian period in the Northeast. Archaeology in America: An Encyclopedia edited by Franis P. McManamon. Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut. |
*2009, Paleoindian period in the Northeast. Archaeology in America: An Encyclopedia edited by Franis P. McManamon. Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut. |
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*2009, Paleoindian period in the Southeast. Archaeology in America: An Encyclopedia edited by Franis P. McManamon. Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut. Kimmswick, a Mastodon kill in Missouri. |
*2009, Paleoindian period in the Southeast. Archaeology in America: An Encyclopedia edited by Franis P. McManamon. Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut. Kimmswick, a Mastodon kill in Missouri. |
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*2009, Archaeology in America: An Encyclopedia edited by Franis P. McManamon. Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut. |
*2009, Archaeology in America: An Encyclopedia edited by Franis P. McManamon. Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut. |
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*2007,In the Wake of C. B. Moore: The Little Turkey Hill and Harter Knoll sites, Independence County, Arkansas. Field Notes 338:6-10. |
*2007,In the Wake of C. B. Moore: The Little Turkey Hill and Harter Knoll sites, Independence County, Arkansas. Field Notes 338:6-10. |
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*2007,The Paleoindian Period in Arkansas, between approximately 13,500 and 12,620 calendar years ago. Field Notes 331:3-9. |
*2007,The Paleoindian Period in Arkansas, between approximately 13,500 and 12,620 calendar years ago. Field Notes 331:3-9. |
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*2006,New Radiocarbon Dates for the Anzick Clovis Burial. In Paleoindian Archaeology, edited by J. E. Morrow and C.G. Gnecco. University Press of Florida, Gainesville. Co-authored with Stuart J. Fiedel. |
*2006,New Radiocarbon Dates for the Anzick Clovis Burial. In Paleoindian Archaeology, edited by J. E. Morrow and C.G. Gnecco. University Press of Florida, Gainesville. Co-authored with Stuart J. Fiedel. |
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*2005, The Myth of Clovis, Part One: East vs. West. Central States Archaeological Journal 52(1):51-54. |
*2005, The Myth of Clovis, Part One: East vs. West. Central States Archaeological Journal 52(1):51-54. |
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*2005, The Myth of Clovis, Part Two: The Evolution of Paleoindian Projectile Point Styles. Central States Archaeological Journal 52 (2):79-82. |
*2005, The Myth of Clovis, Part Two: The Evolution of Paleoindian Projectile Point Styles. Central States Archaeological Journal 52 (2):79-82. |
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*2005, Gainey phase tools from the Taylor No. 2 site (11EF129), Effingham County, Illinois. Co-authored with Brad Koldehoff. Current Research in the Pleistocene 22:57-60. |
*2005, Gainey phase tools from the Taylor No. 2 site (11EF129), Effingham County, Illinois. Co-authored with Brad Koldehoff. Current Research in the Pleistocene 22:57-60. |
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*2005, Neutron Activation Analysis of Late Mississippian Period Pottery from the Greenbrier Site (3IN1), Independence County, Arkansas. Co-authored with R. A. Taylor, R. J. Speakman,, and M. D. Glascock. Arkansas Archeologist 44:1-19. |
*2005, Neutron Activation Analysis of Late Mississippian Period Pottery from the Greenbrier Site (3IN1), Independence County, Arkansas. Co-authored with R. A. Taylor, R. J. Speakman,, and M. D. Glascock. Arkansas Archeologist 44:1-19. |
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*2004, The Sacred Spiro Landscape, Cahokia Connections, and Flat Top Mounds. Central States Archaeological Journal 51(2):112-114. |
*2004, The Sacred Spiro Landscape, Cahokia Connections, and Flat Top Mounds. Central States Archaeological Journal 51(2):112-114. |
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*2003, Ongoing Research and Laboratory Analyses of Materials Recovered from the Greenbrier Site, 3IN1. Field Notes Bulletin of the Arkansas Archeological Society 309:3-6. |
*2003, Ongoing Research and Laboratory Analyses of Materials Recovered from the Greenbrier Site, 3IN1. Field Notes Bulletin of the Arkansas Archeological Society 309:3-6. |
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*2002, Exploring the Clovis-Gainey-Folsom Continuum. In Folsom Technology and Lifeways, edited by John E. Clark and Michael B. Collins, pp. |
*2002, Exploring the Clovis-Gainey-Folsom Continuum. In Folsom Technology and Lifeways, edited by John E. Clark and Michael B. Collins, pp. 140–157. Lithic Technology Special Publication No. 4. Co-authored with T. A. Morrow. |
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*2002, Rummells-Maske Revisited: A Fluted Point Cache from East Central Iowa. Plains Anthropologist 47(183):307-321. Co-authored with T. A. Morrow. |
*2002, Rummells-Maske Revisited: A Fluted Point Cache from East Central Iowa. Plains Anthropologist 47(183):307-321. Co-authored with T. A. Morrow. |
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*2001, The Utility of Clovis Blades for Skinning and Butchering Large Game. Field Notes Bulletin of the Arkansas Archeological Society 302:3-5. |
*2001, The Utility of Clovis Blades for Skinning and Butchering Large Game. Field Notes Bulletin of the Arkansas Archeological Society 302:3-5. |
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*2001, Notes on Ice Age Blades and Blade Technology. Field Notes Bulletin of the Arkansas Archeological Society 303:3-5. |
*2001, Notes on Ice Age Blades and Blade Technology. Field Notes Bulletin of the Arkansas Archeological Society 303:3-5. |
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*2000, Use-wear Analysis of Clovis Tools from the Martens Site. Current Research in the Pleistocene 17:101-103. Co-authored with S. Ahler and T. A. Morrow. |
*2000, Use-wear Analysis of Clovis Tools from the Martens Site. Current Research in the Pleistocene 17:101-103. Co-authored with S. Ahler and T. A. Morrow. |
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*1999, Geographic Variation in Fluted Projectile Points: A Hemispheric Perspective. American Antiquity 64(2):215-230. Co-authored with T. A. Morrow. |
*1999, Geographic Variation in Fluted Projectile Points: A Hemispheric Perspective. American Antiquity 64(2):215-230. Co-authored with T. A. Morrow. |
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*1998, 1997 Excavations at the Martens Site. Current Research in the Pleistocene 15:45-47. |
*1998, 1997 Excavations at the Martens Site. Current Research in the Pleistocene 15:45-47. |
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*1997, End Scraper Morphology and Use-Life: An Approach for Studying Paleoindian Technology and Mobility. Lithic Technology 22(1):70-85. |
*1997, End Scraper Morphology and Use-Life: An Approach for Studying Paleoindian Technology and Mobility. Lithic Technology 22(1):70-85. |
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*1995, Fluted Point Manufacture: A Perspective from the Ready Lincoln Hills Site, 11Jy46, Jersey County, Illinois. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 20(2):167-191. |
*1995, Fluted Point Manufacture: A Perspective from the Ready Lincoln Hills Site, 11Jy46, Jersey County, Illinois. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 20(2):167-191. |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*[http://www.uark.edu/campus-resources/archinfo/ Arkansas Archaeological Survey] |
*[http://www.uark.edu/campus-resources/archinfo/ Arkansas Archaeological Survey] |
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*[http://www.asun.edu Arkansas State University] |
*[http://www.asun.edu Arkansas State University] |
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*[http://www.wustl.edu/ Washington University] |
*[http://www.wustl.edu/ Washington University] |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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[[Clovis Culture]] |
[[Clovis Culture]] |
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{{US-academic-stub}} |
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{{archaeologist-stub}} |
Revision as of 11:18, 14 May 2009
Dr. Juliet Morrow is an archaeologist and Professor of Anthropology at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro, Arkansas.
Education
Washington University, 1987. BA in Geology Washington University, 1987. BA in Anthropology Washington University, 1990. Masters in Anthropology Washington University, 1996 Doctorate in Anthropology
Biography
Dr. Morrow was born Juliet Elizabeth Remley in St. Louis, Missouri April 5, 1962 to John and Joyce Remley. Her father worked as a computer programmer and her mother was a stay at home mom who later returned to college and became a nurse. As a child her family moved extensively across the Midwest and Eastern United States settling in Missouri, Illinois, New York, and New Jersey. Through the course of these travels she also had numerous adventurous excursions into the great outdoors due to her father’s great passion for the outdoors. By her own recollection by the age of fifteen her family had visited nearly every National Park in the United States and many in Canada as well. Because of these experiences she developed her own passion for the outdoors. As a teenager she attended several outdoor adventure programs such as outward bound and an excursion with NOLS the National Outdoor Leadership School. She also completed a scuba diving certification course and received a PADI open water diver certification. Because of these experiences, when she enrolled at Washington University she majored in Geology, however, upon meeting Dr. Patti Jo Watson she discovered a desire to also major in Anthropology and so began a life long pursuit of relics from the past. Dr. Morrow is currently serving as station archeologist for the North Eastern Arkansas Archaeological Survey and also teaches Archaeology and Cultural Anthropology at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro, Arkansas.
Key Sites
Martens – this site, located near St. Louis, Missouri, in the Chesterfield municipality is a Clovis Culture site estimated to have been inhabited around 9550 BC. Dr. Morrow’s doctoral research included an analysis of the stone tools from this site and other Clovis sites. Her dissertation is about the organization of early Paleoindian technology in the Confluence of the Mississippi, Illinois and Missouri Rivers.
The Sigman site - Located in Mississippi County, AR, near Yarbro, this is a multi-component Mississippian village that was buried via a sand blow of the 1811-1812 New Madrid seismic event and then exposed by land-leveling in 1998. Native American wall trench houses at the site were excavated by Morrow and many volunteers in advance of Earthquake geologists digging a trench to search for the port of entry of the sand blow. Buffalo Head Slough – this small village site is adjacent to the Sloan Dalton site and was completely excavated within the area that was land-leveled in the fall of 1997. Five months of excavation produced evidence of two separate occupations. Radiocarbon dates suggest the occupations date to the Early Mississippian, A.D. 800, and the Middle Mississippian, A.D. 1275 (Wilson Phase). Funding from the Arkansas Natural and Cultural Resource Council was obtained for radiocarbon dates.
Greenbrier - located in Independence County, Arkansas, is a large late Mississippian village, circa A.D. 1400-1600, that was possibly visited by the De Soto entrada . It was excavated in 1999 and 2000 as part of the Arkasnas Archeological Society Training Program. The King Mastodon – this is Late Pleistocene rim swamp deposit located in Craighead County Arkansas that was excavated in 1999 with funding from the National Geographic Society based on the possibility of associated cultural remains. Archaeological excavations produced remains of a 30-year-old mastodon, extinct peccary and numerous extant faunal specimens. Radiocarbon-dates of the Mastodon indicate that it died approximately 14,000 years ago.
Atlatl Knoll – This is a Late Archaic cemetery excavated in 1999 by Morrow with help from the Natural Resource Conservation Service. The site is interpreted as a family cemetery dating to 3,700 B.C. based on the inclusion of a Karnak projectile point/knife in a female burial. Also with this burial was a Canid canine tooth necklace and all of the components to manufacture an atlatl.
The Jarrett site – this is a small Middle Mississippian village (Wilson Phase) in Randolph County, AR that Morrow and volunteers excavated in 2001-2002. Kreb’s Place – this is a large Middle Mississippian (Wilson Phase) village in Craighead County, Arkansas that Morrow and volunteers excavated portions of in 2008 while the site was being land-leveled.
Influence and Legacy
Dr. Morrow’s contributions to the archaeological community would include: 1998- Founding the Central Mississippi Valley Archaeological Society
Selected Publications
- 2009, Paleoindian period in the Northeast. Archaeology in America: An Encyclopedia edited by Franis P. McManamon. Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut.
- 2009, Paleoindian period in the Southeast. Archaeology in America: An Encyclopedia edited by Franis P. McManamon. Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut. Kimmswick, a Mastodon kill in Missouri.
- 2009, Archaeology in America: An Encyclopedia edited by Franis P. McManamon. Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut.
- 2007,In the Wake of C. B. Moore: The Little Turkey Hill and Harter Knoll sites, Independence County, Arkansas. Field Notes 338:6-10.
- 2007,The Paleoindian Period in Arkansas, between approximately 13,500 and 12,620 calendar years ago. Field Notes 331:3-9.
- 2006,New Radiocarbon Dates for the Anzick Clovis Burial. In Paleoindian Archaeology, edited by J. E. Morrow and C.G. Gnecco. University Press of Florida, Gainesville. Co-authored with Stuart J. Fiedel.
- 2005, The Myth of Clovis, Part One: East vs. West. Central States Archaeological Journal 52(1):51-54.
- 2005, The Myth of Clovis, Part Two: The Evolution of Paleoindian Projectile Point Styles. Central States Archaeological Journal 52 (2):79-82.
- 2005, Gainey phase tools from the Taylor No. 2 site (11EF129), Effingham County, Illinois. Co-authored with Brad Koldehoff. Current Research in the Pleistocene 22:57-60.
- 2005, Neutron Activation Analysis of Late Mississippian Period Pottery from the Greenbrier Site (3IN1), Independence County, Arkansas. Co-authored with R. A. Taylor, R. J. Speakman,, and M. D. Glascock. Arkansas Archeologist 44:1-19.
- 2004, The Sacred Spiro Landscape, Cahokia Connections, and Flat Top Mounds. Central States Archaeological Journal 51(2):112-114.
- 2003, Ongoing Research and Laboratory Analyses of Materials Recovered from the Greenbrier Site, 3IN1. Field Notes Bulletin of the Arkansas Archeological Society 309:3-6.
- 2002, Exploring the Clovis-Gainey-Folsom Continuum. In Folsom Technology and Lifeways, edited by John E. Clark and Michael B. Collins, pp. 140–157. Lithic Technology Special Publication No. 4. Co-authored with T. A. Morrow.
- 2002, Rummells-Maske Revisited: A Fluted Point Cache from East Central Iowa. Plains Anthropologist 47(183):307-321. Co-authored with T. A. Morrow.
- 2001, The Utility of Clovis Blades for Skinning and Butchering Large Game. Field Notes Bulletin of the Arkansas Archeological Society 302:3-5.
- 2001, Notes on Ice Age Blades and Blade Technology. Field Notes Bulletin of the Arkansas Archeological Society 303:3-5.
- 2000, Use-wear Analysis of Clovis Tools from the Martens Site. Current Research in the Pleistocene 17:101-103. Co-authored with S. Ahler and T. A. Morrow.
- 1999, Geographic Variation in Fluted Projectile Points: A Hemispheric Perspective. American Antiquity 64(2):215-230. Co-authored with T. A. Morrow.
- 1998, 1997 Excavations at the Martens Site. Current Research in the Pleistocene 15:45-47.
- 1997, End Scraper Morphology and Use-Life: An Approach for Studying Paleoindian Technology and Mobility. Lithic Technology 22(1):70-85.
- 1995, Fluted Point Manufacture: A Perspective from the Ready Lincoln Hills Site, 11Jy46, Jersey County, Illinois. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 20(2):167-191.
References
External links
- Arkansas Archaeological Survey
- Arkansas State University
- Washington University
- Dr. Morrow’s Site
- National Outdoor Leadership School
- Outward Bound