J. G. Crock C.V. 1 JOHN GORDON CROCK, PH.D. University of Vermont Consulting Archaeology Program Delehanty Hall, Room 111 180 Colchester Ave. Burlington, Vermont 05405 (802) 656-4310 [email protected] EDUCATION: 2000 Ph.D. in Anthropology, University of Pittsburgh 1989 B.A. University of Vermont RESEARCH INTERESTS: Archaeology of New England and northeastern North America; Archaeology and ethnohistory of the Caribbean Region; World Heritage; Cultural Resource Management; Trade and exchange; Maritime adaptations; Development of inequality; Human colonization of islands; Lithic analysis ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS: 2011-present Associate Professor, University of Vermont Department of Anthropology. 2005-2011 Assistant Professor, University of Vermont Department of Anthropology. Courses include Introduction to Prehistoric Archaeology; Indians of the Northeast: Vermont; Peoples and Cultures of the Caribbean; Field Work in Archaeology; Archaeological Laboratory Methods. 2000-2005 Research Assistant Professor, University of Vermont Department of Anthropology 1999; 1997 Teaching Assistant, University of Vermont Field Work in Archaeology, Anguilla B.W.I. •Testing and excavation at the Shoal Bay site 1999; 1996 Teaching Assistant, University of Pittsburgh Cultures of the Pacific; Introduction to Archaeology •Prehistoric colonization; ethnography; contemporary issues 1998 Fall Instructor, University of Pittsburgh Introduction to Archaeology •Archaeological method and theory; survey of world prehistory CULTURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT: 2000-present Director Consulting Archaeology Program, Department of Anthropology, University of Vermont. Principal investigator and chief administrator for more than 600 grants and contracts. 1999 Principal Investigator Phase IB Archaeological Survey of the Proposed Beef Island Airport Expansion Project, Tortola, British Virgin Islands. VGS010453 J. G. Crock C.V. 2 1998 Fall Project Facilitator, Dept. of Anthropology, University of Pittsburgh Closing of the Center for Cultural Resource Research (CCRR), the University’s Cultural Resource Management Program. 1995-1998 Principal Investigator, Dissertation Field Work in Archaeology, Anguilla, B.W.I. “Elite Control and Chiefdom Development in the Eastern Caribbean.” James B. Richardson III, Co-PI and Dissertation Advisor. 1996 Principal Investigator, Phase II testing and Phase III mitigation of the Barnes Bay site, a late prehistoric village in Anguilla, B.W.I., for the proposed Cocoloba Hotel/Meta-Resort expansion project. 1992-1993 Project Director, University of Maine at Farmington Archaeology Research Center (UMF ARC) Anguilla Archaeology Project, Anguilla, B.W.I. Funded by a grant from the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). 1990-1993 Research Supervisor, UMF ARC, Supervised twenty-three phase I reconnaissance survey and phase II testing projects in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont. 1990-1991 Lithic Analyst Co-directed attribute and quantitative analysis of the lithic assemblage from the Trants site, Montserrat, West Indies. 1990 Volunteer Archaeological Testing of the Trants Site, Montserrat, West Indies. Carnegie Museum of Natural History and UMF ARC. 1989-1990 Assistant Research Supervisor, UMF ARC, Assisted in the supervision of eleven phase I reconnaissance survey, phase II testing and phase III mitigation projects in Maine and Vermont. 1988 Summer Field Assistant, UMF ARC, Participated in three phase I reconnaissance survey and phase II testing projects in Maine and New Hampshire. 1987 Summer Laboratory Research Assistant, University of Vermont. Student Field Work in Archaeology, Department of Anthropology, University of Vermont. Archaeological mitigation for the Highgate Falls Hydroelectric Project, Highgate, Vermont. NON-CONSULTING ARCHAEOLOGY PROGRAM GRANT ACTIVITY 2011 REU Site: Human and Environmental Dynamics in Champlain Valley Archaeology. Scott Van Keuren and John G. Crock. National Science Foundation, $274,535.00. Recommended but not awarded. To be revised and resubmitted. 2011 John G. Crock Exploring 9,000 Years of Human History at Chimney Point. Lake Champlain Basin Program, Vermont, $9,973.00. 2010 REU Site: Human and Environmental Dynamics in Champlain Valley Archaeology. Scott Van Keuren and John G. Crock. National Science Foundation, $282,678. Not awarded. To be revised and resubmitted. 2009 John G. Crock Establishing a Pre-Columbian Fishery Baseline on Anguilla: Impacts on Marine Resources and Implications for Management. Marine Conservation Biology Institute Tegner Award, $9,751.00. VGS010454 J. G. Crock C.V. 3 2006 John G. Crock Archaeological Resources Assessment for St. Anne’s Shrine and Fort St. Anne, Isle La Motte. Lake Champlain Basin Program, Vermont, $4,900.00 2006 John G. Crock and Mara Saule Studying the Feasibility of Placing a Vermont Archaeology Heritage Center in the Billings Center at the University of Vermont. William T. Hillman Foundation, $25,000.00. REFEREED PUBLICATIONS (staff and student collaborators in bold): 2012 Maritime Mountaineers: Paleoindian Settlement Patterns on the West Coast of New England. John G. Crock and Francis W. Robinson, IV. In Late Pleistocene Archaeology and Ecology in the Far Northeast, edited by Claude Chapdelaine, pp. 43-76. Texas A&M University Press. 2012 A Pre-Columbian Fisheries Baseline from the Caribbean. Nanny Carder and John G. Crock. Journal of Archaeological Science. 39(10):3115-3124. 2011 Diet and Rank in a Caribbean Maritime Society. John G. Crock and Nanny Carder. Latin American Antiquity 22(4):1-22. 2009 Jackson-Gore: An Early-Paleoamerican Occupation in the Green Mountains of Vermont. John G. Crock and Francis Robinson, IV. Current Research in the Pleistocene 26:40-42. 2008 Collapse among Amerindian Complex Societies in Amazonia and the Insular Caribbean: Endogenous and/or Exogenous Factors? James B. Petersen†, Michael Heckenberger, Eduardo Goes Neves, John G. Crock, and Robert N. Bartone In Global Perspectives on the Collapse of Complex Systems edited by R.M. Reycraft and J.A. Railey, pp. 129-146. University of New Mexico Press. 2008 Preliminary Interpretations of Ceramic Compositional Analysis from Late Ceramic Age Sites in Anguilla and the Salt River Site in St. Croix John G. Crock, Birgit F..Morse, James B. Petersen†, Christophe Descantes, and Michael D. Glascock. Journal of Caribbean Archaeology. Special publication #2, pp 45-55. 2007 Fish Populations and Communities during the Late Post-Saladoid (AD 600/800-1500) on Anguilla, Northern Lesser Antilles. Nanny Carder, Elizabeth Reitz and John G. Crock. Journal of Archaeological Science 34(4):588-599. 2007 “Handsome Death:” The Taking, Veneration, and Consumption of Human Remains in the Insular Caribbean and Greater Amazonia. James B. Petersen† and John G. Crock. In The Taking and Displaying of Human Trophies, edited by R. Chacon and D. Dye, pp. 547-574. Springer Press, New York. 2004 Inter-island Exchange, Settlement Hierarchy and a Taíno-Related Chiefdom on the Anguilla Bank, Northern Lesser Antilles. John G. Crock and James B. Petersen. In Late Ceramic Age Societies in the Eastern Caribbean, pp. 139-156, edited by André Delpuech and Corinne L. Hofman. BAR VGS010455 J. G. Crock C.V. 4 International Series, Paris Monographs in American Archaeology. Archaeopress, Oxford, 14. 2003 St. Lawrence Iroquoians in Northern New England: Pendergast was "Right" and More. James B. Petersen, John G. Crock, Ellen R. Cowie, Richard Boisvert, Joshua Toney, and Geoffrey Mandel. In A Passion for the Past: Papers in Honour of James F. Pendergast, edited by James V. Wright and Jean-Luc Pilon, pp. 107-153. Archaeological Survey of Canada Mercury Series Paper 164. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Gatineau. 1998 Archaeology of Trants, Montserrat. Part 4. Flaked Stone and Stone Bead Industries. John G. Crock and Robert N. Bartone. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 67(3):197-224. 1993 Scalloping for Artifacts: A Biface and Plummet from Eastern Blue Hill Bay, Maine. John G. Crock, James B. Petersen, and Ross M. Anderson. Archaeology of Eastern North America 22:179-192. OTHER PUBLICATIONS (staff and student collaborators in bold): In press Book Review of Islands at the Crossroads: Migration, Seafaring and Interaction in the Caribbean, edited by Antonio Curet and Mark Hauser. John G. Crock. In Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology. In press Anguilla. John G. Crock. In Encyclopedia of Caribbean Archaeology, edtited by Basil Reid and Grant Gilmore, University of Florida Press. In press James B. Petersen. John G. Crock. In Encyclopedia of Caribbean Archaeology, edtited by Basil Reid and Grant Gilmore, University of Florida Press. 2011 Archaeology of Chimney Point. John G. Crock. Council for Northeast Historical Archaeology Newsletter 79:6-7. 2011 Zooarchaeological Analysis of Fishing at the Rendezvous Bay Site, Anguilla: an Investigation into Possible Overexploitation of Marine Fishes. James P. Allen, John G. Crock, and Nanny Carder. In Proceedings of the 24th International Congress for Caribbean Archaeology, edited by Reg Murphy and Samantha Rebovich, St. Johns, Antigua, pp. 138-146. 2011 A Comparison of the Relative Proportions of Invertebrate Species Recovered from the Sandy Ground and Rendezvous Bay Sites on Anguilla. Alexandra D. Clark and John G. Crock. In Proceedings of the 24th International Congress for Caribbean Archaeology, edited by Reg Murphy and Samantha Rebovich. St. Johns, Antigua, pp. 751-756. 2009 Indians on the Lake. William A. Haviland and John G. Crock. Chapter 3 in Lake Champlain: An Illustrated History, edited by Julie
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