|
The Anthropology Program
|
|||
Ed
Jackson Professor of Anthropology (Ph.D. University of Michigan, 1986) |
|||
| Dissertation Sedentism and Hunter-Gatherer Adaptations in the Lower Mississippi Valley: Subsistence Strategies during the Poverty Point Period. Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. (1986)
Research Interests Prehistory of the Southeastern United States. My research and
teaching area of specialization is the prehistory of the southeastern
United States, particularly in subsistence practices, ritual integration,
and political and economic organization of middle range societies ranging
from the Middle Archaic to Mississippian Period. I am particularly interested
in exploring how prehistoric animal use reflects economic as well as social
organization in these societies. Extensive local fieldwork in collaboration
with my graduate students has produced significant advances in our understanding
of the prehistory of southeast Mississippi. In addition to my own research
efforts and teaching responsibilities, I am editor for the Mississippi
Archaeological Association, publisher of Mississippi Archaeology.
Recent publications H. Edwin Jackson (in press) Prehistoric Faunal Exploitation in the Lower Mississippi Valley. In Time's River: Archaeological Syntheses in the Yazoo Basin and Lower Mississippi River Valley, edited by E. Peacock and J. Rafferty. University of Alabama Press J. S. Girard, H. E. Jackson, K. M. Roberts, 2007 Fish Hatchery 2 (16NA70): A Late Prehistoric Site on the Caddo-Lower Mississippi Valley Margin. Louisiana Archaeology 27: 15-70. Joe W. Saunders and others, 2005 Watson Brake, a Middle Archaic Mound Complex in Northeast Louisiana. American Antiquity. 70(4): 631-668. H. Edwin Jackson, 2005 Darkening the Skies: A Zooarchaeological Accounting of Passenger Pigeons in the Prehistoric Southeast. In Engaged Anthropology: Essays in Honor of Richard I. Ford, edited by M. Hegmon and S. Beiselt University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology Anthropological Papers. Susan L. Scott and H. Edwin Jackson, 2004. Faunal Remains from the US Park Service Excavations at MLE14, MLE18, MLE90 and MLE112. In The Chickasaws: Economics, Politics, and Social Organization in the Early 18th Century, edited by Jay K. Johnson. Final Report, National Endowment for the Humanities. H. Edwin Jackson and Susan L. Scott, 2003. Patterns of Elite Faunal Utilization at Moundville, Alabama. American Antiquity 68(3):552-572. H. E. Jackson, M. Higgins, and R. Reams, 2002. Woodland Cultural and Chronologial Trends in the Southern Gulf Coastal Plain: Recent Research in the Pine hills of Southeastern Mississippi. The Woodland Southeast, edited by D. G. Anderson and R. Mainfort. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa. H. E. Jackson and S. L. Scott, 2002. Woodland Faunal Exploitation in the Mid-South. The Woodland Southeast, edited by D. G. Anderson and R. Mainfort. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa. H. E. Jackson and Susan L. Scott, 2001. Archaic Faunal Utilization in the Louisiana Bottomlands. Southeastern Archaeology. 20(2):187-196. S. L. Scott and H. E. Jackson, 1998. Early Caddo Ritual and Patterns of Animal Use: An Analysis of Faunal Remains from the Crenshaw Site (3MI6), Southwestern Arkansas. Bulletin of the Arkansas Archaeology Society 37:1-37. H. E. Jackson, 1998. Little Spanish Fort: An Early Middle Woodland Enclosure in the Lower Yazoo Basin, Mississippi. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 23(2):199-220. J. W. Saunders, R. D. Mandel, R. T. Saucier, E. T. Allen, C. T. Hallmark, J. K. Johnson, H. E. Jackson, C. M. Allen, G. L. Stringer, D. S. Frink, J. K. Feathers, S. Williams, K. J. Gremillion, M. F. Vidrine, and R. Jones, 1997. A Mound Complex in Louisiana at 5400-5000 Years Before the Present. Science 777:1796-1799. H. Edwin Jackson and Susan L. Scott, 1995. The Faunal Record of the Southeastern Elite: The Implications of Economy, Social Relations, and Ideology. Southeastern Archaeology 14(2): 103-119.
Resources Available
Physical Anthropology Lab Research & Teaching Collections (Mississippi, Eastern North America) Zooarchaeology Reference Collection Scanning Electron Microscope (at Polymer Science)
Contact Information
Phone: (601) 266-6887 Fax: (601) 266-6373 E-mail: ed.jackson@usm.edu |
|||
Last
Modified:October 12, 2007 2:54 PM URL: http://www.usm.edu/antsoc/anthro/jackson.html Questions or Comments? AA/EOE/ADAI |