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Office Location: Social Science Building 235 Office Telephone: 406 243 2450 E-mail: kelly.dixon@mso.umt.edu |
Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology
Kelly J. Dixon (Ph.D.,
Among Dixon’s other recent publications are: “The Donner Party: An Archaeological Perspective on a Tragedy in the Sierras,” Historical Methods (2007); “When Fancy Gets The Upper Hand of Fact: Historical Archaeology and Popular Culture in the American West,” Archaeological Record (2007); "Survival of Biological Evidence on Artifacts: Applying Forensic Techniques at the Boston Saloon," Historical Archaeology (2006); Sidling Up to the Archaeology of Western Saloons: Historical Archaeology Takes on the Wild of the West, World Archaeology (2006); “Archaeology of the Boston Saloon,” African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter (2006); and Saloons in the "Wild" West and Taverns in Ancient Mesopotamia: Explorations Along the Timeline of Public Drinking, in Between Dirt and Discussion (2006).
Her recent archaeological field and lab research (2003-2006) has focused on the encampments of the ill-fated Donner Party (www.anthro.umt.edu/donner). While a book and articles related to the Donner research are forthcoming, it is possible to get a preview of this research in the New Yorker (April 24, 2006). Dr. Dixon is currently developing student-oriented multidisciplinary archaeological research at the mining ghost town of
Dixon
Anthropology 252 Archaeological Wonders of the World http://www.cas.umt.edu/departments/anthropology/courses/anth252/default.htm
Anthropology 395 The Archaeology and Anthropology of Olduvai Gorge http://www.cas.umt.edu/anthro/courses/olduvai/default.htm
Anthropology 455 Artifact Analysis
Anthropology 466 Archaeological Survey Methods http://www.anthro.umt.edu/notes/466/
Anthropology 456 Historical Archaeology http://www.cas.umt.edu/anthro/courses/anth456/default.htm
Anthropology 487 Anthropological Field Experience
Anthropology 495 Landscape Archaeology
Anthropology 495 Archaeological Field School
Coloma Ghost Town Field School: http://www.cas.umt.edu/mtcoloma/default.htm
Terrace Garden Field School and related projects: www.cas.umt.edu/anthro/anth495cim/
Anthropology 503 Graduate Seminar in Cultural Resource Interpretation
Anthropology 551 Graduate Seminar in Historical Archaeology: http://www.cas.umt.edu/departments/anthropology/courses/anth551/
Forthcoming The Anthropology of Desperation: Exploring the Donner Party’s Alder Creek Camp. Edited volume being prepared for review and publication during 2010 through a cooperative agreement between the Society for Historical Archaeology and the University of Nebraska Press.
In Review “Rock Hearths and Rural Wood Camps of Gold Mountain: Chinese Woodchoppers in the Lake Tahoe Basin.” Chapter in an edited volume entitled Historical Archaeology of the American West. The chapter is co-authored with Carrie Smith and will be published during 2010 by the University of Oklahoma Press.
I2010 “’Men, Women, Children Starving’: Archaeology of the Donner Family Camp.” American Antiquity. Co-authored with S. Novak, G. Robbins, J. Schablitsky, G. R. Scott, and G. Tasa.
2007 “The Opium Debate and Chinese Exclusion Laws in the Nineteenth-Century American West.” Review in Montana: The Magazine of Western History: 58(3):71-72.
2007 “The Donner Party: An Archaeological Perspective on a Tragedy in the Sierras.” Historical Methods, 40(4):179-181.
2007 “Chinese American Death Rituals: Respecting the Ancestors.” Review, Pacific Historical Review, May 2007:302-303.
2007 “When Fancy Gets The Upper Hand of Fact: Historical Archaeology and Popular Culture in the American West.” SAA Archaeological Record, 7(3):19-25.
2006 “Sidling Up to the Archaeology of Western Saloons: Historical Archaeology Takes on the Wild of the West.” World Archaeology, 38(4):576-585.
2006 “Saloons in the Wild West and Taverns in Ancient Mesopotamia: Explorations Along the Timeline of Public Drinking.” In Between Dirt and Discussion: Methods and Methodology in Historical Archaeology, edited by Steven Archer and Kevin Bartoy, pp. 61-79. Springer [Academic] Press, New York and London.
2006 “Archaeology of the Boston Saloon.” African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter, June 2006. http://www.diaspora.uiuc.edu/news0606/news0606.html#2
2006 “Survival of Biological Evidence on Artifacts: Applying Forensic Techniques at the Boston Saloon.” Historical Archaeology 40(3):20-30.
2006 “Forensic Technology and the Historical Archaeologist.” Invited article that will introduce a thematic issue of Historical Archaeology 40(3):1-7. Co-authored with Julie Schablitsky and Mark Leney.
2005 Boomtown Saloons: Archaeology and History in Virginia City, Nevada. University of Nevada Press, Reno. http://www.anthro.umt.edu/faculty/dixon_flyer.pdf
Archaeology; Historical Archaeology; Marginalized Populations