Faculty Profiles

 

Pamela J. Crabtree

Associate Professor of Anthropology
Member, Center for the Study of Human Origins
B.A. 1972, Barnard; M.A. 1975, Ph.D. 1982, Pennsylvania.

Since 1997, I have been involved in an archaeological study of forts of the French and Indian War period in the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, a cooperative project between New York University and the National Park Service. Peter Bogucki (Princeton University) and I are currently editing an encyclopedia of the Barbarian world, to be published by Charles Schribner's Sons.

Publications

Archaeology and Prehistory. Pam J. Crabtree and Douglas V. Campana, New York: McGraw-Hill, 2001.

Medieval Archaeology: An Encyclopedia. New York: Garland, 2000.

"Production and Consumption in an Early Complex Society": Animan Use in Middle Saxon East Anglia World Archaeology,
28(1):58-75, 1996.

"Zooarchaeology and Complex Societies: Some Uses of Faunal Analysis for the Study of Trade, Social Status, and Ethnicity". In Archaeological Method and Theory, Volume 2, edited by M.B. Schiffer, pp. 155-205. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1990.

"Early Animal Domestication and Its Cultural Context." Pam J. Crabtree, Douglas V. Campana, and Kathleen Ryan, eds. University of Pennsylvania Museum, MASCA Research Papers in Science and Archaeology, Supplement to Vol. 6, 1989.