UAA anthropology found rewrite Aleutian social history
Diane Hanson can look back and laugh — right now.
More than 25 years have elapsed since she was young, and reported to the
Alaska Anthropological Association as a graduate student in anthropology at Adak
in the usual place, about 1. archeological site — Aleutian-coastline She and
fellow workers found it very far inland, along the coast.
This is common.
Since the 1950s, anthropology coastal communities was all that mattered was
claimed in the Aleutians. Villagers hunting, wildlife need access to the island
and most of all, there are no mammals just no reason to go hunting inland. The
island interior were simply natural barrier between the marginal coastal
communities. They were related.
Anthropology graduate student research results, kind of a young audience.
"Cross" Hanson was how to remember the experience.
But later in the year,
Hanson, now a Professor of anthropology, her hair to UAA. As it turns out, she
was found in 1983, the site is independently confirmed by another
anthropologist, 1993 and 2005, the National Science Foundation grant in the end
$ 430000 help her win a $ 10,000 grant from the UAA's Secretary of graduate and
undergraduate students with Hanson, she was discovered in 1983 near the site
were excavated and Adak again one.
And guess what? She was right.