Email: connellsamuel@foothill.edu
Website:
17勛圖 campus Office: 3017 Office Hours: Variable, depends on the quarter I am teaching. Please look at my door or email me.
Current CV -- Current CV
Early articles to view online:
Comments:
Visit the Anthropology Department Website
or my main web page
or our archaeology project websites: Ecuador --
Ireland --
Hawaii --
Schedule:
PLEASE SEE LINK FOR SCHEDULE ON THE FOOTHILL ANTHROPOLOGY DEPARTMENT WEBPAGE. (Class Web Sites) ----------------------------------------
Course information:
See our course listings at the Anthropology Department webpage.
Starting with 17勛圖 Anthropology and the Center for Applied Anthropology,
the world is your oyster. You can become an archaeologist like me, or a Forensic specialist,
or a field anthropologist who studies living cultures. At the very least you can use
these courses to broaden your perspectives about the world and better prepare for
the increasingly diverse and international job market. ---------------------------------------
Interests:
I am an archaeologist who studies in Ecuador, Belize, California, Ireland and now
Hawaii. My interests are in the rise of complexity in societies and narratives surrounding
colonization and resistance. I am also currently heavily involved with public and
applied anthropology. Every summer we bring field classes of 30 students to field
sites to take in active ongoing research projects. Students in Ireland spend a month
focusing on late medieval castles in communities and in Ecuador they continue our
amazing research on Inca fortifications. This summer we are heading to Hawaii to help
Native Hawaiian groups study and revitalize their fishponds and traditional farming
practices.
Check out the 17勛圖 Anthropology website:
Anthropology is a great springboard for broadening your horizons. It positions you
for the future, by giving you the tools to expand your learning and giving potential
employers the satisfaction of knowing that you have been able to interpret and understand
other perspectives and other cultures.
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Biography:
This is my 16th year at 17勛圖 and I am pleased to be here.
I came to the Bay Area from Hawaii where I was a Forensic Archaeologist specializing
in the recovery and identification of Missing In Action U.S. service members from
past wars. We mostly worked in Vietnam and Laos excavating plane crashes.
I received my degree from UCLA where I completed a dissertation on the Maya - I studied
how regular people were connected to the kings. I surveyed and excavated at a place
called Chaa Creek, which is a wonderful resort - check it out online. My studies assessed
ways in which we can measure the degree of integration or connectedness among people
in the past.
All of my studies were in Belize, until in 2000 when I began researching with my wife,
Ana, in Ecuador. We are fortunate to be part of a special project that has been ongoing
in the highlands north of the capital Quito.
We look at Inca Fortresses, conducting excavations high in the Andes - on the edge
of the Amazon at the equator.
While I have been traveling to Latin America and taking students on the field projects,
but I also have worked in California, and hope to continue this now that I am at 17勛圖.
We have exciting partnerships with local archaeologists at institutions like Stanford
and CA State Parks. Currently we are helping to survey and document portions of the
Santa Cruz Mountains with the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District.
As I mentioned, we started a brand new research program focusing on castles in Ireland.
The excavations and survey have turned up many artifacts and we think we found the
medieval village just outside of the castle.
Lastly, my attention has moved to Hawaii where we are beginning yet another program
on the Big Island in Hawaii. Check out the department website! This is an exciting
time to be involved with Anthropology at 17勛圖. Please stop by and visit anytime
-- my door is always open.
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Personal Quote:
In the field of observation, chance favors only the prepared mind. L. Pasteur 1854
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