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Dr. Jan Storå
Archeozoologist
email
[email protected]
Dr. Jan Storå of Stockholm University is an expert on animal osteology, especially seals. He has already completed an extensive analysis of bones excavated in the Seal Hunting Cultures Project . He will be involved in further analyses and also carry out extensive comparisons with other osteological collections from the Bothnia region. His doctoral dissertation was entitled Reading Bones. Stone Age Hunters and Seals in the Baltic (2001).
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PhD Candidate
Britta Wennstedt Edvinger
email
britta@
arkeologicentrum.se
Britta has worked as an archaeologist at county museums in northern Sweden, for the the Archaeo-logical Survey of the Central Board of Antiquities and as an instructor in archaeology at the Mid- Sweden University in Östersund. She has worked as an archaeology consultant since 2000 through her own firm, Arkeologicentrum. Britta's primary research interests are (pre) historic boreal and alpine hunters, fishers and reindeer herders in Scandinavia. She has published articles on mountain Saami prehistory, stone age rock art, archaeological methodology and Saami bear ceremonialism. In the Search for a Past Project she is studying Saami landscape history, Saami ritual sites and Saami bear ceremonialism.
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Katherine Rusk, D. Phil.
email
ruskk@si.edu
Arctic Studies Center, NMNH
Smithsonian Institution
Recently received her D. Phil from University of York, England. Title of
thesis Shall We Abide Here? Site Selection Criteria of the Eastern Settlement of Norse Greenland: A Case Study of Qorlortup Valley. This was an examination of the settlement pattern around Eric the Red's farm Bratthlid to see why they chose this area during the initial settlement period. After extensive field survey and subsequent GIS analysis, she found the most likely explanantion for the location of their farms in the landscape was the exposure of that particular location to sunlight during winter, not as others had suggested due to the proximity of pasture for sheep.
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