Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World

Thomas Garrison

Postdoctoral Fellow in Archaeology and Anthropology (2008-2010)

Biography

Tom Garrison is an archaeologist specializing in ancient Mesoamerica as well as GIS and remote sensing applications in archaeology.  He received his PhD from Harvard University in the spring of 2007 before coming to Brown in the fall of the same year.  His dissertation was based on five years of research at the Preclassic Maya site of San Bartolo, Guatemala (www.sanbartolo.org) and examined changes in landscape and politics from 1000 BC-AD 1100.  Tom has also worked in San Cristóbal de las Casas (Chiapas, Mexico), the Cayo District (Belize), Copan (Honduras), and Cuauhtinchan (Puebla, Mexico).  He is currently collaborating with Dr. Stephen Houston on a regional project at El Zotz, Guatemala (https://www.mesoweb.com/zotz/), as well as providing remote sensing support for the Petra Project, Jordan.

Degrees

Ph.D. (Harvard University 2007); A.M. (Harvard University 2003); B.A. (Connecticut College 2000).

Employment

2008-2010: Brown University, Postdoctoral Fellow in Archaeology and Anthropology, Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World and Department of Anthropology

2008-2009: Harvard University, Lecturer, Department of Anthropology

2007-2008: Brown University, Postdoctoral Research Associate, Department of Anthropology

Grants, Awards, Honors, and Fellowships

Under review: Landscape Succession in Maya Lowland Archaeology.  Submitted to the National Science Foundation (7/1/08).  Co-PI with Stephen Houston.

Under review: Revisiting Lowland Maya Settlement Patterns. Proposal for Advanced Seminar Series at the School for American Research (3/1/08). Timothy Murtha and Jeffrey Glover, collaborators.

2008: Mesolore, Phase II. Consultant to proposal awarded to Liza Bakewell and Byron Hamann by the Davis Foundation.

2006-2007: Doctoral Dissertation Completion Fellowship.  Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University.

2001-2006: John G. Owens Fellow.  Dept. of Anthropology, Harvard University.

Recent News

The University of New Mexico Press

New Edited Volume by JIAAW Director Andrew Scherer

"Substance of the Ancient Maya: Kingdoms and Communities, Objects and Beings," edited by Andrew K. Scherer and Thomas G. Garrison, collects twelve essays by top scholars that highlight what is new in research pertaining to the ancient Maya. Subjects range from updated political histories of major kingdoms in the southern Maya Lowlands to explorations of the nature of Maya writing and materiality. These essays were inspired by the scholarship of Stephen Houston and celebrate his transdisciplinary commitment to research in anthropological archaeology, epigraphy, and art history.

The contributions in this volume are organized into two sections that respectively reflect different scales from which to approach the substance of the ancient Maya—from hand-held objects to entire kingdoms. This dichotomy reflects the breadth of questions central to current research on the Maya. It also illustrates how certain themes, such as the relationship between the living and the realm of the supernatural, are fundamental to both thinking by and about the Maya at all scales. A diversity of methods is not only embodied by this assemblage of essays but is also spread equally across the two sections of the book, illustrating that archaeologists, epigraphers, geographers, and art historians can equally contribute to the substance of kingdoms and communities, as they can to objects and beings.

Collectively, these contributions show how the objects and beings that composed the Classic Maya world were both literal and sacred substances that mediated relations not only among living people but with gods and ancestors. A final chapter by Stephen Houston reflects on unfinished projects of the ancient Maya as a metaphor for all of the work yet to be done to move forward in our studies of the past.

Andrew K. Scherer is the director of the Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World and an associate professor of anthropology and archaeology at Brown University.

Thomas G. Garrison is an assistant professor of geography and the environment and the director of the Lidar and Landscapes of the Ancient Mediterranean and Americas (LLAMA) Lab at the University of Texas at Austin. He is the lead editor of the forthcoming Oxford Handbook of the Maya.
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