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ISU Anthropology Professor Peterson Receives $20,000 NEH Fellowship

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  • ISU Anthropology Professor Peterson Receives $20,000 NEH Fellowship

    ISU ANTHROPOLOGY PROFESSOR PETERSON RECEIVES $20,000 NEH FELLOWSHIP TO INVESTIGATE LINKS BETWEEN PREHISTORIC METALLURGY AND DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIETIES

    Idaho State University
    http://www2.isu.edu/headlines/?p=1892
    M ay 15 2009

    A $20,000 fellowship and access to Idaho State University's Center
    for Archaeology, Materials and Applied Spectroscopy will allow
    ISU Assistant Anthropology Professor David Peterson to study the
    relationship between mining and the development of civilization in
    Eurasia on the Armenian Plateau, which has been called the "epicenter
    of the Iron Age."

    The National Endowment for the Humanities selected Peterson to receive
    a research fellowship in Eurasian and east European research titled
    "Collaborative Investigations of Early Mining and Metal Production
    on the Armenia Plateau, ca. 7,000-800 B.C." with his colleagues in
    the Institute of Geological Sciences and the Institute of Archaeology
    and Ethnography of the National Academy of Sciences of the Republic
    of Armenia.

    "For a long time archaeology has focused on metal production as an
    important part of the evolution of civilizations," Peterson said. "I
    will be systematically collecting samples from copper deposits,
    sourcing artifacts to find out which deposits were exploited during a
    particular period of prehistory, and investigating how mining and metal
    technology influenced the development of societies, and vice versa -
    how the development of societies influenced mining and metallurgical
    activities."

    The NEH fellowship was not easy to get.

    "Competition for the NEH program was extremely competitive this year:
    we received many applications from a wide range of highly qualified
    candidates," said Janette Owen, senior program manager, Russian and
    Eurasian Outbound Programs, in a letter to Peterson. "Of those,
    only four applicants received funding. Your inclusion among this
    small number of fellows is a remarkable accomplishment."

    Peterson said he could not have landed the fellowship, nor could he
    pursue his research specialties at Idaho State University, were not
    for the ISU Center for Archaeology, Materials, and Applied Spectroscopy
    (CAMAS).

    "CAMAS is a fantastic facility and has a lot of equipment available
    for use in archaeology," Peterson said. "I will be using its
    induced-coupled mass spectrometer and scanning electron microscope
    to analyze the composition and structure of materials we collect in
    Armenia. This will tell us which ore deposits drawn from in making
    certain artifacts, the kinds of techniques used to make them, and
    how technologies for making and using copper and bronze evolved from
    7,000 to 800 B.C. Our facilities are world class and are accessible
    for archeological studies. ISU is a great place to be for research
    and education in archaeological science."

    The ISU researcher will be testing about 600 ore samples and 1,400
    samples from artifacts during the two-year study. He will head to
    the Armenian Plateau in early July and will spend two months there
    each of the next two summers. The Armenian Plateau includes Turkey's
    Eastern Anatolia Region, northwestern Iran, all of Armenia, southern
    Georgia and western Azerbaijan.

    "The Armenia Plateau is a lot like the high desert steppe of Idaho,"
    Peterson said. "They're both high elevation volcanic plateaus that are
    hot in the summer and cold and windy in the winter. There is a great
    potential for ISU researchers to collaborate with colleagues there
    in wide range of archeological, geological and environmental research."

    For more information on Peterson's research visit
    http://www.isu.edu/~petedavi/; for more information on ISU's CAMAS
    facility visit www.isu.edu/camas/about.shtml.

    Idaho State University, a Carnegie-classified doctoral research
    institution founded in 1901, educates approximately 14,000 students
    per year in more than 280 programs. It is Idaho's lead institution in
    health professions and medical education. Its seven colleges engage
    in a broad range of innovative research, teaching, and learning in the
    natural and physical sciences, humanities, performing and visual arts,
    education, engineering, business, pharmacy, and technology. Visit
    ISU today at www.isu.edu.
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