词条 | Roger Curtis Green |
释义 |
Roger Curtis Green {{post-nominals|country=NZL|ONZM}} (15 March 1932 – 4 October 2009) was an American-born, New Zealand-based archaeologist, Professor Emeritus at The University of Auckland, and member of the National Academy of Sciences and Royal Society of New Zealand. He was awarded the Hector and Marsden Medals and was an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for his contributions to the study of Pacific culture history. Early life and educationRoger Green was born in Ridgewood, New Jersey, and expressed an interest in archaeology at an early age.[1]{{rp|835}} At sixteen, his family relocated to Albuquerque, New Mexico, where his interest in North American prehistory flourished. Following a field season on Pueblo sites in the region under the tutelage of Frank Hibben, Green attended the University of New Mexico.[1]{{rp|836}} While there, he undertook coursework in geology and linguistics in addition to anthropology, while at the same time being engaged in officers training. He was particularly influenced by the work of linguist Edward Sapir during this period,[1]{{rp|836}} which likely contributed to his subsequent works in Polynesian linguistics. During this period, Green continued to work on local field projects, resulting in his first published works.[2] His talents were recognised early on by his professors at New Mexico, and before completing his Masters study there, Green was encouraged to enroll in a doctorate program at Harvard.[1]{{rp|837}} While there he studied closely under Gordon Willey and Cora du Bois. It was also there that he was first introduced to Pacific prehistory by Douglas Oliver, who helped arrange a Fulbright fellowship that took him to New Zealand and on to conduct research in French Polynesia on the islands of Moorea and Mangareva. His PhD dissertation focused on the prehistoric sequence of the Auckland region. Academic careerFollowing his doctoral work in the Pacific, Green replaced Jack Golson as a senior lecturer of Anthropology at The University of Auckland from 1961 to 1966.[1]{{rp|839}} In 1966, he was promoted to associate professor, and worked for the next three years at the University of Hawaii at Mānoa. From 1970 to 1973, he worked on an extensive research project with Douglas Yen in the Solomon Islands funded by a Captain James Cook Fellowship, after which he returned to Auckland for the remainder of his teaching career. He retired from teaching in 1992, at which time he was made Professor Emeritus. In addition to teaching at Auckland and Hawaii, Green periodically held active teaching and research positions at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, the Bernice P. Bishop Museum in Honolulu, and Te Whare Wānanga o Awanuiārangi in Whakatane, New Zealand. He also oversaw the funding of numerous research projects through the Green Foundation for Polynesian Research.[3] During his teaching career, Green taught a number of students who would later make significant contributions to New Zealand and Pacific archaeology, including Janet Davidson, Les Groube, Andrew Pawley, Lisa Matisoo-Smith. ContributionsGreen's earliest work was focused primarily on the Largo-Gallina phase of the Pueblo Native Americans. He conducted several excavations at various sites in New Mexico as part of academic and salvage projects.[4][5] In the Pacific, Green contributed to the individual culture histories of New Zealand,[6] Hawaii,[7] Samoa,[8] Fiji,[9] Tonga,[10] Papua New Guinea, French Polynesia,[11] the Solomon Islands,[12] New Caledonia,[13] and Easter Island.[14] He worked extensively on the general prehistory of the Pacific, contributing to a myriad of topics including:
Among his methodological contributions, Green was well known for his work on obsidian dating and provenance, an invaluable tool in Pacific archaeology. Additionally, he made significant contributions to settlement pattern archaeology, particularly with his work in Moorea and Samoa.[28] The Green Foundation, established in 1984 by Green and his wife, Valerie, was an initiative which was started with diverted earnings from fee paying work Green was involved in. The Foundation supports multidisciplinary research in New Zealand and the Pacific. Selected publications
See also
References1. ^1 2 3 4 Davidson, Janet, 1999. Roger Curtis Green. In T. Murray, ed. Encyclopedia of Archaeology: The Great Archaeologists. Santa Barbara:ABC-CLIO. 2. ^e.g. Green, Roger C., 1956. A pit house of the Gallina phase. American Antiquity 22:10–16 3. ^For example, Allen, M.S. 2006. Periodicity, duration, and function of occupation at Tauroa Point, Northland, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology 27:19–62. 4. ^Green, Roger C., 1956. Excavations near Mayhill, New Mexico. "Highway Salvage Archaeology" 2:10–16 5. ^Green, Roger C., 1956. A pit house of the Gallina phase. American Antiquity 22:10–16. 6. ^Green, Roger C., 1975. Adaptation and change in Maori culture. In G. Kuschel (ed.), "Biogeography and Ecology in New Zealand. The Hague: Dr. W. Junk, pp. 591–641. 7. ^Green, Roger C., 1980. Makaha before 1880 A.D. Makaha Valley Historical Project Summary Report No. 5. Pacific Anthropological Records 31. Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press. 8. ^Green, Roger C. and J. M. Davidson, eds. 1969. Archaeology in Western Samoa, Volume I. Auckland: Auckland Institute and Museum. 9. ^Green, Roger C., 1963. A suggested revision of the Fijian sequence. Journal of the Polynesian Society 72:235–253. 10. ^Green, Roger C., 1972. Revision of the Tongan Sequence. Journal of the Polynesian Society 81:79–86 11. ^Green, Roger C., K. Green, R. A. Rappaport, and J. M. Davidson. 1967. Archaeology on the island of Mo'orea, French Polynesia. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 51, 2. New York. 12. ^Green, Roger C., 1977. A First Culture History of the Solomon Islands. Auckland: University of Auckland Bindery 13. ^Green, Roger C. and J.S. Mitchell, 1983. New Caledonian culture history: a review of the archaeological sequence. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology 5:19–67. 14. ^Green, Roger C., 1998. Rapanui origins prior to European contact – the view from Eastern Polynesia. In P. Vargas-Cassanova (ed.), "Easter Island and East Polynesian Prehistory". Santiago: Instituto de Estudios Isla de Pascua 15. ^Green, Roger C., 1967. The immediate origins of the Polynesians. In Polynesian Culture History: Essays in Honor of Kenneth P. Emory, edited by G. H. Highland et al. Bernice P. Bishop Museum Special Publication 56. Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press. 16. ^Kirch, Patrick V. and R. C. Green, 1987. History, phylogeny, and evolution in Polynesia. Current Anthropology 28: 431–443, 452–456. 17. ^Kirch, Patrick V. and R. C. Green, 2001. Hawaiiki, Ancestral Polynesia, An Essay in Historical Anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 18. ^Green, Roger C., 1966. Linguistic subgrouping with Polynesia: the implications for prehistoric settlement. Journal of the Polynesian Society 80:355–370. 19. ^e.g. Green, Roger C., 1973. Lapita pottery and the origins of Polynesian culture. Australian Natural History 17:332-37. 20. ^Green, Roger C., 1979. Lapita. In The Prehistory of Polynesia, edited by J.D. Hennings. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 21. ^Green, Roger C., 1993. The Lapita site at Nenumbo, in the Solomon Islands. In G. Burenhult (ed.), People of the Stone Age: Hunter Gatherers and Eaerly Farmers. [The Illustrated Historyof Humankind, Vol. 2], pp. 150, San Francisco: Harper Collins. 22. ^Green, Rocger C., 1976. In R.C. Green and M.M. Cresswell (eds), Southeast Solomon Islands Cultural History: A Preliminary Survey. Wellington: Bulletin of the Royal Society of New Zealand 11:245-65) 23. ^Green, R.C. and D. Anson, 1987. The Lapita site of Watom: New evidence from excavations in 1985. Man and Culture in Oceania, Special Issue 3:121-31 24. ^e.g. Green, Roger C., 1984. Settlement pattern studies in Oceania: an introduction to a symposium. "New Zealand Journal of Archaeology" 6:59–69. 25. ^Kirch, Patrick V, 2004. On the Roads of the Winds. Berkeley: University of California Press 26. ^Green, Roger C., 1996. Settlement patterns and complex society in the Windward Society Islands: Retrospective commentary on the research in 'Opunohu Valley, Mo'orea. In Julien, M. Orliac and C. Orliac (eds), Memoire de Pierre, Memoire d'Homme, Tradition et Archeologie en Oceanie, Ouvrage Collectif en Hommage a J. Garanger, pp. 209–227. Paris: Publication de la Sorbonne. 27. ^Green, Roger C., 1990. The Study of open settlements in New Zealand prehistory. In D.G. Sutton (ed.), The Archaeology of the Kainga: A Study of Precontact Maori Undefended Settlements at Pouerua, Northland, New Zealand, pp. 23–32. Auckland: Auckland University Press. 28. ^1 Green, R.C., 2002. A retrospective view of settlement pattern studies in Samoa. In T. N. Ladefoged and M. W. Graves (eds), "Pacific Landscapes: Archaeological Approaches". Los Osos, CA: Easter Island Foundation, pp. 125–52. 29. ^e.g. Jones, Martin, F. Petchey, R. C. Green, P. Sheppard, and M. Phelan, 2007. The marine delta-R for Nenumbo: a case study for calculating reservoir offsets from paired sample data. "Radiocarbon" 49(1):95–102. 30. ^Green, R.C. and S. H. Bickler, 2009. 'Anakena reinterpreted using a geo-archaeological, chronological, and landscape approach. Presented to the University of Auckland Department of Anthropology, October 2008 External links
15 : New Zealand historians|Historians of the Pacific|New Zealand archaeologists|University of Auckland faculty|1932 births|2009 deaths|Officers of the New Zealand Order of Merit|University of New Mexico alumni|Harvard University alumni|American emigrants to New Zealand|Members of the United States National Academy of Sciences|20th-century historians|20th-century New Zealand scientists|20th-century New Zealand writers|20th-century New Zealand male writers |
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