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Education and Professional Experience: Dickson
has been a faculty member at Texas A&M since 1975. After
receiving his M.A. from Northwestern University and his Ph.D.
from the University of Arizona and before coming to Texas
A&M, he was Assistant to the Director of the School of
American Research in Santa Fe, New Mexico and Research Assistant
Professor and Director of the Columbia Reservoir Archaeological
Project at the University of Tennessee. Dickson has had extensive
archaeological field experience in the American South and
Southwest, Central America and East Africa. His research focuses
largely on hunter-gatherer adaptations to the arid and semi-arid
highland environments of Africa during the Middle and Later
Stone Ages. To this end, he has been conducting site reconnaissance
and excavation in the Mukogodo Hills region of Kenya since
1989. Pursuant to this research, he received a Fulbright Research
Fellowship to Kenya in 1994.
Publications: Dickson has 60 professional
publications including three books. His first book, Prehistoric
Pueblo Settlement Patterns, was called "one of the
most stimulating settlement pattern studies ever done in the
Southwest" by the American Anthropologist. His second,
The Transfer and Transformation of Ideas and Material
Culture was co-edited with Peter Hugill. His third, The
Dawn of Belief: Religion in the Upper Paleolithic of Southwestern
Europe, deals with the "cognitive archaeology"
of the Stone Age in the Old World. Finally, Dickson has authored
a textbook, Ancient Preludes: World Prehistory from the
Perspectives of Archaeology, Geology, and Paleoecology,
the third edition of which was released in 2004.
Professional Activities: Dickson has served
as President of the Council of Texas Archaeologists, Trustee
of the Brazos Valley Museum of Natural History and, since
1984, has been on the Board of Directors of the Human Relations
Area Files, Inc. In 2000, he was selected, along with Dr.
Jon P. Alston, to give the Fallon-Marshall Lecture at Texas
A&M University.
Teaching: Dickson’s teaching centers
on the prehistory of the Old World and of North America. In
addition, he teaches archaeological method and theory at the
graduate level as well as undergraduate courses in the anthropology
of religion and world systems theory. He has received two
teaching awards from the TAMU Association of Former Students
and has served as one of Texas A&M’s representatives
to the Peer Review of Teaching Project sponsored by the Pew
Memorial Trust.
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