2021 awards totaling $42,570 went to:
Angela Armstrong-Ingram for Paleobotanical Evidence of Irrigation in Owens Valley;
Tammy Buonasera for Molecular, Isotopic, and Proteomic Applications to Archaeological Materials at ALA-11;
Jill Eubanks for Investigating Precontact Resource Conservation of Artiodactyl Populations;
Helen Filmore for Gemulelekha: Building a Small Fire, An Interdisciplinary Research Project on Revitalizing Washoe Tribe Fire Use;
Elliot Helmer for Relational Resource Management: An Application of Indigenous Relational Ontologies to the Analysis of a Southern Northwest Coast Shell Midden; and
Brian Holquin for The Chumash and a Changing Environment: An Archaeogenomic and Geochemical Analysis of Diet, Mobility, and Social Structure on the Northern Channel Islands and Santa Barbara Coast, California.
2022 awards totaling $57,140 went to:
Abby Baka for Exploring Human Responses to the Pleistocene-Holocene Transition on the Colorado Plateau;
Jonathan Cordero for Ethnohistory of the Yelamu;
Jeremy McFarland for Radiocarbon Dating of Legacy Museum Collections and Selective Field Sampling from the King Range National Conservation Area to Assess Changes in Human Occupation, Subsistence,and Trade in Northwestern California;
AnnMarie Medin for Cultural Connections: Elem Pomo Dance Demonstration at the SCA Banquet;
Jessica Morales for Evaluating the Dog as a Hunting Tool in Prehistoric Alta and Baja California;
Lee Panich and Gustavo Flores for Native Freedom and the Collapse of the Missions in the Southern San Francisco Bay Area; and
Juliana Wilder for Prehistoric Land Use and Mobility in Hermit Valley, Alpine County, California.
Angela Armstrong-Ingram for Paleobotanical Evidence of Irrigation in Owens Valley;
Tammy Buonasera for Molecular, Isotopic, and Proteomic Applications to Archaeological Materials at ALA-11;
Jill Eubanks for Investigating Precontact Resource Conservation of Artiodactyl Populations;
Helen Filmore for Gemulelekha: Building a Small Fire, An Interdisciplinary Research Project on Revitalizing Washoe Tribe Fire Use;
Elliot Helmer for Relational Resource Management: An Application of Indigenous Relational Ontologies to the Analysis of a Southern Northwest Coast Shell Midden; and
Brian Holquin for The Chumash and a Changing Environment: An Archaeogenomic and Geochemical Analysis of Diet, Mobility, and Social Structure on the Northern Channel Islands and Santa Barbara Coast, California.
2022 awards totaling $57,140 went to:
Abby Baka for Exploring Human Responses to the Pleistocene-Holocene Transition on the Colorado Plateau;
Jonathan Cordero for Ethnohistory of the Yelamu;
Jeremy McFarland for Radiocarbon Dating of Legacy Museum Collections and Selective Field Sampling from the King Range National Conservation Area to Assess Changes in Human Occupation, Subsistence,and Trade in Northwestern California;
AnnMarie Medin for Cultural Connections: Elem Pomo Dance Demonstration at the SCA Banquet;
Jessica Morales for Evaluating the Dog as a Hunting Tool in Prehistoric Alta and Baja California;
Lee Panich and Gustavo Flores for Native Freedom and the Collapse of the Missions in the Southern San Francisco Bay Area; and
Juliana Wilder for Prehistoric Land Use and Mobility in Hermit Valley, Alpine County, California.