The University of Louisiana at Monroe

 

Diana M. Greenlee

Ph.D.

University of Washington

2002

 

Poverty Point State Historic Site

PO Box 276

Epps LA 71237

318.926.3314

greenlee@ulm.edu

 

Dr. Diana M. Greenlee

Poverty Point Station Archaeologist

Adjunct Assistant Professor of Geosciences

Research

Human diet and subsistence; palaeoenvironments; bone chemistry and microstructure; maize-based farming systems; evolutionary theory; prehistory of eastern North America

Selected Publications & Presentations

2007     Current Efforts on Behalf of Poverty Point State Historic Site:  Getting on the World Heritage List.  Paper presented at the 2007 Louisiana Preservation Conference, Monroe, LA.

2006     Dietary Variation and Prehistoric Maize Farming in the Middle Ohio Valley. In Histories of Maize: Multidisciplinary Approaches to the Prehistory, Linguistics, Biogeography, Domestication, and Evolution of Maize, edited by John Staller, Robert Tykot and Bruce Benz, pp. 215-233.  Academic Press, Boston.

2003     Dietary Impacts of Intraspecific Competition in Ohio Valley Prehistory.  Poster presented at the 68th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Milwaukee, WI.

2002     Recent Surface Investigations at Tchula Lake (20-O-9):  Tchula Lake, Deasonville, and Lower Mississippi Valley Prehistory.  Paper presented at the 59th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Biloxi, MS.  (3rd author with R. C. Dunnell and J. K. Feathers)

2001     Dietary Variation and Village Settlement in the Ohio Valley.  In Posing Questions for a Scientific Archaeology, edited by T. L. Hunt, C. P. Lipo and S. L. Sterling, pp. 217-250.  Bergin & Garvey, Westport, CT.

1999     Late Woodland Period “Waste” Reduction in the Ohio River Valley.  Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 18:376-395.  (junior author with R. C. Dunnell)

1998     Prehistoric Diet in the Central Mississippi River Valley.  In Changing Perspectives on the Archaeology of the Central Mississippi Valley, edited by M. J. O'Brien and R. C. Dunnell, pp. 299-324.  University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.


 

 

 

http://www.ulm.edu/