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William Workman

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William Workman

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Professor of Anthropology

afwbw@uaa.alaska.edu

Ph.D. University of Wisconsin-Madison

M.A. University of Wisconsin-Madison

B.A. University of Wisconsin-Madison

He began his northern 1962 as a crew member on the U.W.'s Aleut-Konyag Prehistory and Ecology project excavation at Three Saints Bay on Kodiak Island. He joined the faculty of Alaska Methodist (now Alaska Pacific) University in 1969. In 1977 he accepted a position at the University of Alaska Anchorage, where he currently is Professor of Anthropology. Since 1962 Workman has participated in, directed or co-directed archaeological field projects in the Cook Inlet region, on Kodiak Island, the Copper River Basin and the southern Yukon Territory of Canada, spending slightly over two and one half of the last 35 years in the field. He has authored or co-authored some twenty scientific papers and one published monograph on the culture history of the Aishihik-Kluane area, southwest Yukon Territory of Canada as well as several popular articles and numerous reviews, unpublished reports and papers delivered at professional meetings. Academic honors include membership in Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Beta Kappa, and Sigma Xi as well as two National Science Foundation graduate fellowships. He has also held an exchange fellowship from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science and has been a visiting scientist with the Archaeological Survey of Canada and a visiting professor of anthropology at the University of Oregon. Other professional activities include service as contributing editor (far north) for the Review of Archaeology, editor for current research (far north) for American Antiquity and associate editorships for Arctic Anthropology and the Anthropological Papers of .the University of Alaska. Workman has served several terms on the board of directors of the Alaska Anthropological Association and was president of that organization in 1976-77. His major research interests concern the prehistory and traditional cultures of arctic and subarctic North America and Eurasia, especially those of northwestern North America and northeastern Asia, with a particular interest in the origins and development of the seal hunting cultures about the North Pacific Ocean. 

Arctic Anthropology Vol. 35, No. 1, 1998

Arctic Anthropology Vol. 35, No. 1, 1998

Arctic Anthropology is an international journal devoted to the study of Old and New World northern cultures and peoples. Archaeology, ethnology, physical anthropology, and related disciplines are represented, with emphasis on: studies of specific cultures of the arctic.  This issue features Dr. Douglas Veltre, Dr. David Yesner, and Dr. William Workman from UAA's Anthropology Department.

Page Updated: 3/8/07  By:  Josh Wilson
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