Title: College of Arts
1College of Arts Sciences and Integrative
Studies Program Distinguished Lecture
SeriesPresents
- Dr. Alan Kolata, PhD, Harvard 1978, Neukom
family professor of anthropology and of social
sciences, chair of the department of anthropology
at the University of Chicago. Dr. Kolata leads
ongoing interdisciplinary research projects
studying human-environment interactions over the
past 3000 years in the lake Titicaca basin of
Bolivia and on the north coast of Peru. The
project in Bolivia has rehabilitated Precolonial
Andean agricultural methods for the benefit of
contemporary populations and holds implications
for the development of sustainable agriculture in
the region. Recent research interests include
comparative work on agroecological systems and
human-environment interactions in Bolivia, Peru,
and Thailand.
From Macchu Picchu and Tiahuanaco
Past as Prologue, The Role of Indigenous
Knowledge Systems in the Developing World
November 6, 2002 - 600 p.m.
Engbretson Hall Governors State University
Selected Publications Valley of the Spirits. New
York John Wiley Sons. 1996 Tiwanaku and Its
Hinterland Archaeological and Paleoecological
Investigations of an Andean Civilization. Volume
I Agroecology. Washington, DC Smithsonian
Institution Press.In G. Bawden R. Reycraft,
eds., Environmental Disaster and the Archeology
of Human Response. Univ. of New Mexico Press,
163-178. 2002 Tiwanaku and Its Hinterland
Archaeological and Paleoecological Investigations
of an Andean Civilization. Volume II Urban and
Rural Archaeology. Washington, DC Smithsonian
Institution Press.