Go to USC home page USC Logo USC: COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES: DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES | OUTLOOK | BLACKBOARD

ANTHROPOLOGY HOME PAGE

FACULTY

STAFF INFORMATION

AFFILIATED ANTHROPOLOGISTS


GRADUATE STUDENTS


GRADUATE PROGRAM

CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM

ANTHROPOLOGY COURSES

STUDENT RESEARCH FUNDING AND GRANTS

AWARDS

ALUMNI-STAY IN TOUCH!

EVENTS CALENDAR

COLLOQUIA

CONFERENCES

ORGANIZATIONS AND CLUBS

HELPFUL UNIVERSITY SITES

RELATED DEPARTMENTS

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

INTERESTING WEB SITES

DEPARTMENT EVENTS

FIELD SCHOOL OPPORTUNITIES
USC  THIS SITE


College of Arts and Sciences
DWIGHT JONES
EDUCATION INFO:
2006- B.A. Anthropology from University of South Carolina

AREAS OF SPECIALIZATION:
Archaeology
Geographic Information Systems

AREAS OF INTEREST:
Mississippian settlement patterns and landscape; Iconography; Archaeology and Law; Native American Identity; Archaeoastronomy; Lithic Analysis; Geoarchaeology; Technology and Archaeology

M.A. THESIS TOPIC:
Warren K. Moorehead completed three seasons of excavation at Etowah, Georgia in 1927.  His excavations focused on the burial mound (Mound C) and the surrounding village areas, as well as a few excursions into the surrounding countryside.  My focus is on the excavations Moorehead did on Mound C.  Moorehead used a five foot grid to map his excavations, however Moorehead would lay his grid at the beginning of the season only to completely remove his grid at the end of the season.  This process has led archaeologists to believe that while internally the season may be spatially accurate, between seasons there appears to be internal inconsistencies in his spatial data.  My thesis involves using Moorehead’s field notes to not only enter his information into a geodatabase, but digitize his hand-drawn maps and look for overlaying features in an effort to re-align his three seasons to be more spatially accurate.  The outcome of this thesis will be a GIS database of Moorehead’s field notes as well as a digitized, internally consistent map of his excavations.  The resulting map will be used to integrate Moorehead’s data into the two other Mound C excavations (Thomas, 1896; Larsen 1962-73) to gain a better understanding of the mortuary data excavated from Mound C.

CONFERENCES ATTENDED:
South Carolina Anthropology Student Conference 2005-2007
  • Student coordinator and organizer 2006-2009
Southeastern Archaeological Conference 2008.

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS:
Anthropology Graduate Organization for Research, Action, and Ethics (AGORAE)
  • Founding member
  • Secretary 2007-2009
Southeastern Archaeological Conference (SEAC)
Golden Key International Honor Society

EMAIL:
JONESDL3@mailbox.sc.edu

RETURN TO TOP
USC LINKS: DIRECTORY MAP EVENTS VIP
SITE INFORMATION