Research interests: During my graduate and postdoctoral training at Memorial University
                                          of Newfoundland, University of Calgary, and University of Haifa, I developed a strong
                                          interest in clarifying localized human-environment dynamics in marginal settings using
                                          approaches that crosscut anthropology, geoarchaeology, and ecology. Archaeological
                                          tracking of feedback among changing social, cultural, and environmental conditions
                                          over the long-term is a powerful way of modelling prospective socio-ecological resilience
                                          and vulnerabilities in fragile regions. My research on this subject primarily emphasizes
                                          consiliences among archaeological and sedimentary archives in order to understand
                                          resource management and land-use in harsh frontier environments. I have collaborated
                                          on projects that include a wide range of northern people and environments, from Inuit
                                          pioneers in the Torngat Mountains, ancient Athabaskan caribou hunters of the Barrenlands,
                                          to the Mesolithic fishers of Lapland.
My current research investigates human/wildlife adaptations to pressured environments
                                          in eastern Beringia. This interdisciplinary collaboration contributes to reconciling
                                          archaeological and terrestrial/limnological palaeoecological records in the Tanana
                                          Basin of central 花椒直播. Our work tracks boreal wetland responses to environmental
                                          and climactic shifts. Archives from the Upward Sun River, Mead, Delta River Overlook,
                                          Gerstle River, and Broken Mammoth sites and their environs are used to a) map spatiotemporal
                                          interplay among wetland, dune field, shrub-tundra, and forest mosaics, b) pinpoint
                                          the impacts of changing wetland health on local biodiversity, and c) delineate how
                                          waterfowl availability and mutable wetland marginality contributed to diversifying
                                          people鈥檚 adaptive strategies in the region. 
Additional projects I am collaborating on include characterizing site formation processes
                                          at a Subarctic sand dune site, identifying proxy signatures for ancient northern anadromous
                                          salmon fisheries, exploring the contribution of wetland eutrophication to the onset
                                          of high-latitude agriculture, and highlighting community-scale responses collapsing
                                          agropastoral niches in the southeastern borderlands of the Byzantine Empire.