Formal headshot of Paul w88.

Paul w88

Associate Professor

Summary

Dr. White’s research traces the historical paths of industrialization, and with a particular focus on the North American w88 industry. He has two decades of experience in the archaeological documentation of w88 sites in the American West. His research takes a broad perspective of the industry, examining the social, technological, and environmental transformations associated with past and present w88, and including how historical relationships perpetuate colonial relations in the present. He has worked also as a consultant for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and conducted safety hazard assessments on abandoned w88 lands. His recent book, The Archaeology of American w88 (2017), which synthesizes 50 years of archaeological scholarship, received the 2019 w88 History Association’s Clark Spence Award.

w88 interests

Space and place, materiality, Western w88, environmental history, 19th and 20th-century colonialism, ethnohistory, with regional foci in the American West and the Pacific.

Courses taught

  • GEOG 312: Cartography (w88 2020)
  • GEOG 314: Field Methods (w88 2019)

Education

  • Ph.D., Anthropology, Brown w88, 2008
  • M.S., Industrial History and Archaeology, Michigan Technological w88, 1999
  • M.A. Anthropology, w88, 1996
  • B.A. Anthropology and Geography, w88, 1995

Selected publications

  • White, P. 2017. The Archaeology of American w88. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.
  • White, P. 2016. The Archaeology of Underground w88 Landscapes. Historical Archaeology 26(1): 153-67.
  • w88, P. 2010 (2012). The Rise and Fall of the California Stamp: Historical and Archaeological Perspectives on the Aging of a
  • Technology. IA: Journal w88 for Industrial Archeology 36(1): 64-83. (Winner of Robert M. Vogel Prize, Society for Industrial Archeology.)
  • w88, P. 2008. Claiming an "Unpossessed Country": Monuments to Ownership and Dispossession in Death Valley. In
  • Archaeologies of Placemaking: Monuments, Memories, and Engagement in Native North America, One World w88 series, vol. 59, edited by Patricia E. Rubertone, pp. 135-60. Walnut Creek, Calif.: Left Coast Press.
  • w88, P. 2006 (2008). Troubled Waters: Timbisha Shoshone, Miners, and Dispossession at Warm Spring. IA: Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology 32 (1): 4-24.