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Brian M. Wood
Department of Anthropology
Harvard University
11 Divinity Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02138
(617) 388-2394
bmwood@fas.harvard.edu
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Education
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Harvard University, Department of Anthropology: PhD
candidate in Biological Anthropology, 2004 - present.
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Ph.D. research: Food production and sharing among
Hadza hunter-gatherers. Research interests include behavioral ecology
and evolution of primates and humans, hunter-gatherers, spatial
analysis, computer modeling, and ethnoarchaeology. Advised by Frank Marlowe, Richard
Wrangham, and Marc Hauser.
Visiting PhD Student, University of Copenhagen Department of
Anthropology January 2008 - August 2008.
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California Polytechnic State University,
San Luis Obispo, Department of Computer
Science: M.S. with distinction, Spring 2004.
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M.S. Thesis: "Energetic Analyst: Software for the
visualization and analysis of pedestrian travel over three dimensional
terrain, and its anthropological applications". Advised by Zoë Wood.
Coursework included mathematics, programming languages, software
engineering, artificial intelligence, computer graphics, theory of
computing, algorithms, operating systems, and distributed computing.
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University
of California,
Davis, Department of Anthropology,
B.A. with high honors, Spring 1999.
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B.A. Thesis title: "Prehistoric Exploitation of
the Annadel Obsidian Quarry". Advised by Robert
L. Bettinger. Coursework and research focused on the behavioral
ecology and archaeology of hunter-gatherers. Advised by Monique
Borgerhoff Mulder in research on subsistence transitions amoung
Sukuma agropastoralists.
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University
of New Mexico,
Department of Anthropology,
visiting student, Fall 1998.
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Human Evolutionary Ecology field school among the
Ache forager/horticulturalists of Paraguay. Training in
ethnographic data collection methods and research design, advised by Kim Hill.
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Fieldwork
Experience
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Behavioral Ecology of Hadza
Foragers
Frank Marlowe, dir.
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Fieldwork
and ethnographic data collection. Research focuses on food sharing, men
and women's time allocation, foraging goals, and ethnoarchaeology.
2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 (18 months).
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Coastal
Chumash Archaeology
Terry L.
Jones, dir.
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Helped manage excavations of CA-SLO-9, a coastal
Chumash archaeological site threatened by erosion.
April – June 2004.
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Contract
Archaeology
Far Western Anthropological Research Group, Holman and Associates,
William Self and Associates, US Forest Service, Pacific Legacy, Inc.
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Numerous archaeological excavations and surveys
throughout California and Nevada.
Laboratory work included management of artifact
collections, documentation of archaeological sites, and contributions
to reports in the form of technical writing, editing, and the
generation of maps and artifact illustrations.
July 1997 - September 2001.
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Human
Evolutionary Ecology of Ache Foragers
Kim Hill and Magdalena Hurtado, dirs.
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Human Evolutionary Ecology field school in the
Ache village
of Arroyo Bandera
and surrounding Mbaracayu Reserve.
January - May 1998
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UC
Davis Archaeological Field School in Eastern
California.
Brian
Ramos and Mark Giambastiani, dirs.
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Survey and excavation of the Truman/Queen obsidian
quarry and excavation of open air and rock shelter sites in the
Volcanic Tablelands.
Summer 1996
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Center
for American
Archaeology Young Scholars
Field School
Jane
Buikstra, dir.
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Excavation of a Late Woodland village and analysis
of archaeobotanical remains.
Summer 1992
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Other Professional Experience
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GIS Analyst, System Administrator, and
Programmer
1. Harvard University Anthropology Department,
Biological Wing. Supervisors: Cheryl Knott and Frank Marlowe (November
2004 - January 2006).
2. Cal
Poly University Center
for Teacher Education. Supervisor: Elaine Chin (September 2002 – June
2004).
3. Cal Poly Geographic Information Systems
Technology Lab, Landscape Architecture Department Supervisor: Walt
Bremer (July 2002 – July 2003).
4. Cal Poly Kennedy Library. Supervisor: Sariya
Talip Clay (April 2002 – June 2004).
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Publications
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(2007) Mallol, Carolina,
Marlowe, F., Wood, B.,
Porter, C., and Bar-Yosef, O. "Earth, Wind, and Fire:
Archeological
signals of Hadza fires". Journal of Archaeological Science
(2006) Wood, Brian and Wood, Z. "Energetically optimal travel across
terrain: visualizations and a new metric of geographic distance with
archaeological applications" Proceedings of SPIE Electronic
Imaging, San Jose, January 2006
(2006) Wood, Brian. "Prestige or provisioning? A
test of foraging goals among the Hadza" Current Anthropology
47(2):383-387.
(2000) Wood, Brian, and Hill, K. "A test of the ‘showing-off' hypothesis
with Ache hunters" Current Anthropology 41(1):124-125.
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Conference Papers
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(2007) Wood, B.
and Marlowe, F. "Do Hadza children benefit from the
father's foraging?"
The Father Effect Symposium, Human Behavior
and Evolution Society Meetings.
(2007)
Wood, B. "Food sharing in a population of
hunter-gatherers: are men providing public goods?"
Invited lecture, University of Copenhagen, Department of Economics,
Workshop in Experimental and Behavioral Economics.
(2007) Marlowe,
F., and Wood, B. "The Hadza male's dilemma: Good father
or Good Citizen?" Paternal Care Symposium, American
Association of Physical Anthropology Meetings.
(2005) Wood, Brian "Hadza foraging goals". 4th
annual meetings of the New England Biological Anthropology Society,
March 19, 2005.
(2004) Jones, Terry, Hylkema, M., Wood, B., and
Barrios, A. “Colonization, culture, and chaos on the central California
coast” 34th annual
meetings of the Society for California Archaeology, April 20, 2004.
(2003) Wood, Brian, Chin, E., and Taylor, A.
“Analyzing alternative teacher certification programs with GIS”.
3rd annual ESRI Education User Conference, San Diego, California,
July 7, 2003.
(2000) Wood, Brian. “Prehistoric exploitation of
the Annadel obsidian quarry”. 30th annual meetings of the Society for
California Archaeology, April 21, 2000.
(1999) Wood, Brian. “Why men hunt: testing the
‘Showing Off' hypothesis” Undergraduate Research Conference, UC Davis.
April 24, 1999.
(1998) Wood, Brian. “Ache material culture”
Occasional speakers series, Far Western Anthropological Research Group.
July 23, 1998.
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Grants, Fellowships, and Awards
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2007 Harvard Graduate Student Council Conference
Grant.
2007 Harvard Department of Anthropology Advanced
Studies Support.
2006 L.S.B. Leakey Foundation Predoctoral Research
Grant.
2006 Wenner Gren Foundation Research Grant.
2005 Jennifer Oppenheimer Graduate Grant Committee
on African Studies, Harvard
University.
2001-2004 National Science
Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.
1999 President's Fulmore
Scholarship, UC Davis.
1998 President's Fulmore
Scholarship, UC Davis.
1998 IGCC Undergraduate Research
Award, UC Davis.
1996 President's Undergraduate
Fellowship Grant, UC Davis.
1996 Edward Frank Kraft Scholarship
Prize for freshmen, UC Davis.
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Professional Organizations
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American Anthropological Association
Human Behavior and Evolution Society
Evolutionary Anthropology Society
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Other
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Student Board Representative, Evolutionary
Anthropology Society 2006, 2007
Webmaster, Evolutionary Anthropology Society 2007
- present. www.evanthsoc.org
Volunteer, Cultural Survival, 2004
Photograph 'Hadza men from Gola hunting zebra'
featured in Science June
29th, 2007
Photograph 'Mahia being cut as medicine after
falling out of a Baobab tree' featured in San Diego Museum of Man
Exhibit "Body Ornamentation: Artistic Representations of Self" May 12,
2006 - March 27, 2007
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Languages
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Native English, advanced Swahili, intermediate
Danish, intermediate Spanish.
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Programming
Languages
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C/C++, C#, Java, PHP, HTML,
Javascript,
Visual Basic, Perl
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