Difference between revisions of "Kelsey Lowe"

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{{Infobox academic
 
{{Infobox academic
 
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| name              = [[has name::Kelsey Lowe]]
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| name              = [[has name::Kelsey M. Lowe]]
 
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| image              = [[File:Boulia_NMP_camp_Kelsey_with_Bartington_2.JPG|thumb|Kelsey]]
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| image              = [[File:Boulia_NMP_camp_Kelsey_with_Bartington_2.JPG|thumb|Kelsey Lowe with Bartington-601 Gradiometer at Boulia Native Mounted Police Camp, Australia]]
 
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| influenced        = <!--Must be referenced from a third party source-->
 
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| awards            = <!--Notable national level awards only-->
 
| awards            = <!--Notable national level awards only-->
| website            = [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kelsey-lowe-01230413 LinkedIn], [http://mq.academia.edu/KelseyLowe Academic.edu], [https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Kelsey_Lowe ResearchGate], [http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0857-2877 ORCID]  
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| website            = [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kelsey-lowe-01230413 LinkedIn], [http://mq.academia.edu/KelseyLowe Academia], [https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Kelsey_Lowe ResearchGate], [http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0857-2877 ORCID], [https://scholar.google.com.au/citations?hl=en&user=6IPqcwQAAAAJ Google Scholar]]
 
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[[Kelsey Lowe]] is an interdisciplinary researcher in landscape and environmental archaeology. She is currently an Australian Research Council (ARC) Senior Research Associate at the [[Wikipedia:University of Southern Queensland|University of Southern Queensland]] working with the Archaeology of the Native Mounted Police Project [[https://archaeologyonthefrontier.com Archaeology on the Frontier]]. She is also an [[https://social-science.uq.edu.au/profile/315/kelsey-lowe Honorary Research Fellow] at the University of Queensland and a Senior Heritage Advisor at [[http://extent.com.au Extent]]. Kelsey has both national and international experience working on projects in the Northern Plains and Southeastern regions of the US, in addition to projects in Australia, Bolivia, Cyprus, Greece, Myanmar and Turkey.  
 
[[Kelsey Lowe]] is an interdisciplinary researcher in landscape and environmental archaeology. She is currently an Australian Research Council (ARC) Senior Research Associate at the [[Wikipedia:University of Southern Queensland|University of Southern Queensland]] working with the Archaeology of the Native Mounted Police Project [[https://archaeologyonthefrontier.com Archaeology on the Frontier]]. She is also an [[https://social-science.uq.edu.au/profile/315/kelsey-lowe Honorary Research Fellow] at the University of Queensland and a Senior Heritage Advisor at [[http://extent.com.au Extent]]. Kelsey has both national and international experience working on projects in the Northern Plains and Southeastern regions of the US, in addition to projects in Australia, Bolivia, Cyprus, Greece, Myanmar and Turkey.  
  
= Early Life and Education =
+
= Education =
Kelsey has over 17 years experience in archaeology, and specialises in archaeological geophysics, geoarchaeology and geographic information systems (GIS). She developed an interest in these methods early in her career and completed a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology from [[Wikipedia:Minnesota State University Moorhead|Minnesota State University Moorhead]] and a minor in Soil Science from [[Wikipedia:North Dakota State University|North Dakota State University]] in 2003. She continued to utilise her interdisciplinary skills at the [[Wikipedia:University of Mississippi|University of Mississppi]] where she completed a Master of Arts in Anthropology in 2005. After completing her Masters, Kelsey began a career in cultural resource management (CRM) in the southeastern USA where she developed skills relating to the management, preservation and protection of heritage sites with an emphasis on public outreach and community engagement. After working in CRM for six years, she went back to university and completed a doctorate in Archaeology from the [[Wikipedia:University of Queensland|University of Queensland]] in 2014. Collectively, Kelsey's PhD thesis examined the role of geophysical technologies to address fundamental issues in Australian archaeology with an emphasis on analysing sediment accumulation processes in rockshelters as a means of investigating early colonisation. Using magnetic susceptibility and ground-penetrating radar (GPR), she resolved questions about the onset of human occupation and its relationship to changing climatic regimes, how to identify burials in a geologically complex deposit and determine that shell matrix sites were repeatedly occupied.
+
Kelsey has over 17 years experience in archaeology and specialises in archaeological geophysics, geoarchaeology and geographic information systems (GIS). She developed an interest in these methods early in her career and completed a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology from [[Wikipedia:Minnesota State University Moorhead|Minnesota State University Moorhead]] and a minor in Soil Science from [[Wikipedia:North Dakota State University|North Dakota State University]] in 2003. She continued to utilise her interdisciplinary skills at the [[Wikipedia:University of Mississippi|University of Mississppi]] where she completed a Master of Arts in Anthropology in 2005. After completing her Masters, Kelsey began a career in [[Wikipedia:cultural resource management|cultrual resource management]] (CRM) in the southeastern USA where she developed skills relating to the management, preservation and protection of heritage sites with an emphasis on public outreach and community engagement. After working in CRM for six years, she went back to university and completed a doctorate in Archaeology from the [[Wikipedia:University of Queensland|University of Queensland]] in 2014. Collectively, Kelsey's PhD thesis examined the role of geophysical technologies to address fundamental issues in Australian archaeology with an emphasis on analysing sediment accumulation processes in rockshelters as a means of investigating early colonisation. Using [[Wikipedia:magnetic susceptibility|magnetic susceptibility]] and [[Wikipedia:ground-penetrating radar|ground-penetrating radar]] (GPR), she resolved questions about the onset of human occupation and its relationship to changing climatic regimes, how to identify burials in a geologically complex deposit and determine that shell matrix sites were repeatedly occupied.
  
 
= Research Focus =
 
= Research Focus =
Kelsey's interdisciplinary background, particularly with near-surface geophysics, geoarchaeology and environmental magnetism, provides her with a unique perspective at which to examine archaeological landscapes and how these were modified by both natural and cultural processes. Her primary research centres on the interplay of satellite remote sensing, archaeological geophysics, GIS and geoarchaeology to answer questions about human behaviour and their movement across the landscape. In Australia, she focuses on understanding the nature and persistence of initial human occupation in northern Australian sites with an emphasis on site formation processes. This falls within the paradigms associated with human evolution/dispersals models, which are critical in understanding Australia's cultural history. Her expertise in geoarchaeology and mineral magnetics, has also allowed her to work on another important Australian site that falls within models of human dispersal (Warratyi) and Holocene settlement (Bentinck and Lizard Island).  
+
Kelsey's interdisciplinary background, particularly with [[Wikipedia:near-surface geophysics|near-surface geophysics]], [[Wikipedia:geoarchaeology|geoarchaeology]] and [[Wikipedia:environmental magnetism|environmental magnetism]], provides her with a unique perspective at which to examine archaeological landscapes and how these were modified by both natural and cultural processes. Her primary research centres on the interplay of satellite [[Wikipedia:remote sensing|remote sensing]], archaeological geophysics, [[Wikipedia:geographic information system|geographic information system]] (GIS) and geoarchaeology to answer questions about human behaviour and their movement across the landscape. In Australia, she focuses on understanding the nature and persistence of initial human occupation in northern Australian sites with an emphasis on site formation processes. This falls within the paradigms associated with human evolution/dispersals models, which are critical in understanding Australia's cultural history. Her expertise in geoarchaeology and mineral magnetics has also allowed her to work on another important Australian site that falls within models of human dispersal (Warratyi) and Holocene settlement (Bentinck and Lizard Island).  
  
Internationally, Kelsey's focus is on developing new methodologies (archaeological geophysics, GIS and 3D laser scanning) as a better way to protect and preserve sites susceptible to destruction through urban development and to inform sustainable approaches to living and heritage management in Yangon, Myanmar. She is also working using such methodologies to understand urbanisation and settlement layouts of Middle Bronze Age sites in Cyprus, Turkey and Malta.  
+
Internationally, Kelsey's focus is on developing new methodologies (archaeological geophysics, GIS and 3D laser scanning) as a better way to protect and preserve sites susceptible to destruction through urban development and to inform sustainable approaches to living and heritage management in [[Wikipedia:Yangon|Yangon]], Myanmar. She is also working using such methodologies to understand urbanisation and settlement layouts of Middle Bronze Age sites in Cyprus, Turkey and Malta.
  
 
= Current Projects =
 
= Current Projects =
 
=== Australian Focus ===
 
=== Australian Focus ===
#The Archaeology of the Native Mounted Police (NMP), Queensland, University of Southern Queensland, Flinders University, University of Notre Dame [[https://archaeologyonthefrontier.com Archaeology on the Frontier]]
+
#The Archaeology of the [[Wikipedia:Australian native police|Australian native police]] (NMP), Queensland, University of Southern Queensland, Flinders University, University of Notre Dame [[https://archaeologyonthefrontier.com Archaeology on the Frontier]]
 
#Madjebebe Rockshelter, North Australia, University of Queensland
 
#Madjebebe Rockshelter, North Australia, University of Queensland
 
#Gledswood Shelter 1, North Australia
 
#Gledswood Shelter 1, North Australia
 
#Bentinck Island, Gulf of Carpentaria, James Cook University
 
#Bentinck Island, Gulf of Carpentaria, James Cook University
#Murrey River Basin Mounds, New South Wales
+
#Murrey River Basin Mounds, New South Wales [[File:IMG_6730.JPG|336px|right|thumb|Eain Taw Yar Pagoda, Yangon, Myanmar]]
 
#Warratyi Rockshelter, South Australia, Adelaide University
 
#Warratyi Rockshelter, South Australia, Adelaide University
 
#Baker's Flat Historic Irish Settlement, South Australia, Flinders University
 
#Baker's Flat Historic Irish Settlement, South Australia, Flinders University
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=== International Focus ===
 
=== International Focus ===
#Yangon Urban Archaeology Project, Yangon, Myanmar (Co-Director)
+
#[[Yangon Urban Archaeology Project]], Yangon, Myanmar (Co-Director)
 
#Alampra Archaeological Mission Project (AAMP) for Alampra, Cyprus (Deputy Director)
 
#Alampra Archaeological Mission Project (AAMP) for Alampra, Cyprus (Deputy Director)
#Boncuklu and Kültepe-Kanesh Projects, Turkey, University of Queensland,  [[http://boncuklu.org]]
+
#Boncuklu and Kültepe-Kanesh Projects, Turkey, University of Queensland,  [[http://boncuklu.org The Boncuklu Project]]
 
#Malta Archaeological Project, Malta
 
#Malta Archaeological Project, Malta
 
#Parchman Place Mounds, USA, University of Mississippi [[http://www.archaeologicalconservancy.org/parchman/]]
 
#Parchman Place Mounds, USA, University of Mississippi [[http://www.archaeologicalconservancy.org/parchman/]]
 
#Carson Mounds, USA [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carson_Mounds]]
 
#Carson Mounds, USA [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carson_Mounds]]
  
= Bibliography =
+
= Publications =
== Publications ==
+
 
# Twaddle, R. W., C. R. Sloss, K. M. Lowe, P. Moss, L. L. Mackenzie and S. Ulm. (2017). [[Short-term late Holocene dry season occupation and sandy mud flat focused foraging at Murdumurdu, Bentinck Island, Gulf of Carpentaria]]. Queensland Archaeological Research 20: 9–30, doi: 10.25120/qar.20.2017.3584. [https://journals.jcu.edu.au/qar/article/view/3588]
 
# Twaddle, R. W., C. R. Sloss, K. M. Lowe, P. Moss, L. L. Mackenzie and S. Ulm. (2017). [[Short-term late Holocene dry season occupation and sandy mud flat focused foraging at Murdumurdu, Bentinck Island, Gulf of Carpentaria]]. Queensland Archaeological Research 20: 9–30, doi: 10.25120/qar.20.2017.3584. [https://journals.jcu.edu.au/qar/article/view/3588]
 
# Wallis, L. A., I. Davidson, H. Burke, S. Mitchell, B. Barker, L. Hatte, N. Cole and K. M. Lowe. (2017). [[Aboriginal stone huts from the Georgina River, southwest Queensland]], Queensland Archaeological Research 20: 1–8, doi 10.25120/qar.20.2017.3584. [https://journals.jcu.edu.au/qar/article/view/3584]
 
# Wallis, L. A., I. Davidson, H. Burke, S. Mitchell, B. Barker, L. Hatte, N. Cole and K. M. Lowe. (2017). [[Aboriginal stone huts from the Georgina River, southwest Queensland]], Queensland Archaeological Research 20: 1–8, doi 10.25120/qar.20.2017.3584. [https://journals.jcu.edu.au/qar/article/view/3584]

Latest revision as of 22:15, 10 September 2017


       Kelsey M. Lowe
Kelsey Lowe with Bartington-601 Gradiometer at Boulia Native Mounted Police Camp, Australia
         Occupation:
        Senior Research Associate, Honorary Research Fellow and Senior Heritage Advisor
         Title:
        Doctor of Philosophy
         Professional Membership:
        {{{member}}}
         Known For:
        Archaeological Geophysics, Geoarchaeology, GIS
         Discipline:
        Archaeology, Archaeological Prospection, Geoarchaeology
         Sub Discipline:
        Remote Sensing, Geographic Information Systems, Geosciences, Culture Heritage Management, Environmental Magnetism
         Workplaces:
        University of Southern Queensland, University of Queensland
         Education:
        University of Queensland, University of Mississippi, Minnesota State University Moorhead
         Doctoral Advisor:
        Jamie Shulmeister
         Email:
        {{{email}}}
         Web Links:
        LinkedIn, Academia, ResearchGate, ORCID, Google Scholar]
         ORCID:
        {{{orcid}}}
       
Kelsey M. Lowe 's Network Links

Kelsey Lowe is an interdisciplinary researcher in landscape and environmental archaeology. She is currently an Australian Research Council (ARC) Senior Research Associate at the University of Southern Queensland working with the Archaeology of the Native Mounted Police Project [Archaeology on the Frontier]. She is also an [Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Queensland and a Senior Heritage Advisor at [Extent]. Kelsey has both national and international experience working on projects in the Northern Plains and Southeastern regions of the US, in addition to projects in Australia, Bolivia, Cyprus, Greece, Myanmar and Turkey.

Education

Kelsey has over 17 years experience in archaeology and specialises in archaeological geophysics, geoarchaeology and geographic information systems (GIS). She developed an interest in these methods early in her career and completed a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology from Minnesota State University Moorhead and a minor in Soil Science from North Dakota State University in 2003. She continued to utilise her interdisciplinary skills at the University of Mississppi where she completed a Master of Arts in Anthropology in 2005. After completing her Masters, Kelsey began a career in cultrual resource management (CRM) in the southeastern USA where she developed skills relating to the management, preservation and protection of heritage sites with an emphasis on public outreach and community engagement. After working in CRM for six years, she went back to university and completed a doctorate in Archaeology from the University of Queensland in 2014. Collectively, Kelsey's PhD thesis examined the role of geophysical technologies to address fundamental issues in Australian archaeology with an emphasis on analysing sediment accumulation processes in rockshelters as a means of investigating early colonisation. Using magnetic susceptibility and ground-penetrating radar (GPR), she resolved questions about the onset of human occupation and its relationship to changing climatic regimes, how to identify burials in a geologically complex deposit and determine that shell matrix sites were repeatedly occupied.

Research Focus

Kelsey's interdisciplinary background, particularly with near-surface geophysics, geoarchaeology and environmental magnetism, provides her with a unique perspective at which to examine archaeological landscapes and how these were modified by both natural and cultural processes. Her primary research centres on the interplay of satellite remote sensing, archaeological geophysics, geographic information system (GIS) and geoarchaeology to answer questions about human behaviour and their movement across the landscape. In Australia, she focuses on understanding the nature and persistence of initial human occupation in northern Australian sites with an emphasis on site formation processes. This falls within the paradigms associated with human evolution/dispersals models, which are critical in understanding Australia's cultural history. Her expertise in geoarchaeology and mineral magnetics has also allowed her to work on another important Australian site that falls within models of human dispersal (Warratyi) and Holocene settlement (Bentinck and Lizard Island).

Internationally, Kelsey's focus is on developing new methodologies (archaeological geophysics, GIS and 3D laser scanning) as a better way to protect and preserve sites susceptible to destruction through urban development and to inform sustainable approaches to living and heritage management in Yangon, Myanmar. She is also working using such methodologies to understand urbanisation and settlement layouts of Middle Bronze Age sites in Cyprus, Turkey and Malta.

Current Projects

Australian Focus

  1. The Archaeology of the Australian native police (NMP), Queensland, University of Southern Queensland, Flinders University, University of Notre Dame [Archaeology on the Frontier]
  2. Madjebebe Rockshelter, North Australia, University of Queensland
  3. Gledswood Shelter 1, North Australia
  4. Bentinck Island, Gulf of Carpentaria, James Cook University
  5. Murrey River Basin Mounds, New South Wales
    Eain Taw Yar Pagoda, Yangon, Myanmar
  6. Warratyi Rockshelter, South Australia, Adelaide University
  7. Baker's Flat Historic Irish Settlement, South Australia, Flinders University
  8. Willow Court Lunatic Asylum, Tasmania, Flinders University

International Focus

  1. Yangon Urban Archaeology Project, Yangon, Myanmar (Co-Director)
  2. Alampra Archaeological Mission Project (AAMP) for Alampra, Cyprus (Deputy Director)
  3. Boncuklu and Kültepe-Kanesh Projects, Turkey, University of Queensland, [The Boncuklu Project]
  4. Malta Archaeological Project, Malta
  5. Parchman Place Mounds, USA, University of Mississippi [[1]]
  6. Carson Mounds, USA [[2]]

Publications

  1. Twaddle, R. W., C. R. Sloss, K. M. Lowe, P. Moss, L. L. Mackenzie and S. Ulm. (2017). Short-term late Holocene dry season occupation and sandy mud flat focused foraging at Murdumurdu, Bentinck Island, Gulf of Carpentaria. Queensland Archaeological Research 20: 9–30, doi: 10.25120/qar.20.2017.3584. [3]
  2. Wallis, L. A., I. Davidson, H. Burke, S. Mitchell, B. Barker, L. Hatte, N. Cole and K. M. Lowe. (2017). Aboriginal stone huts from the Georgina River, southwest Queensland, Queensland Archaeological Research 20: 1–8, doi 10.25120/qar.20.2017.3584. [4]
  3. Clarkson, C., Z. Jacobs, B. Marwick, R. Fullagar, L. A. Wallis, M. Smith, R. G. Roberts, E. Hayes, K. M. Lowe, X. Carah, S. A. Florin, J. McNeil, L. J. Arnold, Q. Hua, J. Huntley, H. Brand, T. Manne, A. Fairbairn, J. Shulmeister, L. Lyle, M. Salina, M. Page, K. Connell, G. Park, K. Norman, T. Murphy and C. Pardoe. (2017). Human occupation of northern Australia by 65,000 years ago, Nature 547: 306–310, doi:10.1038/nature22968. [5]
  4. Lowe, K. M., A. S. Fogel and A. Sneddon. (2017). Archaeological geophysical survey of a Prehistoric Bronze Age site in Cyprus (Alambra Mouttes) – Applications and limitations, Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences: 1–19. doi: 10.1007/s12520-017-0508-3. [6]
  5. Lowe, K. M., S. M. Mentzer, L. A. Wallis and J. Shulmeister. (2016). A multi-proxy study of anthropogenic sedimentation and human occupation of Gledswood Shelter 1: Exploring an interior sandstone rockshelter in Northern Australia. Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences: 1–26, doi: 10.1007/s12520-016-0354-8. [7]
  6. Lowe, K. M., J. Shulmeister, J. M. Feinberg, T. Manne, L. A. Wallis and K. Welsh. (2016). Using soil magnetic properties to determine the onset of Pleistocene human settlement at Gledswood Shelter 1, northern Australia. Geoarchaeology 31: 211–228. [8]
  7. Clarkson, C., M. Smith, B. Marwick, R. Fullagar, L. A. Wallis, P. Faulkner, T. Manne, E. Hayes, R. G. Roberts, Z. Jacobs, X. Carah, K. M. Lowe, J. Matthews and S. A. Florin. (2015). The archaeology, chronology and stratigraphy of Madjedbebe (Malakununja II): A site in northern Australia with early occupation. Journal of Human Evolution 83: 46–64, doi: 10.1016/j.hevol.2015.03.014. [9]
  8. Lowe, K. M., L. A. Wallis, C. Pardoe, B. Marwick, C. Clarkson, T. Manne, M. Smith and R. Fullagar. (2014). Ground-penetrating radar and burial practices in western Arnhem Land, Australia. Archaeology in Oceania 49: 148–157. [10]
  9. Rosendahl, D., K. M. Lowe, L. A. Wallis and S. Ulm. (2014). Integrating geoarchaeology and magnetic susceptibility at three shell mounds: A pilot study from Mornington Island, Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia. Journal of Archaeological Science 49: 21–33. [11]
  10. Lowe, K.M., R.S. Fuller and A.M. Blank Maher. (2013). Moving forward: Post-Katrina archaeological investigations at the Oak Grove Site (22HR502). Mississippi Archaeology 43(2): 142–166.
  11. Mehta, J. M., K. M. Lowe, R. Stout-Evans and J. Connaway. (2012). Moving earth and holding water: Building monuments and reclaiming farmland at the Carson Mounds site, Coahoma County, Mississippi. Journal of Anthropology, Article ID 192923, doi:10.1155/2012/192923.
  12. Lowe, K. M. (2012). Review of geophysical applications in Australia archaeology. Australian Archaeology 74: 71–84. [12]
  13. Lowe, K. M. and A. S. Fogel. (2010). Understanding Northeastern Plains village sites through archaeological geophysics. Archaeological Prospection 17(4): 247–257. [13]
  14. Conyers, L. B., E. G. Errenwein, M. Grealy and K. M. Lowe. (2008). Electromagnetic conductivity mapping for site prediction in meandering river floodplains. Archaeological Prospection 15(2): 81–91. [14]
  15. Lowe, K. M. (2008). Down-hole susceptibility curve signatures at Parchman Place, Mississippi. Reviewed in A review of the role of magnetic susceptibility in archaeogeophysical studies in the USA: Recent developments and prospects by Rinita A. Dalan in Archaeological Prospection 15(1): 1–31. [15]
  16. Lowe, K.M. (2007). Evaluating paleochannels using interdisciplinary methods in the Yazoo Basin of Northwest Mississippi. (2007). In Digital Discovery: Exploring New Frontiers in Human Heritage. Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology, Proceedings of the 34th Conference. CD-ROM Vol. 1: 315–327.