Gordon Willey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gordon Randolph Willey (7 March 191328 April 2002) was an American archaeologist famous for his fieldwork in South and Central America as well as the southeastern United States.

Willey received his bachelors Degree in 1935 and his Masters Degree in 1936 from the University of Arizona in Anthropology. After completing his master’s studies at Arizona, Willey moved to Macon, Georgia and performed field work under Arthur R. Kelley.

While in Georgia, Willey, along with James A. Ford, helped implement and refine ceramic stratigraphy, a concept new to Georgia. Willey also worked at the historic site of Kasita. In 1938, Willey published an article entitled “Time Studies: Pottery and Trees in Georgia.” In the early part of 1939, Willey worked at the Lamar site near Macon and identified relationships between Lamar and the Swift Creek and Napier sites. In the fall of 1939, Willey entered Columbia and began his doctoral studies. After receiving his PhD, Willey worked as an anthropologist for the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C. and then went to teach at Harvard University.

He went on archaeological expeditions in Peru, Panama, Nicaragua, Belize and Honduras. He received numerous awards, and was well known as a new world archaeologist and theorist, particularly for his studies in the pattern of settlements of native societies. He also wrote many books including some in the archaeology of North America.

Perhaps his most significant work was the 1953 work Prehistoric Settlement Patterns in the Viru Valley, Peru which launched the new archaeological interest in settlement patterns. This first major study of settlement patterns was a great bolster to the New Archaeology, associated with Lewis Binford among others because it focused not on the pottery chronologies of urban areas, but rather on the function of smaller satellite settlements and ceramic scatters across a landscape. This method continues in archaeology to this day.








[edit] Further reading

  • Daniel, Glyn Edmund; Chippindale, Christopher. The Pastmasters: Eleven Modern Pioneers of Archaeology: V. Gordon Childe, Stuart Piggott, Charles Phillips, Christopher Hawkes, Seton Lloyd, Robert J. Braidwood, Gordon R. Willey, C.J. Becker, Sigfried J. De Laet, J. Desmond Clark, D.J. Mulvaney. New York: Thames and Hudson, 1989 (hardcover, ISBN 0500050511).
  • Williams, Stephen, ed. The Waring Papers. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1967.

[edit] External links