John Shea (archeologist)

John Joseph Shea (born in 1960 in Hamilton, Massachusetts) is an American archeologist and paleoanthropologist. Shea is Professor of Anthropology at Stony Brook University in New York since 1992. Shea's parents are Joseph P. and Gloria C. (Cyr) Shea. His brothers are Joseph R. and Timothy J. Shea. Shea graduated Hamilton-Wenham Regional High School in 1978. He earned his BA from Boston University in 1982 (double major, Archaeology and Anthropology) and his Ph.D. from Harvard (Anthropology) in 1991. His first doctoral advisor was Glynn Isaac, after whose death, Ofer Bar-Yosef, David Pilbeam, and K.C. Chang oversaw his training. Shea has conducted archaeological fieldwork in Israel, Jordan, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, Belize, New Mexico, and Massachusetts. He is married to Patricia L. Crawford and resides in Stony Brook, New York and Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Shea's research focuses on stone tools and how they relate to major issues in human evolution. He is a skilled flintknapper and experienced in many other areas of primitive technology. He is an alumnus of the Aboriginal Living Skills School's 2014 Desert Drifter survival course. Highlights of Shea's research include the following, in rough chronological order.

Major and Recent Publications

Shea, J. J. 2011. Homo sapiens is as Homo sapiens was: Behavioral Variability vs. "Behavioral Modernity" in Paleolithic Archaeology. Current Anthropology 52:1-35. Shea, J. J. 2011. Refuting a Myth of Human Origins. American Scientist 99:128-135.


Books

References

  1. WorldCat author file

External links

· John Shea's Personal Website · John Shea's www.academia.edu website.

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