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Mark A. Rees
Assistant Professor,
Department of Sociology
and Anthropology,
Director, Archaeology Field School
University of Louisiana at Lafayette
Phone: (337) 482-6045

markrees@louisiana.edu

Mark A. Rees is an archaeological anthropologist and assistant professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at University of Louisiana at Lafayette.

Dr. Rees became interested in archaeology as a teenager exploring the banks of Bayou Vermilion and backwaters of the Atchafalaya Basin. As an undergraduate student he participated in an archaeology field school at Magnolia Mound Plantation in Baton Rouge. He was subsequently employed in cultural resource management with the National Park Service, private consulting companies and several universities.

Dr. Rees received an M.A. in historical archaeology from the University of Massachusetts at Boston in 1991. His thesis examined the historical demography of a seventeenth-century Christianized Massachuset community outside of Boston. He received a Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of Oklahoma in 2001 with specializations in archaeology, cultural anthropology, ethnohistory, and political organization. He was an assistant field supervisor on the Early Cahokia project and participated in excavations in and around the pre-Columbian metropolis of Cahokia in western Illinois. His dissertation was a comparative analysis of Mississippian (ca. AD 1000-1700) political culture in the Southeast, based on a study of single mound sites associated with the Moundville polity in west-central Alabama. His research was supported by a National Science Foundation dissertation improvement grant (SBR-9711795).

While completing his doctoral studies Dr. Rees served as a research archaeologist and instructor at the Center for Archaeological Research, Southwest Missouri State University. His experience ranges from colonial homesteads in Massachusetts and Vermont to archaeological surveys in the piney hills of west-central Louisiana. He has directed excavations of French and British colonial sites in Missouri and Virginia, joined in the search for early nineteenth century Delaware settlements in the James River Valley of Missouri, and participated in the mitigation of Native American sites on the Navajo Reservation in New Mexico. He has contributed to more than eighteen major archaeological projects throughout the northeast, mid-Atlantic, mid-West, and southeastern United States.

Dr. Rees is the author of more than two dozen technical reports and numerous papers delivered at professional meetings. He has published articles in the journal Southeastern Archaeology, the Quarterly Bulletin of the Archeological Society of Virginia, and the Missouri Archaeological Society Quarterly. He is a recent contributor to the The Archaeology of Traditions: The Southeast Before and After Columbus (University of Florida Press, 2001), Historical Perspectives on Midsouth Archeology (Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series, 2001), and Between Contacts and Colonies: Archaeological Perspectives on the Protohistoric Southeast (University of Alabama Press, 2002). He is co-editor with Cameron Wesson of Between Contacts and Colonies and is currently working on a manuscript on Mississippian political culture in the Southeast. He plans to co-edit a volume on Plaquemine culture (ca. AD 1200-1700) in the Lower Mississippi Valley.

Dr. Rees joined the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette in the Fall of 2001. His arrival was a homecoming of sorts. His mother, Margaret Baquet Rees, was a graduate of Southwestern Louisiana Institute and University of Southwestern Louisiana, now University of Louisiana at Lafayette. While growing up in Lafayette he made frequent visits to his grandparents in Breaux Bridge. His interest in the past was first instilled in that ancient town of La Pointe (later called Pont des Breaux).

Since coming to the University of Louisiana at Lafayette Dr. Rees has begun research on Native American mound sites and early historic settlement in south-central Louisiana. He has initiated two programs of research along these lines: the Plaquemine Mounds Archaeological Project and Early Acadian Archaeological Project.

The Plaquemine Mounds Archaeological Project (PMAP) commenced with an archaeology field school during the 2001 winter intersession. Among the long-term goals of PMAP are to document, map, and investigate the settlement patterns associated with late prehistoric and protohistoric (ca. AD 1200-1700) Native American earthen-mound construction in the western Atchafalaya Basin. The initial field season included efforts directed at mound stabilization and site preservation, assisted by matching grants from the National Association of State Archaeologists and Chitimacha Tribe of Louisiana. The 2003 field school focused on three mound sites in St. Martin and St. Mary parishes. The Plaquemine Mounds Archaeological Project is supported by a 3-year grant from the Louisiana Board of Regents Research Competitiveness subprogram.

The Early Acadian Archaeological Project (EAAP) is investigating archaeological evidence for eighteenth-century Acadian settlement in south-central Louisiana. The EAAP was launched during the winter of 2002 with an archaeology field school at a second-generation Acadian home site and plantation on the Teche Ridge in Iberia Parish.

Through these dual research projects Dr. Rees is examining the settlement patterns, cultural practices, and social histories of two distinct peoples of Louisiana. Both projects promise to shed light on poorly known areas of regional culture history, while providing exceptional educational opportunities for students at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.

Document last modified Wednesday, April 14, 2004 8:06 AM CST.
Copyright © 2003 by the University of Louisiana at Lafayette
Center for Cultural and Eco-Tourism, P.O. Box 40831, Lafayette, LA 70504
Telephone: (337) 482-6027 Fax: (337) 482-6028

E-mail: ccet@louisiana.edu