Caroline Phillips (archaeologist)

Caroline Anne Phillips is a New Zealand archaeologist.[1] She has lectured at the University of Auckland and Te Whare Wananga o Awanuiarangi.[2]

Dr

Caroline Phillips
OccupationHonorary Research Fellow (Anthropology), University of Auckland
Academic background
EducationUniversity of Auckland
ThesisThe archaeology of Maori occupation along the Waihou River, Hauraki (1994)
Academic work
DisciplineNew Zealand Archaeology
Websitehttp://carolinephillips-archaeology.co.nz/

Life

Phillips began her career in archaeology as a fieldworker, working on surveys and excavations. Much of her work was on Māori sites. In 1987 she completed a master's degree at the University of Auckland on the Karikari Peninsula, in the far north of New Zealand. In 1994 she completed a doctoral degree from the same university, studying Māori settlements on the Waihou River.[2][3]

Publications

  • Waihou Journeys: The Archaeology of 400 Years of Maori Settlement (Auckland University Press, 2000)[4]
  • Bridging the Divide: Indigenous Communities and Archaeology into the 21st Century (co-editor; 2010)[5]
  • Archaeology at Opita: Three Hundred Years of Continuity and Change (co-author, 2013)[6]

References

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