Author

Evan Peacock

Professor of Anthropology, Mississippi State University - Cited by 1,262 - evolutionary archaeology - applied zooarchaeology

Biography

He is an evolutionary archaeologist, a theoretical stance that is ideal for anyone interested in understanding the intersections between nature and culture and how each is shaped by the other over time. His research interests are centered on long-term human/nature interactions, including documenting and quantifying prehistoric human environmental impact. He is having specialize in the analysis of molluscan remains, especially freshwater mussel and land snail shells. He is also working with biologists to conduct biogeographical research on original mussel ranges and species abundances using archaeological shell, providing information useful for conservation efforts today.
Title
Cited by
Year
The “cultural filter,” human transport of mussel shell, and the applied potential of zooarchaeological data
E Peacock, CR Randklev, S Wolverton, RA Palmer, S ZaleskiEcological Applications 22 (5), 1446-1459, 2012201
51
2012
A comparison of multiple proxy data sets for paleoenvironmental conditions as derived from freshwater bivalve (Unionid) shell
E Peacock, JL SeltzerJournal of Archaeological Science 35 (9), 2557-2565, 2008200
38
2008
Archaeological freshwater mussel remains and their use in the conservation of an imperiled fauna
E PeacockConservation Biology and Applied Zooarchaeology, 42-67, 2012201
26
2012
The spread of shell tempering in the Mississippi Black Prairie
J Rafferty, E PeacockSoutheastern Archaeology, 253-264, 2008200
22
2008
Archaeology and biogeography of prehistoric freshwater mussel shell in Mississippi
E Peacock, C Jenkins, PF Jacobs, J GreenleafBAR Publishing, 2011201
18
2011
Elemental analysis of ceramic incrustation indicates long-term cultural continuity in the prehistoric Carpathian Basin
WA Parkinson, E Peacock, RA Palmer, Y Xia, B Carlock, A Gyucha, ...Archaeology, Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia 38 (2), 64-70, 2010201
17
2010
The distribution and research value of archaeological mussel shell: an overview from Mississippi
E Peacock, C JenkinsMidcontinental Journal of Archaeology 35 (1), 91-116, 2010201
14
2010
A prehistoric freshwater mussel assemblage from the Big Sunflower River, Sunflower County, Mississippi
J Mitchell, E PeacockSoutheastern Naturalist 13 (3), 626-638, 202
14
2014
Prehistoric freshwater mussel faunas from Bayou Bartholomew, Southeastern Arkansas
E Peacock, A Moe-Hoffman, RJ Scott, MD JeterSoutheastern Archaeology 32 (1), 1-, 202
13
2013
Space, Time and Form at the Pinnix Site (22GR795): A “Lithic Scatter” in the North Central Hills of Mississippi
E Peacock, JK Feathers, J Alvey, K BacaMississippi Archaeology 43 (1), 67-106, 2008200
11
2008
The bet-hedging model as an explanatory framework for the evolution of mound building in the southeastern United States
E Peacock, J RaffertyBeyond barrows: current research on the structuration and perception of the …, 2013201
11
2013
Pre-columbian freshwater mussel assemblages from the Tallahatchie River in the Lower Mississippi River Alluvial basin, USA
E Peacock, J Mitchell, C JenkinsAmerican Malacological Bulletin 34 (2), 121-132, 2016201
10
2016
Chemical sourcing of a prehistoric freshwater shell artifact using laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry
E Peacock, RA Palmer, Y Xia, W Bacon-Schulte, B Carlock, J SmithArchaeology of Eastern North America, 91-99, 202
10
2010
Behavioral, Environmental, and Applied Aspects of Molluscan Assemblages from the Lower Tombigbee River, Alabama., USA
E Peacock, SW McGregor, AA DumasTrends and traditions in Southeastern zooarchaeology, 186-211, 2014201
10
2014
Sampling to redundancy in an applied zooarchaeology: a case study from a freshwater shell ring in the Mississippi Delta, southeastern USA
J Mitchell, E Peacock, S MyattJournal of Archaeological Science: Reports 5, 4-508, 2016201
9
2016