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Slideshow

A talk by Dr. Emily Zavodny: Surf and Turf: zooarchaeometry as a tool for understanding the role of environment in shaping past risk-management systems in Croatia and Florida

A flyer for the event. A line of an illustrated pig, cow, goat, turkey, and fish face left and their skeletons reflect across an x-axis. The title of the talk is above them, and meeting details including the date, time, and location are below them. A photo of Dr. Zavodny occupies the bottom right corner and across the bottom left and center are the Anthropology and Laboratory of Archaeology logos.
Baldwin Hall Pinnacle Room 480
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Museum Events
The Georgia Museum of Natural History invites you to join the UGA Anthropology Department and the Laboratory of Archaeology for a talk with Dr. Emily Zavodny on Monday, January 13th at 3 PM in the Baldwin Hall Pinnacle Room 480!
 
Understanding how humans navigated their environments in the past can inform modern strategies for increasing resilience and sustainability. Zooarchaeometric studies- traditional faunal analyses coupled with stable isotopic data- provide an opportunity to examine the diversity of human responses to perceived environmental risk through the lens of animal management practices. To illustrate this, I present faunal and isotopic data from two vastly different locations and time periods: the marginal mountainscape of Late Bronze Age central Croatia and a biodiverse estuary in pre-contact northeastern Florida. Zooarchaeometric analyses from these case studies highlight the complex decision-making processes that shaped these early economic systems, including concerns about intensification, centralization, and scheduling at multiple spatial and organizational scales. Moreover, while both communities undoubtedly concerned themselves with mitigating risk, analyses show that local environments were important drivers in how each group defined “risk” itself.
 
Dr. Emily Zavodny is an environmental archaeologist specializing in paleoecology, zooarchaeology, and stable isotope geochemistry. She received her MA and PhD from The Pennsylvania State University and BA from Wake Forest University. She is broadly interested in how prehistoric human and animal populations successfully adapted to uncertainty and risk posed by marginal landscapes, resource scarcity, and/or changing climate and environments. Her ongoing research examines the spread of agriculture and animal husbandry throughout southeast Europe and the long-term impact of these intensive practices on human behavior and local landscapes. Her current research focuses on the introduction and acclimatization of domesticated animals (cattle, sheep, goats, pigs) to different ecosystems in the Balkans and their enduring impact on human behavior and local landscapes. Dr. Zavodny has active field and lab projects based on her ongoing work in Croatia, and directs the Zavodny Isotope Geochemistry and ZooArchaeology Group (ZIGZAG) Lab at UCF.
Dr. Emily Zavodny
Department of Anthropology
University of Central Florida

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