Frank
Hole (Ph.D., Chicago 1961) Professor Emeritus, taught at Rice University
for seventeen years before coming to Yale in 1980. He has been
head of the Anthropology Division of the Yale Peabody
Museum, and C. J. MacCurdy Professor of Anthropology.
He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences.
Over a span of some forty years Hole has traveled
and carried out archaeological, ethnographic and land
use research in the Near East, first in Iran and currently
in Syria. His specialty is the history and development
of agriculture and animal husbandry. Excavations at
Ali Kosh and Chagha Sefid in Deh Luran, Iran provided
some of the first substantial evidence for the early
stages of agriculture. His study of modern nomadic
herders led to the excavation and interpretation of
an 8000 year old herders' camp. In Syria he has carried
out a series of reconnaissance surveys and excavations
ranging from the Neolithic to the Third Millennium.
He has been co-PI on NASA grants
to study land use in Southwest Asia. The land use
studies have focused on changes in agricultural systems
over the thirty year record of satellite images. Combining
these with archaeological evidence, he is reconstructing
a 9000 year history of land use for the Khabur region
of northeastern Syria.
Mailing
address:
Department of Anthropology
Yale University
P. O. Box 208277
New Haven, CT 06520-8277
Office
address:
Room 302, 10 Sachem Street
Lab address:
Room 301, 10 Sachem Street
Tel: (203) 432-3683
Fax: (203) 432-3669
Email: frank.hole@yale.edu
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