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Iain McKechnie

Associate professor

Anthropology

Contact:
Office: Cornett B246a 250-721-7351
Credentials:
PhD (UBC)
Area of expertise:
Coastal archaeology, historical ecology, Northwest coast, zooarchaeology

Bio

I am a coastal archaeologist interested in the history of food and settlement as a medium for understanding human-environmental relations on the Pacific Northwest Coast. I am a specialist in zooarchaeology (the archaeology of animal bones) and historical ecology (contextualizing modern ecosystem observations with those from well before the 20th or 21st centuries). I am also keen on cartography, visualization of archaeological data, and digital archaeological techniques and technologies.

My research focuses on the human use of animals, with a particular concentration on fish, shellfish, and marine mammals along the British Columbia Coast. I explore how these ancient records broaden contemporary perspectives on present day resource management challenges and the legacy of Indigenous settlement, use, and care for coastal environments.

I am participating in research with the Hakai Institute’s marine science programs as well as conducting ongoing fieldwork out of the Bamfield Marine Sciences Centre in Nuu-chah-nulth territories in Barkley Sound along the west coast of Vancouver Island.

Interests

  • coastal archaeology
  • zooarchaeology
  • historical ecology
  • Northwest coast
  • fisheries

Courses

  • ANTH 240 Archaeology
  • ANTH 340 Archaeology of British Columbia
  • ANTH 343 Archaeological Field Techniques
  • ANTH 442/520B Marine Historical Ecology
  • ANTH 551/651 Seminar in Ecology and Evolution

Publications