Ph.D. Candidate in Archaeology, Purdue University
Emily Fletcher is a digital archaeologist interested in software development, data management, decolonizing archaeology, and technological innovation. She attended Kalamazoo College for her undergraduate studies, where people are often surprised to learn she double majored in computer science and history. She worked as a software developer for a year before coming to Purdue in 2019 to pursue a graduate degree.
In Emily's research, she writes software to bring new life to archaeological legacy data (records from previous research). She specifically focuses on the Gulkana Site, an important but understudied Native Alaskan heritage site where people created a variety of copper tools roughly a thousand years ago. She hopes that her software can make data about this site easier for archaeologists and descendants to interact with.
Jun 20, 2024 05:34 am UTC| Insights & Views
The ancestors of Alaska Native people began using local copper sources to craft intricate tools roughly 1,000 years ago. Over one-third of all copper objects archaeologists have found in this region were excavated at a...
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