Val Attenbrow

Dr. Val Attenbrow (born 1942) is Principal Research Scientist in the Anthropology Research Section of the Australian Museum,[1] a position she has held since 1989.[2]

Attenbrow commenced her archaeological studies in the Department of Anthropology at Sydney University where she obtained a Bachelor of Arts Honours degree in 1976, and completed her PhD in 1987. She has worked as a private consulting archaeologist and in the National Parks and Wildlife Service (New South Wales) as a cultural heritage officer.

Her research had focussed on the Holocene period subsistence patterns, resource use and stone tool technology of Australian Aborigines, particularly in south-eastern Australia. She has undertaken fieldwork in Upper Mangrove Creek near Wyong on the NSW central coast) and the Port Jackson catchment (the area around Sydney Harbour).[3]

She is author of a comprehensive study of the Aboriginal prehistory of the Sydney Area.[4]

References

  1. Papers in Honour of Val Attenbrow Technical Reports of the Australian Museum, Online 23 (2011), ISSN 1835-4211
  2. Australian Museum Staff Profiles
  3. Australian Academy of the Humanities Honorary Fellows
  4. Attenbrow, Valerie (2010), Sydney's Aboriginal past : investigating the archaeological and historical records (2nd ed.), University of New South Wales Press, ISBN 978-1-74223-116-7
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.