Richie Rosencrance Graduate student rrosencrance@nevada.unr.edu /main/images/colleges-schools/liberal-arts/anthropology/profile/richie-rosencrance-web.jpg <p><strong>Current status</strong>: Ph.D. in progress</p> <p><strong>M.A. thesis title</strong>: Assessing the Chronological Variation Within Western Stemmed Projectile Points</p> <p><strong>Lab associations</strong>: Artemisia Archaeological Research Fund</p> <p>Richie Rosencrance is a first-year Ph.D. student and graduate research assistant for the Great Basin Paleoindian Research Unit. His research focuses on Western Stemmed lithic technology and hunter-gatherer settlement patterning during the Late Pleistocene in the northern Great Basin and Columbia Plateau. A significant amount of his dissertation research will focus on the Haskett assemblages from the Connley Caves archaeological site in central Oregon. He previously received his Master&rsquo;s in Anthropology at the University of Nevada, Reno that established a new projectile point chronology for the various Western Stemmed types. Between his M.A. and pursing his Ph.D., Richie served as a project archaeologist and field director for CRM projects in Texas, Louisiana and Oregon. He has also been employed as a supervisor and instructor of the University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History&rsquo;s archaeological field school at the Connley Caves since 2016.</p> <h2>Academic interests</h2> <ul> <li>Lithic Technology</li> <li>Western Stemmed Tradition</li> <li>Peopling of the Americas</li> <li>Radiocarbon Dating</li> <li>Great Basin and Columbia Plateau Archaeology</li> <li>Collections-Based Research</li> </ul> <h2>Selected publications</h2> <ul> <li>2024, K. N. McDonough, R. L. Rosencrance, J. E. Pratt (editors). Current Perspectives on Stemmed and Fluted Technologies in the American Far West. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.</li> <li>2022, R. L. Rosencrance, K. N. McDonough, J. H. Holcomb, P. E. Endzweig, and D. L. Jenkins. Dating and Analysis of Western Stemmed Toolkits from the Legacy Collection of Connley Cave 4, Oregon. PaleoAmerica 8(3):264-284.</li> <li>2022, K. N. McDonough, J. L. Kennedy, R. L. Rosencrance, J. H. Holcomb, D. L. Jenkins, and K. Puseman. Expanding Paleoindian Diet Breadth: Paleoethnobotany of Connley Cave 5, Oregon, USA. American Antiquity 87(2):303-332.</li> <li>2021, R. L. Rosencrance, and A. J. Hirshman. Over the Hills and Far Away: Middle and Late Woodland Archaeology and Toolstone Conveyance at Hyre Mound (46RD1), West Virginia. North American Archaeologist 42(2):140-176</li> <li>2021, Rosencrance, R. L. and A. J. Hirshman. Over the Hills and Far Away: Middle and Late Woodland Archaeology and Toolstone Conveyance at Hyre Mound (46RD1), West Virginia. <em>North American Archaeologist</em> 42(2):140-176.</li> <li>2021, Jazwa, C. S., G. M. Smith, R. L. Rosencrance, D. G. Duke, and D. Stueber. Reassessing the Radiocarbon Date from the Buhl Burial from South-Central Idaho and its Relevance to the Western Stemmed Tradition-Clovis Debate in the Intermountain West. <em>American Antiquity</em> 86(1):172-184.</li> <li>2019, McDonough, K. N. and R. L. Rosencrance. Gifts from the Pueblo Valley: Analysis of a Donated Collection from Far Southeastern Oregon. <em>Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology</em>, 39(2):213-229.</li> <li>2019, R. L. Rosencrance, G. M. Smith, D. L. Jenkins, T. J. Connolly, and T. C. Layton. Reinvestigating Cougar Mountain Cave: New Perspectives on Stratigraphy, Chronology, and a Younger Dryas Occupation in the Northern Great Basin. <em>American Antiquity</em> 84(3):559-573.</li> </ul> <ul> <li>M.A., Anthropology, University of Nevada, Reno, 2019</li> </ul>