|
|
|
Project
Leadership
The Middle Awash research project
was formed by the late Professor J. Desmond Clark in 1981. Leadership
of the project rests with four coordinating scientists who take responsibility
for research design, logistics, funding, methodology, and general
project goals.
 |
The late Professor
J. Desmond Clark was the pre-eminent African
prehistorian of the 20th century. He conducted archaeological
research throughout Africa, including during the Second
World War when he served in the British Army in Ethiopia. Clark
moved from his work at Gadeb in the Ethiopian Highlands
and started the Middle Awash research project in 1981. He
is widely acknowledged to have fostered the training of
indigenous African scholars from many countries, including
Ethiopia. He authored many books, papers, and other
scholarly works in African archaeology. |
 |
Professor
Tim White has done field paleontology in Africa
since 1974. His expertise is Plio-Pleistocene suids
and hominids, but his interests and publications include
archaeology and taphonomy. He has worked at and/or
visited most major Plio-Pleistocene hominid localities
in Africa. He has substantial experience both in
the laboratory and conducting fieldwork in Ethiopia. In
1981 White joined Professor J. Desmond Clark in the Middle
Awash research. White took responsibility for the
paleontological aspects of the research, and has led the
paleontology team in the Middle Awash since 1990. He
has written books on human osteology and bone modification. |
 |
Doctor
Giday WoldeGabriel has done geology in Ethiopia
since 1976, first at Addis Ababa University, then as a
graduate student working on Ethiopian Rift evolution, and
now as a researcher with the Middle Awash research project
in charge of geological studies. His areas of specialization
include field geology, tectonics, volcanology, tephrochronology,
and tephrochemical analysis which is a primary correlative
tool used in the construction of stratigraphic frameworks
for the prehistoric artifacts and fossils of the Middle
Awash. He is the author of numerous publications
on Ethiopian geology and has worked in the Middle Awash
since 1992. |
 |
Doctor Berhane
Asfaw has done paleoanthropological research in Ethiopia
since the first Middle Awash season in 1981. His areas
of specialization include paleolithic archaeology and hominid
paleontology. He is the former Director of the National
Museum of Ethiopia and ran the Paleoanthropology Inventory
of Ethiopia project during the 1980s and 1990s. That
project discovered many of the most productive paleoanthropological
sites in the country. Dr. Asfaw is the author of numerous
publications on fossil hominids. |
 |
Doctor Yonas
Beyene has
conducted paleolithic archaeology in France and Ethiopia. He
is currently the Head of Anthropology and Archaeology at the
Authority for Research and Conservation of the Cultural Heritage
in Addis Ababa, Dr. Beyene is the chief archaeologist on the
Konso and Middle Awash projects. He is author of numerous
publications on sites ranging from the Afar to the Kenyan-Ethiopian
border at Fejej, a site that he co-discovered during his time
with the Paleoanthropology Inventory of Ethiopia project. |
|
|



|