When we discussed female
paleoanthropologists it was the same time a major science story was breaking. Homo naledi is a new species of hominin
that has been broadcasted all over the popular press; one major spotlight is
that a team of women scientists was conducting the excavation of the fossils
from the cave site. While this is a good start for advancing women in the field
of paleoanthropology, it is not enough. The Rising Star team of women
scientists is only credited for excavating the site under the direction of Lee
Berger, the program director. Women will only truly advance in the field when
women mentor and oversee other women scientists in field research.
Figure 1: Bones of
the Homo naledi fossils found in
South Africa.
Figure 2: The women
excavating team of Rising Star.
Figure 3: Kaye Reed
in the field at Hadar, Ethiopia.
After earning her Ph.D. in
Anthropology, which focused on the paleoecology of hominin localities in South
Africa, Kaye Reed worked as a Postdoctoral research assistant at the Institute
of Human Origins (IHO), which at that time was associated with the University
of California, Berkeley. While at IHO,
Dr. Reed worked along side paleoanthropologists Don Johanson, Bill Kimbel, and
Tim White. In 1997 Johanson and Kimbel left Berkeley and moved IHO to Arizona
State University, and offered Dr. Reed a position as an assistant professor in
the department of Anthropology.
Dr. Reed has been at ASU ever since
the move in 1997. She has earned a full tenured professor position, and she is
the only female in the department of Anthropology to have such distinction. In
1999, Kaye accepted her first student, Amy Rector. In addition to teaching,
directing field sites, and mentoring students, Dr. Reed has also served as an
associate editor for the Journal of Human
Evolution, a NRC panel member on Earth Sciences Context for Human
Evolution, and NSF Biological Anthropology program director. Dr. Kaye Reed is a
paleoecologist and paleoanthropologist that deserves to be recognized for her
help with advancing women scientists in fields where men dominate the highest
academic positions.
No comments:
Post a Comment