My research interests still heavily lie in the utilization of spatial technology to aid in addressing broader anthropological questions. More specifically, I am interested in combining spatial technology with anthropological concepts at different scales to address the organization of social, political, and religious institutions among and within Late Precontact Native American cultures and their communities in the Southeastern US.
Broadly, my research did two things. First, it furthered the methodological development of landscape-scale electromagnetic induction survey (EMI), and demonstrated the significance of this underutilized geophysical method for archaeological use worldwide.
Second, in combining spatial technologies with archaeological methods, the history of occupation at Singer-Hieronymus was refined, and a detailed map of site size and organization was obtained.