Anne Ford
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Anne Ford
Summary
Anne Ford is a human[1]. She worked as an archaeologist[2].
Key Facts
- Anne Ford worked as an archaeologist[2].
- Anne Ford's field of work was archaeology[3].
- Anne Ford held the position of associate professor[4].
- Among Anne Ford's employers was University of Otago[5].
- Anne Ford was educated at University of Otago[6].
- Anne Ford's doctoral advisor was Alan Cooper[7].
- Anne Ford's doctoral advisor was Richard Walter[8].
- Anne Ford's doctoral advisor was Glenn Summerhayes[9].
- A notable student of Anne Ford was Dylan Gaffney[10].
- A notable student of Anne Ford was Nicholas P Sutton[11].
- Anne Ford is recorded as female[12].
- Anne Ford's instance of is recorded as human[13].
- Anne Ford's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 59173121430729981438[14].
- Anne Ford's IdRef ID is recorded as 280794479[15].
- Anne Ford's ORCID iD is recorded as 0000-0002-1253-7177[16].
- Anne Ford earned the academic degree of Doctor of Philosophy[17].
- Anne Ford's family name is recorded as Ford[18].
- Anne Ford's academic thesis is recorded as Learning the Lithic Landscape in the Ivane Valley, Papua New Guinea: modelling colonisation and occupation using lithic sources and stone tool technology[19].
- Anne Ford's Google Scholar author ID is recorded as t9ghUDMAAAAJ[20].
- Anne Ford's ResearchGate profile ID is recorded as Anne-Ford[21].
- Anne Ford's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as NZThesisProject[22].
- Anne Ford's Academia.edu profile URL is recorded as https://otago.academia.edu/AnneFord[23].
- Anne Ford's LinkedIn personal profile ID is recorded as anne-ford-40b47940[24].
Body
Education
Anne Ford was educated at University of Otago[6]. Doctoral advisors include Alan Cooper[7], a volcanologist[25]; Richard Walter[8], an anthropologist[26], b. 1944[27], of New Zealand[28], awarded the Fellow of the Royal Society Te Apārangi[29], specialised in archaeology[30]; and Glenn Summerhayes[9], a researcher[31], b. 1954[32], awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia[33]. She earned the academic degree of Doctor of Philosophy[17].
Career and Affiliations
Anne Ford worked as an archaeologist[2]. Her field of work was archaeology[3]. Among her employers was University of Otago[5]. She held the position of associate professor[4]. Notable students include Dylan Gaffney[10], an archaeologist[34], of New Zealand[35] and Nicholas P Sutton[11], a researcher[36].
FAQs
What did Anne Ford do for work?
Anne Ford worked as archaeologist[2].
Where did Anne Ford go to school?
Anne Ford was educated at University of Otago[6].