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Donald F. Brown (archeologist) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Donald F. Brown (archeologist) Donald Freeman Brown (26 November 1908 – 21 February 2014) was an American archaeologist who pioneered the core boring technique for surveying large archaeological sites, and discovered the location of Sybaris, a 6th century Greek colony in Southern Italy. He was a founding member of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Assistant Curator of European Prehistory at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnography, Editor-in-Chief of C.O.W.A. (Council for Old World Archaeology),and is Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Boston University. == Biography ==
He was born in Holyoke, Massachusetts, son of Wilford Chapman Brown, an inventor at the Cheney Bigelow Wireworks in Springfield, MA and Alma Louise Schuster, daughter of German immigrants. In 1926 he graduated from Classical High School in Springfield and attended Amherst College, and Boston University, finally completed the work for his A.B. in Psychology at Harvard College in 1930. Deciding to study archaeology, he entered Harvard’s A.M./Ph.D. program. A founding member of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society (Link label ) in 1939, he belonged to the Willoughby Chapter, which excavated Native American sites in Sudbury, Massachusetts, and there met his wife Linda Easton Smith with whom he had six children, settling in Stow, Massachusetts. His studies were interrupted by WWII, where he fell in love with Italy while serving in the army there.
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