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・ Phyllocnistis ampelopsiella
・ Phyllocnistis amydropa
・ Phyllocnistis argentella
・ Phyllocnistis argothea
・ Phyllocnistis atractias
・ Phyllocnistis atranota
・ Phyllocnistis aurilinea
・ Phyllocnistis baccharidis
・ Phyllocnistis bourquini
・ Phyllis McCarthy
・ Phyllis McDonagh
・ Phyllis McGinley
・ Phyllis McKie
・ Phyllis Monkman
・ Phyllis Morris
Phyllis Morse
・ Phyllis Mudford King
・ Phyllis Munday
・ Phyllis Mundy
・ Phyllis Nagy
・ Phyllis Neilson-Terry
・ Phyllis Nelson
・ Phyllis Newman
・ Phyllis Nicolson
・ Phyllis O'Donnell
・ Phyllis Omido
・ Phyllis Pearsall
・ Phyllis Pond
・ Phyllis Povah
・ Phyllis Preuss


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Phyllis Morse : ウィキペディア英語版
Phyllis Morse
Phyllis Morse (Anderson) (b. 1934) is an American archaeologist. When she started at the University of Michigan to study Anthropology in 1953 she embarked on a lifetime immersed in archaeology by profession and marriage. Her expertise lay in the laboratory, where she worked with materials from prehistoric sites across America. In addition to her own work, she worked on many sites and papers with her husband Dan F. Morse, whom she married in 1960, raising three sons. Her love of antiques led her to open a business in 1979 which she still operates, having retired from academic life in 1997.
==Biography==
Anderson was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1934, and attended Crystal Lake Community High, Crystal Lake, Illinois, graduating in June 1952. She became interested in archaeology while studying anthropology at the University of Michigan. In the 1950s there were fewer women at University, let alone any who chose that discipline. She received a BA in anthropology (with distinction) in June 1956 and an MA in anthropology in June 1958 both from Michigan.
Anderson was to meet her future husband, Dan F. Morse because she was not allowed to be the sole woman in the field. She was, however, permitted to be the lab assistant for the Etowah site excavations in 1958 with Dan. They were recruited by Dr. James B. Griffin, their mentor at Michigan and the excavation was led by Lewis Larsen. As a married couple both doing archaeology throughout their careers, the Morses were nearly unique in the field of archaeology. Together, often with their three sons on the digs, they worked in many parts of the southeastern US. They spent thirty years in northeast Arkansas (1967–1997) at the Arkansas Archeological Survey’s Arkansas State University Survey Station in Jonesboro. The culmination of this work was their joint overview Archaeology of the Central Mississippi Valley. Through the 1970s and 1980s Phyllis Morse worked on research projects for the Arkansas Archaeological Survey, including at the Zebree site, taught at Arkansas State University and undertook museum consultancy work. In 1978 Phyllis Morse was awarded a research grant for work at the Parkin site, work that resulted in a 1981 monograph. She began Possum Antiques in 1979 and remains active in antique and book selling and was a member of the Arkansas Antique Dealers Association. She also served on the national board of the Midwest Tool Collectors Association, the Arkansas State board of the League of Women Voters, and was an exhibit consultant for the Memphis Pink Palace Museum and the Memphis Mud Island Museum.

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