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Bruce Mcfadgen has been an archaeologist in New Zealand for over 45 years. His areas of interest include radiocarbon dating and the impact of tectonic dating in New Zealand culture, and he is currently employed by Victoria University in Wellington and is working on many projects there. He has published over 70 academic papers and texts, his most notable contribution being his Stout Fellowship under which he published '''Hostile Shores''', about the impact of natural disasters on early Maori civilization.
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== Bruce Gordon McFadgen (1943- )==
  
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Bruce McFadgen has been an archaeologist in New Zealand for over 45 years. He has more than 70 refereed publications, including monographs and book chapters. His most notable contribution is Hostile Shores, a book about the impact of tectonic events on cultural change.
  
== Early Education ==
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[[Image:Bruce-mcfadgen.jpg]]
  
Before becoming an archaeologist, Mcfadgen became qualified in surveying by working for the Department of Lands and Survey until 1968, after which he finished his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in Anthropology.  
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== Career ==
 +
Before becoming an archaeologist, Bruce McFadgen’s early career was as a surveyor, working for the Department of Lands and Survey from 1961 to 1968, including studying surveying at Otago University in 1964 and 1965. An intense interest in archaeology led to a career change, and he returned to Otago University in 1968 to complete a BA and MA in Anthropology. The topic of his master’s thesis was palaeoenvironmental studies of the Manawatu sand plain<ref>McFadgen B.G., 1972, Palaeoenvironmental studies in the Manawatu sand plain, with particular reference to Foxton. Unpublished MA Thesis (Anthropology), University of Otago, Dunedin.</ref>.
  
[[Image:Bruce-mcfadgen.jpg]]
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His PhD <ref>McFadgen B.G., 1978 Environment and archaeology in New Zealand. Unpublished PhD Thesis (Geology), Victoria University of Wellington.</ref> is in Geology, from Victoria University of Wellington, with research over the period 1972-1977 that followed [[Wellman Harold|Harold Wellman’s]] pioneering work on coastal sedimentology and its historical interpretation. The results of this work have been published<ref>McFadgen, B.G., 1985 Late Holocene Stratigraphy of Coastal Deposits between Auckland and Dunedin, New Zealand. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand Vol. 15(1):27-65.</ref>.
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Bruce was employed by the NZ Historic Places Trust as a Staff Archaeologist from 1977 until 1987, and by the Department of Conservation from 1987 until 2003. In 2003 he took early retirement to take up the JD Stout Fellowship at Victoria University, to research and write Hostile Shores, which was published by Auckland University in 2007.
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Bruce has undertaken field work widely in New Zealand, with particular emphasis on the central New Zealand, especially the southern North Island, the Chatham Islands and the western Bay of Plenty.
 +
 
 +
He has made material contributions in a number of areas, including radiometric dating e.g. <ref>McFadgen, B. G., Knox, F. B. and Cole, T. R. L. 1994. Radiocarbon calibration curve variations and their implications for the interpretation of New Zealand Prehistory. Radiocarbon, 36(2): 221–236.</ref>, <ref>Knox, F. B. and McFadgen, B. G. 2001. Least-squares fitting smooth curves to decadal radiocarbon calibration data from AD 1145 to AD 1945. Radiocarbon, 43(1): 87–118.</ref>, recent tephras and their utilisation in archaeology<ref>Lowe, D.J., Newnham, R.M., McFadgen, B.G. and Higham, T.F.G., 2000: Tephras and New Zealand archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Science, 27, 859-870.</ref>, horticultural (plaggen) soils and other soils modified by human activity e.g. <ref>McFadgen, B.G. 1980. Maori Plaggen Soils in New Zealand: their origin and properties. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 10: 3–18.</ref>, coastal processes in relation to archaeological sites e.g. <ref>McFadgen, B. G. and Goff, J. R. 2005. An earth system approach to understanding the tectonic and cultural landscapes of linked marine embayments: Avon-Heathcote Estuary (Ihutai) and Lake Ellesmere (Waihora), New Zealand. Journal of Quaternary Science, 20(3): 227–237.</ref>, and in particular interpretations of sediments in relation to past tsunami events and the potential effect these events had on past Maori populations e.g.<ref>Goff, J. R. and McFadgen, B. G. 2001. Catastrophic seismic-related events and their impact on prehistoric human occupation in coastal New Zealand. Antiquity, 74: 155–62</ref>.
 +
 
 +
His principal archaeological investigations have been the Foxton archaic site and [[Ruahihi]] Pa<ref>McFadgen, B.G. and R.A. Sheppard 1984 Ruahihi Pa – A Prehistoric Defended Settlement in the Southwestern Bay of Plenty. Bulletin 22, National Museum of New Zealand, New Zealand Historic Places Trust Publication 19</ref>.
  
He is a current resident of Wellington and research associate at Victoria University. He often lectures on prehistoric New Zealand and his various projects.
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Bruce has produced two regional archaeology syntheses in the [[:Category:DoC Regional Archaeologies|Department of Conservation series]]<ref>McFadgen, B.G., 2003 Archaeology of the Wellington Conservancy: Wairarapa, A study in tectonic archaeology. Department of Conservation Science Publication, Wellington.</ref>,<ref>McFadgen, B.G., 1997 Archaeology of the Wellington Conservancy: Kapiti-Horowhenua, A prehistoric and palaeoenvironmental study. Department of Conservation Science Publication, Wellington.</ref>.  
  
 +
A major achievement while with the Department of Conservation was the coordination and production of an on-line Radiocarbon database for New Zealand <ref>New Zealand Radiocarbon Database, http://www.waikato.ac.nz/waikato/nzcd/index.html Accessed 2010.</ref>.
  
== Awards and Credits ==
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Bruce has never been shy of controversy. A material contribution was to tackle the anomalous Poukawa swamp site where he conclusively demonstrated the cultural material found there below the Taupo tephra was intrusive <ref>McFadgen, B.G., 1979: The antiquity of man at Lake Poukawa, New Zealand. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand. Vol. 9:375–382.</ref>. Hence the site is not evidence for occupation a thousand years earlier than more conventional views of New Zealand history. Bruce has presented different interpretations of sites with stone structures around the southern coast of the North Island <ref>McFadgen, B.G. 1980. A stone row system at Okoropunga on the southeast Wairarapa coast and inferences about coastal stone rows elsewhere in central New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Science, 23: 189–197.</ref>. With Goff he has rebutted claims that a bolide impact occurred south of New Zealand within the time of human history<ref>Goff, James, Keri Hulme and Bruce McFadgen, 2003, “Mystic Fires of Tamaatea”: Attempts to creatively rewrite New Zealand’s cultural and tectonic past. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, Vol. 33(4):795-809.</ref>.
  
He initially came to Victoria University to receive his PhD in Geology in 1979. His first position as archaeologist was working for the Historic Sites Trust of New Zealand until 1987, during which time he received the ILFORD award for Aerial Archaeology in 1982 and was president of the New Zealand Archaeological Association (1986-1988) and also the Wellington branch of the Royal Society of New Zealand (1985-1987). As a member of the Royal Society, he has served on the Skinner Research Fund Committee since 1987. From 2001 to 2004 he was on the Advisory Board for the National Isotope Center. He then became employed as a scientist by the Department of Conservation, before retiring early in 2003 to begin work on his Stout Fellowship. He has since become the editor of the ''New Zealand Surveyor'', a New Zealand publication by the Institute of Surveyors.
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Some reviewers see his interpretation of the effect that 15th century tsunami had on Maori history as being closer to determinism than they are comfortable with (e.g.<ref>Anderson, A, 2008, review of Hostile shores: catastrophic events in prehistoric New Zealand and their impact on Maori coastal communities. The Journal of Pacific History, Vol. 43(3):393-4.</ref>, <ref>Lowe, D. J., 2008, review of Hostile shores: catastrophic events in prehistoric New Zealand and their impact on Maori coastal communities. New Zealand Journal of Geology & Geophysics, Vol. 51:379–381.</ref>).
While working for the Historic Sites Trust, he became well-published in his various articles specializing in geoarchaeology and stratigraphy. More recently, he has been studying urban areas in modern New Zealand and the histories behind them, such as the Chews Lane experiments.
 
  
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A close professional association has been with geologist James Goff currently Professor of Tsunami Studies at UNSW Sydney. Bruce has worked with James for more than 10 years on a variety of projects on the New Zealand mainland and on off-shore islands, and most recently on D'Urville Island.
  
== Stout Fellowship ==
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Bruce is currently a Research Associate with the School of Maori Studies at Victoria University, Wellington<ref>http://www.victoria.ac.nz/maori/staff/bruce-mcfadgen.aspx Accessed 2010.</ref> which involves lecturing, research, and field trips with students. In addition to this he undertakes work as an archaeological consultant across prehistoric and historic archaeology, often in association with other consulting archaeologists. He is currently working in collaboration with Dr Eric Force, Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, on archaeoseismology and its role in the development of civilisation <ref>Force, E.R., and McFadgen, B.G. 2010. Tectonic environments of ancient civilizations:  opportunities for archaeoseismological and anthropological studies. In: Ancient Earthquakes. Geological Society of America, Special Paper. IGCP 567. (In Press).</ref>.
  
The Stout fellowship was established by the John David Stout trust in order to sponsor research projects into the society of New Zealand, and is an independent grant to well published and recognized scholars to research for a full twelve months at Victoria University.
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== Awards and Credits ==
In 2003, he received the Stout fellowship for his research on tectonics and the Maori people, upon which he worked at the Stout Research Center. It was during this time that he researched and wrote his book '''Hostile Shores: Catastrophic Events in Prehistoric New Zealand and their Impact on Māori Coastal Communities'''. It references many studies, from his independent archaeology to the oral storytelling tradition of the Maori, and focuses on not only early volcanic activity on the islands of New Zealand but also the rash of 15th century tsunamis and their effect on the early populations.  
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Bruce received the ILFORD award for Aerial Archaeology in 1982. He was President of the Wellington Branch of the Royal Society of New Zealand (1985-1987), and of the New Zealand Archaeological Association (1986-1988). He serves as NZAA representative on the Skinner Research Fund Committee (1987 – to present). From 2001 to 2004 he was on the Advisory Board for the National Isotope Centre. He has been a member of the NZ Institute of Surveyors for more than 40 years, and has edited the New Zealand Surveyor, the Journal of the NZ Institute of Surveyors, since 2007.  
  
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== Stout Fellowship ==
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The Stout fellowship <ref>http://www.victoria.ac.nz/stout-centre/research-opportunities/Publications/Former-JDStout-Fellows.pdf Accessed 2010. </ref> was established by the John David Stout Trust in order to sponsor research projects into the society of New Zealand, and is an independent grant to well published and recognized scholars to research for a full twelve months at Victoria University. In 2003, he received the JD Stout fellowship, a 12 month appointment, for his research on tectonics and the Maori people. It was during this time that he researched and began his book '''Hostile Shores: Catastrophic Events in Prehistoric New Zealand and their Impact on Maori Coastal Communities'''. It references many studies, from archaeology to the oral storytelling tradition of the Maori, and focuses on not only early tectonic and volcanic activity in New Zealand but also a series of 15th century tsunamis and their effect on the early populations. Other papers resulted from the period<ref>  http://www.victoria.ac.nz/stout-centre/research-opportunities/jd-stout-info.aspx Accessed 2010. </ref>.
  
 
== Hostile Shores ==
 
== Hostile Shores ==
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[[Image:Hostile Shores.jpg]]
 
[[Image:Hostile Shores.jpg]]
  
'''Hostile Shores''' was published by Auckland University Press in 2003 under the name Bruce or BG Mcfadgen. The "big crunch" of 1400's tsunamis is the focus of his study. He concentrates on early colonization by the Polynesians through 18th century Europeans that inhabit the area. The coastal communities of the Maori people were shaped and affected not only physically but socially by all of these natural and man-made events.
+
Hostile Shores was published by Auckland University Press in 2007. It covers the period between the colonisation of New Zealand by Polynesians through to the 18th century arrival of Europeans. The "big crunch" of 15th Century tsunamis is the focus of his study. The coastal communities of the Maori people were shaped and affected not only physically but socially by natural and man-made events. Bruce incorporates not only his knowledge of tectonics and volcanology but his specialties in radiocarbon dating, especially by correlating the samples of dating to various societies and the natural events that correspond with them. In this way he establishes the timeline of the given situation. He compares it to modern tectonic activity and its effect on modern cultures, and contrasts North and South Island coasts of the island. He identifies the catastrophic events as causes for loss of food sources and the need for migration of certain communities away from the coast to more stable ground.  
Mcfadgen incorporates not only his knowledge of tectonics and vulcanology but his specialties in radiocarbon dating, especially by correlating the samples of dating to various societies and the natural events that correspond with them. In this way he establishes the timeline of the given situation. He compares it to modern tectonic activity and its effect on modern cultures, and contrasts North and South Island coasts of the island. He identifies the catastrophic events as causes for loss of food sources and the need for migration of certain communities to more stable ground.
 
  
== One NZ Foundation Controversy ==
 
  
There has been some controversy among the One New Zealand foundation, which claims to refute Mcfadgen’s work with evidence of pre-Maori settlement in the New Zealand Islands. The ONZF, however, is a society of some debate as an anti-Maori, protest group opposed to the government of New Zealand’s actions in settling with the Maori people. One of their main publications targets Mcfadgen several times, describing his work as “dismissive and simplistic”, however as a private group their findings have not been largely credited.
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== References ==
 +
<references />
  
[http://www.eurospanbookstore.com/display.asp?k=9781869403904&]
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[[Category:Archaeologists]]
[http://www.victoria.ac.nz/maori/staff/bruce-mcfadgen.aspx]
 
[http://www.onenzfoundation.co.nz/Rats.htm]
 
[http://www.fishpond.co.nz/Books/Nonfiction/Social_Sciences/Archaeology/9781869403904/]
 
McFadgen, B.G. 2007. Hostile Shores: Catastrophic Events in Prehistoric New Zealand and their Impact on Māori Coastal Communities. Auckland University Press.
 

Latest revision as of 09:08, 13 January 2013

Bruce Gordon McFadgen (1943- )

Bruce McFadgen has been an archaeologist in New Zealand for over 45 years. He has more than 70 refereed publications, including monographs and book chapters. His most notable contribution is Hostile Shores, a book about the impact of tectonic events on cultural change.

Bruce-mcfadgen.jpg

Career

Before becoming an archaeologist, Bruce McFadgen’s early career was as a surveyor, working for the Department of Lands and Survey from 1961 to 1968, including studying surveying at Otago University in 1964 and 1965. An intense interest in archaeology led to a career change, and he returned to Otago University in 1968 to complete a BA and MA in Anthropology. The topic of his master’s thesis was palaeoenvironmental studies of the Manawatu sand plain[1].

His PhD [2] is in Geology, from Victoria University of Wellington, with research over the period 1972-1977 that followed Harold Wellman’s pioneering work on coastal sedimentology and its historical interpretation. The results of this work have been published[3].

Bruce was employed by the NZ Historic Places Trust as a Staff Archaeologist from 1977 until 1987, and by the Department of Conservation from 1987 until 2003. In 2003 he took early retirement to take up the JD Stout Fellowship at Victoria University, to research and write Hostile Shores, which was published by Auckland University in 2007.

Bruce has undertaken field work widely in New Zealand, with particular emphasis on the central New Zealand, especially the southern North Island, the Chatham Islands and the western Bay of Plenty.

He has made material contributions in a number of areas, including radiometric dating e.g. [4], [5], recent tephras and their utilisation in archaeology[6], horticultural (plaggen) soils and other soils modified by human activity e.g. [7], coastal processes in relation to archaeological sites e.g. [8], and in particular interpretations of sediments in relation to past tsunami events and the potential effect these events had on past Maori populations e.g.[9].

His principal archaeological investigations have been the Foxton archaic site and Ruahihi Pa[10].

Bruce has produced two regional archaeology syntheses in the Department of Conservation series[11],[12].

A major achievement while with the Department of Conservation was the coordination and production of an on-line Radiocarbon database for New Zealand [13].

Bruce has never been shy of controversy. A material contribution was to tackle the anomalous Poukawa swamp site where he conclusively demonstrated the cultural material found there below the Taupo tephra was intrusive [14]. Hence the site is not evidence for occupation a thousand years earlier than more conventional views of New Zealand history. Bruce has presented different interpretations of sites with stone structures around the southern coast of the North Island [15]. With Goff he has rebutted claims that a bolide impact occurred south of New Zealand within the time of human history[16].

Some reviewers see his interpretation of the effect that 15th century tsunami had on Maori history as being closer to determinism than they are comfortable with (e.g.[17], [18]).

A close professional association has been with geologist James Goff currently Professor of Tsunami Studies at UNSW Sydney. Bruce has worked with James for more than 10 years on a variety of projects on the New Zealand mainland and on off-shore islands, and most recently on D'Urville Island.

Bruce is currently a Research Associate with the School of Maori Studies at Victoria University, Wellington[19] which involves lecturing, research, and field trips with students. In addition to this he undertakes work as an archaeological consultant across prehistoric and historic archaeology, often in association with other consulting archaeologists. He is currently working in collaboration with Dr Eric Force, Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, on archaeoseismology and its role in the development of civilisation [20].

Awards and Credits

Bruce received the ILFORD award for Aerial Archaeology in 1982. He was President of the Wellington Branch of the Royal Society of New Zealand (1985-1987), and of the New Zealand Archaeological Association (1986-1988). He serves as NZAA representative on the Skinner Research Fund Committee (1987 – to present). From 2001 to 2004 he was on the Advisory Board for the National Isotope Centre. He has been a member of the NZ Institute of Surveyors for more than 40 years, and has edited the New Zealand Surveyor, the Journal of the NZ Institute of Surveyors, since 2007.

Stout Fellowship

The Stout fellowship [21] was established by the John David Stout Trust in order to sponsor research projects into the society of New Zealand, and is an independent grant to well published and recognized scholars to research for a full twelve months at Victoria University. In 2003, he received the JD Stout fellowship, a 12 month appointment, for his research on tectonics and the Maori people. It was during this time that he researched and began his book Hostile Shores: Catastrophic Events in Prehistoric New Zealand and their Impact on Maori Coastal Communities. It references many studies, from archaeology to the oral storytelling tradition of the Maori, and focuses on not only early tectonic and volcanic activity in New Zealand but also a series of 15th century tsunamis and their effect on the early populations. Other papers resulted from the period[22].

Hostile Shores

Hostile Shores.jpg

Hostile Shores was published by Auckland University Press in 2007. It covers the period between the colonisation of New Zealand by Polynesians through to the 18th century arrival of Europeans. The "big crunch" of 15th Century tsunamis is the focus of his study. The coastal communities of the Maori people were shaped and affected not only physically but socially by natural and man-made events. Bruce incorporates not only his knowledge of tectonics and volcanology but his specialties in radiocarbon dating, especially by correlating the samples of dating to various societies and the natural events that correspond with them. In this way he establishes the timeline of the given situation. He compares it to modern tectonic activity and its effect on modern cultures, and contrasts North and South Island coasts of the island. He identifies the catastrophic events as causes for loss of food sources and the need for migration of certain communities away from the coast to more stable ground.


References

  1. McFadgen B.G., 1972, Palaeoenvironmental studies in the Manawatu sand plain, with particular reference to Foxton. Unpublished MA Thesis (Anthropology), University of Otago, Dunedin.
  2. McFadgen B.G., 1978 Environment and archaeology in New Zealand. Unpublished PhD Thesis (Geology), Victoria University of Wellington.
  3. McFadgen, B.G., 1985 Late Holocene Stratigraphy of Coastal Deposits between Auckland and Dunedin, New Zealand. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand Vol. 15(1):27-65.
  4. McFadgen, B. G., Knox, F. B. and Cole, T. R. L. 1994. Radiocarbon calibration curve variations and their implications for the interpretation of New Zealand Prehistory. Radiocarbon, 36(2): 221–236.
  5. Knox, F. B. and McFadgen, B. G. 2001. Least-squares fitting smooth curves to decadal radiocarbon calibration data from AD 1145 to AD 1945. Radiocarbon, 43(1): 87–118.
  6. Lowe, D.J., Newnham, R.M., McFadgen, B.G. and Higham, T.F.G., 2000: Tephras and New Zealand archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Science, 27, 859-870.
  7. McFadgen, B.G. 1980. Maori Plaggen Soils in New Zealand: their origin and properties. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 10: 3–18.
  8. McFadgen, B. G. and Goff, J. R. 2005. An earth system approach to understanding the tectonic and cultural landscapes of linked marine embayments: Avon-Heathcote Estuary (Ihutai) and Lake Ellesmere (Waihora), New Zealand. Journal of Quaternary Science, 20(3): 227–237.
  9. Goff, J. R. and McFadgen, B. G. 2001. Catastrophic seismic-related events and their impact on prehistoric human occupation in coastal New Zealand. Antiquity, 74: 155–62
  10. McFadgen, B.G. and R.A. Sheppard 1984 Ruahihi Pa – A Prehistoric Defended Settlement in the Southwestern Bay of Plenty. Bulletin 22, National Museum of New Zealand, New Zealand Historic Places Trust Publication 19
  11. McFadgen, B.G., 2003 Archaeology of the Wellington Conservancy: Wairarapa, A study in tectonic archaeology. Department of Conservation Science Publication, Wellington.
  12. McFadgen, B.G., 1997 Archaeology of the Wellington Conservancy: Kapiti-Horowhenua, A prehistoric and palaeoenvironmental study. Department of Conservation Science Publication, Wellington.
  13. New Zealand Radiocarbon Database, http://www.waikato.ac.nz/waikato/nzcd/index.html Accessed 2010.
  14. McFadgen, B.G., 1979: The antiquity of man at Lake Poukawa, New Zealand. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand. Vol. 9:375–382.
  15. McFadgen, B.G. 1980. A stone row system at Okoropunga on the southeast Wairarapa coast and inferences about coastal stone rows elsewhere in central New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Science, 23: 189–197.
  16. Goff, James, Keri Hulme and Bruce McFadgen, 2003, “Mystic Fires of Tamaatea”: Attempts to creatively rewrite New Zealand’s cultural and tectonic past. Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, Vol. 33(4):795-809.
  17. Anderson, A, 2008, review of Hostile shores: catastrophic events in prehistoric New Zealand and their impact on Maori coastal communities. The Journal of Pacific History, Vol. 43(3):393-4.
  18. Lowe, D. J., 2008, review of Hostile shores: catastrophic events in prehistoric New Zealand and their impact on Maori coastal communities. New Zealand Journal of Geology & Geophysics, Vol. 51:379–381.
  19. http://www.victoria.ac.nz/maori/staff/bruce-mcfadgen.aspx Accessed 2010.
  20. Force, E.R., and McFadgen, B.G. 2010. Tectonic environments of ancient civilizations: opportunities for archaeoseismological and anthropological studies. In: Ancient Earthquakes. Geological Society of America, Special Paper. IGCP 567. (In Press).
  21. http://www.victoria.ac.nz/stout-centre/research-opportunities/Publications/Former-JDStout-Fellows.pdf Accessed 2010.
  22. http://www.victoria.ac.nz/stout-centre/research-opportunities/jd-stout-info.aspx Accessed 2010.