URI(s)
Fuller Name
- Catherine Julia
Variants
- Frieman, Catherine J., 1982-
- Frieman, Cate, 1982-
Identifies LC/NAF RWO
Identifies RWO
Birth Date
- 1982-11-16
Has Affiliation
- Organization: Australian National University
- Organization: Merton College
- Organization: Yale University
- Organization: University of Oxford
- Organization: University of Nottingham
Associated Locale
- Australia
Associated Language
- English
Field of Activity
(lcsh) Archaeology--Europe
Occupation
(lcsh) University and college faculty members
Exact Matching Concepts from Other Schemes
Sources
- found: Skeuomorphs and stone-working, 2010:t.p. (Catherine Frieman, Merton Coll.; D.Phil. thesis in archaeology, Univ. of Oxford) thesis cat. inf. form (Frieman, Catherine Julia, b. Nov. 16, 1982; alternative name: Cate)
- found: Flint daggers in prehistoric Europe, 2015:ECIP t.p. (Catherine J. Frieman) galley (lecturer in European archaeology at the Australian National University)
- found: The Oxford handbook of neolithic Europe, 2015:page xxiv (Catherine J. Frieman, School of Archaeology and Anthropology, Australian National University Canberra, Australia)
- found: Australia National University Canberra web site, July 27, 2020:(Associate Professor Catherine J. Frieman, D.phil (Oxon); M.st (Oxon); BA (Yale), Associate Professor in European Archaeology ; [email protected] ; expertise: Archaeology, Archaeology Of Europe, The Mediterranean And The Levant, Social Theory, Sociology And Social Studies Of Science And Technology ; Catherine Frieman is an associate professor in European archaeology in the School of archaeology and anthropology. Previously, she was a post-doctoral research fellow at the Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art at the University of Oxford and a lecturer in archaeology at the University of Nottingham. She received a BA in archaeological studies from Yale University and an M.st and D.phil in archaeology from the University of Oxford. Catherine's D.phil examined the adoption of metal objects and metallurgy in 4th-2nd millennium BC northwest Europe through a close study of various lithic objects long thought to be skeuomorphs of metal. Her primary research interests include innovation and conservatism, and she is a material culture and technology specialist with a particular specialism in stone tools. She currently holds a DECRA fellowship to study conservatism and resistance via the archaeology of prehistoric Cornwall and is Lead CI of an ARC Discovery project looking into human mobility and the diffusion of innovations in prehistoric Iberia and the Pacific. In addition to her research, Catherine is a passionate teacher. In 2017, she was appointed an ANU distinguished educator and her contributions to education have been recognised by teaching excellence awards from CASS, the Vice-Chancellor's office and the Australian Office of Learning and Teaching.) - https://researchers.anu.edu.au/researchers/frieman-cj
- found: Making journeys, 2021:t.p. (edited by Catriona D. Gibson, Kerri Cleary, and Catherine J. Frieman)
- found: Negotiating migrations, 2024:ECIP title page (Catherine J. Frieman)
Instance Of
Scheme Membership(s)
Collection Membership(s)
Change Notes
- 2011-05-13: new
- 2024-04-06: revised
Alternate Formats