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Dr. Jonathan Lothrop

Curator of Archaeology
jonathan.lothrop@nysed.gov

518-486-2992

My research is focused on how and when Indigenous peoples migrated into what we now call New York during the Late Pleistocene or Ice Age and the Early Holocene, between 13,000 and 10,000 years ago, and how they survived initially on the region's subarctic landscapes. Our approach involves integrated studies of Ice Age archaeological sites and artifact collections from across New York and surrounding regions to: (1) refine understandings of the archaeological chronology and material culture of the earliest Native Americans, and (2) using archaeological evidence, model changes through time in the lifeways of these First Peoples. A key aspect of this work involves collaborating with earth scientists at the NYSM and elsewhere to better understand the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene landscapes and environments of these peoples. At the broadest level, this research contributes to our collective understanding of the Late Pleistocene peopling of the New World and how some early peoples may have responded to rapid environmental and climatic changes at the end of the Ice Age, circa 11,600 years ago.

Publications

2023

K. Mghazli, N. Lazreq, G. Geyer, E. Landing, M. Boumehdi, N. Youbi 2023, Cambrian microfossils from the High Atlas, Morocco: Taxonomic, biostratigraphic, palaeobiogeographic, and depositional significance of the Brèche \ a Micmacca limestone beds, Journal of African Earth Sciences 197, 104751. 10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2022.104751
E. Landing, B. Kroger, S. Westrop, G. Geyer 2023, Proposed Early Cambrian cephalopods are chimaeras, the oldest known cephalopods are 30 m.y. younger, Communications Biology 6, 32. 10.1038/s42003-022-04383-9

2022

J. Nguyen, S. Westrop, E. Landing 2022, The Cambrian (Furongian) olenid trilobite <i>Peltura</i> from Avalonian Nova Scotia, Canada, with a review of some species from Baltica, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences , . 10.1139/cjes-2022-0007
E. Landing, S. Westrop, G. Geyer 2022, Trans-Avalonian green–black boundary (early Middle Cambrian): transform fault-driven epeirogeny and onset of 26 m.y. of shallow marine anoxia in Avalonia (Rhode Island–Belgium) and Baltica, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences , . 10.1139/cjes-2022-0065
E. Landing, R. Ripperdan, G. Geyer 2022, Discussion of ‘Reply to “Uppermost Cambrian carbon chemostratigraphy: the HERB and undocumented TOCE events are not synonymous”’Abstract, Geological Magazine 159, 173-176. 10.1017/S001675682100090X
G. Geyer, E. Landing, S. Meier, S. Höhn 2022, Oldest known West Gondwanan graptolite: Ovetograptus? sp. (lower Agdzian/lowest Wuliuan; basal Middle Cambrian) of the Franconian Forest, Germany, and review of pre-Furongian graptolithoids, PalZ , . 10.1007/s12542-022-00627-5

2021

E. Landing, Gerd Geyer, Igor Jirkov, Stefano Schiaparelli, Julia Sigwart 2021, Lophotrochozoa in the Cambrian evolutionary radiation and the Pelagiella problem, Papers in Palaeontology , . 10.1002/spp2.1396
E. Landing, Gerd Geyer, Mark Schmitz, Thomas Wotte, Artem Kouchinsky 2021, (Re)proposal of three Cambrian Subsystems and their Geochronology, Episodes 44, 273-283. 10.18814/epiiugs/2020/020088
E. Landing, Gerd Geyer 2021, Trace fossils, depositional context, and paleogeography of the upper Tal Group (upper lower Cambrian), Lesser Himalaya, India: a Gondwanan succession with no affinities to the Avalonia microcontinent – discussion of paper by Singh et~al. (2019), Ichnos 28, 143-156. 10.1080/10420940.2020.1843457
Gerd Geyer, E. Landing 2021, The Souss lagerstätte of the Anti-Atlas, Morocco: discovery of the first Cambrian fossil lagerstätte from Africa, Scientific Reports 11, 3107. 10.1038/s41598-021-82546-0