!!Martin Jones - Curriculum Vitae
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__Career and academic history__
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*2012-(continuing) Vice-Master, Darwin College, Cambridge\\
*2007 Special Research Advisor, Institute of Archaeology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences \\
*1990- (continuing) George Pitt-Rivers Professor of Archaeological Science, University of Cambridge \\
*1981-90  Lecturer/ Senior Lecturer  in Archaeological Science, University of Durham\\
*1979-81 Research assistant, University of Oxford \\
*1974-79 Environmental Specialist, Oxford Archaeological Unit\\
*1985 DPhil (Oxon) The ecological and cultural implications of selected carbonised seed assemblages from southern Britain\\
*1973 BA(Cantab) 1st class honours in Natural Science\\
*1972 Cambridge University Prize for Botany (Frank Smart Prize)
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__External appointment history__
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*HBMC: (English Heritage)\\
**Chairman, Research Advisory Panel (2004-2007)\\
**Chairman, Science and Conservation Panel (1997-2004)\\
**Ancient Monuments Advisory Committee (1998-2001)\\
**Historic Sites and Landscapes Advisory Committee (2001-\\
*NERC: (Natural Environment Research Council)\\
**Chairman, Science-based Archaeology Strategy Committee (1996 to 1999)\\
**Earth Sciences Technology Board (to 1996-1999)\\
*British Association for the Advancement of Science\\
**President of the Archaeology and Anthropology section 1998\\
*Wellcome Trust\\
**Chairman Bio-archaeology Panel (2000-2005)\\
*AHRC (Arts and Humanities Research Council))\\
**Convenor, Research Panel 1 (2006-2009)\\
**Research Panel Member (2004-2009)\\
*ERC SH5 Advanced Panel member (2012)\\
*Leicester University\\
**i-science steering committee member  (2003-ongoing)\\
*Oxford Archaeological Unit\\
**Research Advisory Panel member (2003-ongoing)\\
*External examinerships present and past\\
**Univs of Bradford, Dublin, Durham, Sheffield, Leicester, London, UMIST and York
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__Current Research Interests__\\
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a) Food and foodways\\
b) Cold climate ecology and pre-agricultural use of plant foods (current focus on Dolni Vestonice and the Moravian Gate.  New collaboration with the Baikal Archaeology Project).\\
c) Early crops through bio-archaeology and genetics (current focus on Triticum diccocum, Hordeum vulgare and Panicum miliaceum)\\
d) Later prehistoric and early historic agriculture