Since 2005, Angela has worked as a professional archaeologist in Alberta, Yukon Territory, Alaska, and California. Angela earned her M.A. in Anthropology from the University of Alberta in 2008, and her Ph.D. in Anthropology from Texas A&M University in 2015, conducting collaborative research with the Tanana Chiefs Conference in Fairbanks, Alaska. Her past research has focused on hunter-gatherer adaptations, lithic technology, consultation with local tribal governments, and the incorporation of archived collections and mitigative data into new research questions and datasets. During her Ph.D. program, she co-managed undergraduate archaeological field schools and public education programs for Native and underprivileged youth. Her experience in cultural resources management includes directing archaeological survey, excavation, and laboratory analysis for precontact and historic-era archaeological resources, ethnographic recording and mapping of traditional use sites, and collections and database management.
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Angela’s Featured Publications
Younie, A.M., R. J. Le Blanc and R. J. Woywitka
In Press
Microblade Technology, Subarctic Cultural Adaptations, and the Denali Complex in the Alberta Oil Sands. In Alberta’s Lower Athabasca Basin: Archaeology and Palaeoenvironments, edited by Brian M. Ronaghan. Athabasca University Press, Athabasca, Alberta.
Younie, A.M. and T. E. Gillispie
2016
Lithic Technology at Linda’s Point, Healy Lake, Alaska. ARCTIC Journal 69(1):79-98
Gillispie, T. E., R. Sattler, J. P. Cook, and A. M. Younie
2014
Healy Lake Village: New Data and Analysis from the Chindadn Site. Alaska Journal of Anthropology 11:186-187.
Younie, A.M., R. Le Blanc and R. Woywitka
2010
Little Pond: A Microblade And Burin Site In Northeastern Alberta. Arctic Anthropology 47(1): 71-92