Tony Boudreaux
Tony Boudreaux

Field(s) of expertise:
Degree(s):
- Ph.D., University of North Carolina
- M.A., University of Alabama
- B.A., Mississippi State University
Department:
Title(s):
- Professor
- Director of Curation, Cobb Institute of Archaeology
Achievements:
- C.B. Moore Award for Excellence in Archaeology by a Young Scholar in Southeastern Studies, Southeastern Archaeological Conference - 2008
Phone:
Email:
TBoudreaux@anthro.msstate.edu
Books:
- Contact, Colonialism, and Native Communities in the Southeastern United States
- Archaeological Investigations at Jackson Landing : An Early Late Woodland Mound and Earthwork Site in Coastal Mississippi
- Papers in Honor of Bennie C. Keel, co-edited with Christopher B. Rodning and Jane M. Eastman
- The Archaeology of Town Creek
- The Archaeology of Native North Carolina: Papers in Honor of H. Trawick Ward, co-edited with Jane M. Eastman and Christopher B. Rodning
Bio:
Dr. Tony Boudreaux is an archaeologist whose research has focused on late pre-Contact and Contact period Native American societies of the southeastern United States, especially complex societies of the Mississippian and Late Woodland periods. His research has explored what public and domestic architectural differences can tell us about ancient communities, how social groups interacted to create and maintain households and communities that persisted for long periods of time, and how social differences were expressed within these communities. He is available for commentary and analysis on these and related topics. In addition to serving as a professor, he also serves as the Director of Curation for the Cobb Institute of Archaeology.