William Saturno

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William Andrew "Bill" Saturno is an American archaeologist and Mayanist scholar who has made significant contributions toward the study of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization. As of February 2015, Saturno holds a position as Assistant Professor in Archaeology at Boston University's College of Arts and Sciences (CAS). . He is also the Director of the Proyecto San Bartolo-Xultun at the Instito de Antropologia e Historia in Guatemala, a National Space SciResearch Scientist at the Marshall Space Flight Center, as well as a Research Associate at the Peabody Museum at Harvard University. Prior to his position at BU, Saturno was a lecturer at the University of New Hampshire [1]. Saturno is most well-known for his discovery of the discovery in 2001 of one of the oldest extant murals yet discovered in the Maya region, at the site of San Bartolo in northeastern Guatemala.[1] Of this discovery, he has said that it was his favorite and most challenging experience of his career, and that "being the first person to see them [the murals] after more than 2,000 years, uncovering them bit by bit, with each part more beautiful than the last, is an experience unlikely to be matched." [2] In 2010, Saturno and Franco Rossi discovered what they believe to be a workroom of a Xultún record keeper. The Mayan hieroglyphics at the site included representations of dates roughly 7000 years in the future, casting doubt on the speculation that the conclusion of the Long Count calendar would result in a 2012 doomsday scenario His current research interests are New World and Mesoamerican civilizations, landscape archaeology, remote sensing, Geographic Information Systems (GIS) application in archaeology, Mesoamerican iconography and religion, the evolution of complex societies, and archaeology in pop culture [3].

History and personal life

Born in Albany, New York, Saturno wanted to be an archaeologist since he was a small child, and first became interested in ancient Maya civilization when he visited the Maya site of Palenque while working in Mexico. Having worked in archaeology for over 20 years, in an interview with National Geographic he stated: "I see being an archaeologist as both a great privilege and a great responsibility. I have been entrusted with the recovery, interpretation, and preservation of the material remains of the past, with the history of an ancient people, and the heritage of a modern one."[4] For the last 7 years, when he is not teaching or conducting field work, Saturno has led scholarly tours in Guatemala and Maya Mexico for Archaeological Tours.[5] Saturno currently lives with his wife and their three sons in Boston, MA and enjoys soccer, opera, and snowboarding in his free time.

Education and academia

He graduated summa cum laude from the University of Arizona with a B.A. in Anthropology and Latin American Studies after attending Binghampton University for a time. He then acquired his Master of Arts Degree from Harvard University in 1995 and his PhD in Anthropology from Harvard University in 2000 [6].

During his time at Harvard University, he worked as a Teaching Fellow, Undergraduate Tutor, and Teaching Assistant in the Anthropology Department. Following the completion of their PhD program, Saturno then went on to become a Lecturer in 2000, and an Assistant Professor in 2003. At this time he also became a Research Scientist at NASA, in the Marshall Space Flight Center [7].

Awards

Saturno has been awarded more than 2.3 million dollars from over 45 grants throughout his career as an archaeologist, including the extremely prestigious Peabody Museum Research Grant, National Endowment for the Humanities Collaborative Research Grant, and the Ambassador's Fund for Cultural Preservation for his work in San Bartolo and the, National Aeronautics and Space Administration IPA for work in Archaeological Remote Sensing (CV) [8].

Fieldwork and projects

His most famous discovery to date, Saturno has worked continuously in San Bartolo since 2001 in an ongoing project. Work originally centered on the Preclassic murals of San Bartolo, but more recently is focused on the large, nearby city of Xultun and the changes in Maya politics and kingship from the Preclassic to European contact.

Since 2013, he has directed field work in Northern Peru, using remote sensing techniques like Landsat and ASTER to find archaeological features in the area and commercial sugarcane plantation environments. ancient Peruvians adapted to their coastal desert environment and how ancient land use has had lasting effects on environmental functions.

He has also conducted extensive excavation, survey, and mapping of ancient Maya and Peruvian archaeological sites, including the ancient Maya city of Copan and Rio Bravo in Belize.

Publications and media appearances

Saturno has written 3 books to date and contributed to over 8 compilated archaeological volumes. In 2000 he published his PhD dissertation as In the Shadow of the Acropolis: Rio Amarillo and Its Role in the Copan Polity. He published The Murals of San Bartolo, El Peten, Guatemala, Part 1: The North Wall and it's companion The Murals of of San Bartolo, El Peten, Guatemala, Part 2: The West Wall with noted Maya scholar Karl Taube in 2005 and 2010, respectively. He has also written several academic articles on the subjects of San Bartolo, ancient Maya religion and iconography, Maya political organization and collapse, among many other Mesoamerican subjects, most recently in the journals "Ancient Mesoamerica", "American Anthropologist", "Antiquity", and "Science".

Saturno works extensively with National Geographic, from which he has received many grants, and has appeared in many of their broadcasts on the ancient Maya, and the ancient Mayan 'prophecy' about the 2012 'Apocalypse' (he very vocally disagreed with the interpretation of the Maya calendar predicting the end of the world) as well as several National Geographic LIVE events. Most recently he has appeared in National Geographic LIVE's event New Light on the Ancient Maya in 2013 and will be appearing in another of their events, In Search of the Ancient Maya, where he will be giving an overview of the archaeological history of the Classic Maya [9]. He also was featured in The History Channel's Indiana Jones and the Ultimate Quest.

References

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