David Guilfoyle is an archaeologist with many years of experience throughout Australia and the western United States (including Alaska). He is currently cooridinating the Gabbie Kylie Foundation (National Trust of Australia), a research fellow at t
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David Guilfoyle is an archaeologist with many years of experience throughout Australia and the western United States (including Alaska). He is currently cooridinating the Gabbie Kylie Foundation (National Trust of Australia), a research fellow at the University of Western Australia, and an adjunct staff member of Flinders University Archaeology Department, South Australia. He obtained a Bachelor of Science degree in archaeology (University of Western Australia) in 1997 and Master of Arts in Archaeology and Heritage (University of Leicester, England) in 2004. He has presented at a number of national and international conferences, trained/tutored university students and field crews in both Australia and the USA, and coordinated numerous field projects, often in remote areas. David has published widely in the field - including guidelines for conducting regional heritage assessments; a research paper modelling patterns of Ancestral Puebloan settlement in south eastern Utah; a research paper on social processes and stone artefact assemblages in northern Queensland; and a contributing author to a recent publication examining the historic archaeology of Colorado. David recently coordinated and delivered a successful Natural Resource Management project implementing a community and regional model to protect and restore cultural heritage areas throughout the South West and South Coast of Australia. David is committed to programmes that implement community and strategic models for effective cultural heritage management. Currently a Adjunct Research Associate with Centre of Excellence in Natural Resource Management (University of Western Australia, Albany) and Western Australian Museum.
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