http://www.JobSpectrum.org/job_mcgovern.html Everyday Chemistry: Patrick E. McGovern |
How would you describe your job to someone standing
behind you in the grocery checkout line?
I'm what's called an archaeological chemist; the more romantic description is
a molecular archaeologist. I try to tease out ancient molecules that comprise
the artifacts found in excavations. I try to solve the mystery of how they were
made and what they were used for.
What is your educational background?
I am trained in chemistry and archaeology. I also did work in neurochemistry
(brain research). So my training combines the sciences and humanities, which
is unusual. As an undergraduate at Cornell University, I majored in chemistry,
but minored in English. As a graduate student in ancient Near Eastern archaeology
at the University of Pennsylvania, I took a lot of foreign languages, including
Hebrew, Latin, Greek, Akkadian, and Egyptian hieroglyphics, as well as history
and anthropology.
The challenge comes in integrating chemistry and the humanities. Molecular
Archaeology is one of the most interdisciplinary fields that can be imagined:
you need to understand archaeology, history and ancient texts, even art, in
addition to a host of chemical techniques.
What path did you take to get where you are now?
In a very serendipitous way! As an undergraduate, I took science and humanities,
since I had a flair for both and wasn't sure which direction I wanted to head
in. I became very interested in chemistry and brain research. But I was also
interested in what it is to be human and how human societies have developed
through time. Archaeology provides new, direct evidence to answer those kinds
of questions. So, before completing a Ph.D. in neurochemistry at the University
of Rochester, I switched directions and began studying archaeology at Penn..
How did you get your current job?
As a grad student in archaeology at Penn, I wanted to keep my connection with
the natural sciences and especially chemistry. The University of Pennsylvania
Museum for Archaeology and Anthropology is world-renowned for its Museum Applied
Science Center for Archaeology (MASCA), which is the only privately funded facility
of its kind in the country. It began back in the 1950's at the second radiocarbon
lab in the country, and went on to do pioneering work in geophysical prospecting
(magnetometer and resistivity exploration for archaeological sites) and numerous
studies of the sciences applied to archaeology.
I worked in the radiocarbon lab as a student on a research fellowship and that
kept my hand in chemistry while I was learning the about the archaeology and
history. My job developed out of that research fellowship when an opening came
up for a research scientist, particularly doing archeological chemistry. It
is the only full-time position like this in the US.
What do you consider to be your key career decisions?
I would say taking measure of where this field of Molecular Archaeology is and
trying to launch off in new directions. For example, my background had been
more in organic chemistry and biochemistry and I began considering how that
background could best be put to use in Molecular Archaeology. I did a series
of pottery and glass studies using inorganic analyses and was successful with
that. The next question was, what did the pottery contain originally and that's
where my training in organic analysis came in. The first compound I worked on
was the famous Royal Purple dye. A Canaanite Jar with a purplish deposit on
its interior had been excavated at the ancient Phoenician site of Sarepta in
Lebanon. Using a whole array of analytical techniques, my laboratory was able
to establish that the compound, dibromoindigo, had been preserved intact for
3000 years. Humans surround themselves with organic materials-clothes, houses,
foods, etc.--but archaeology up until now has not been able to get much information
about the organic materials because they we have been lost through degradation.
In the last 20 years, a lot of very sensitive chemical techniques have become
available that enable us to identify these ancient organic compounds and promise
to revolutionize the field.
What is your ultimate career goal?
I'd like to see archaeology based on natural sciences and especially chemistry
incorporated into the academic curriculum around the country, which it isn't
at this time. I teach one course a year and I'd like to see a full-time position
in Molecular Archaeology open in the country. A lot of traditional programs
don't have room for this. England, for example, is much farther ahead than we
are-at every level. And yet archaeology, which is based on a very limited amount
of preserved material recovered from the past, needs to exploit its database
for every conceivable clue to date, identify, and reconstruct past technologies
and cultures. Chemistry is not a luxury in understanding the history of our
bodies and cultures-it is the sine qua non.
What kinds of people do well in your company/organization?
Those who fit in to the existing paradigm: the traditionally defined disciplines
that don't accommodate interdisciplinary fields such as Molecular Archaeology
at this time. You really have to have your foot in both camps to do good archaeology.
What scientific backgrounds does your company look
for?
At MASCA, our goal has been to find people who combine archaeology and natural
science, and this has been our strength over the years. But those people are
hard to find. In the larger university or museum context, straight chemistry
or straight archaeology (with the emphasis on anthropology and the humanities
rather than the sciences) has been the rule. The traditional definitions are
breaking down very slowly, but some signs exist, such as hiring people doing
ancient DNA analysis in anthropology departments.
What is your typical day like?
There really isn't one, because I spend about two months out of every year on
excavations. I have directed excavations in Jordan, but most recently I have
been combing the world for ancient organic samples that shed light on the earliest
foods and fermented beverages of humanity. For example, the last two years have
been spent in China working on a Chalcolithic excavation, extracting pottery
sherds in a high-school laboratory for analysis back home. We are particularly
interested in establishing whether rice or millet was used for the earliest
beverages. I have also traveled extensively around China, meeting most of the
key archaeologists and scientists, collecting even earlier samples. They are
very excited about the prospects for this kind of research, since it bears directly
on the origins of Chinese civilization, the longest-lasting culture in the world.
In my Penn laboratory, my time is divided between lab research and research
and writing.
What do you like about your job? What don't you like?
Discovering something totally new and different. Finding out something that
nobody else has ever known before. The field hasn't developed enough to really
be recognized as something worth funding and establishing separate academic
positions.
What have been your most interesting projects or
opportunities?
When I was excavating in Jordan, I discovered a tomb that had 227 burials in
it from the early Iron Age. It contained some of the earliest steel artifacts
ever found. The steel wasn't used for weapons but for jewelry, anklets and bracelets.
It suggests that technological developments often have more to do with aesthetics
than practical uses.
Other interesting projects included working on Royal Purple and the earliest
wine and beer. Most recently, it was reconstructing what was eaten and drunk
at King Midas' funerary feast.
If you had it all to do over again, what would you
do differently about your career?
I can't answer that. I think what I've done is so new, so different from anything
I would have predicted. I've gone one step at a time, and followed opportunities
that have developed.
Who are your role models?
The person that probably had the greatest influence was the woman who set up
the radiocarbon lab at Penn, Elizabeth Ralph. It was the 2nd radiocarbon lab
in the US (after the University of Chicago) and she gave me my start in the
lab and in MASCA, which led to what I do today. She was an excellent model
What do you do when you're not at work?
I play golf (6 handicap), travel, read, and go bird watching with my wife.
What is the most rewarding thing about what you
do?
Discovering something new and different about where humans come from and what
our cultures are like and how they've developed. Everything we are today is
buried in the past.
What advice do you have for others who want a job
like yours?
Be trained in both the humanities and social sciences and get a firm background
in chemistry. You have to learn as much as you can about some archeological
period and region, and it's a good idea to have specialized knowledge of at
least one chemical technique. From that, one can branch out into other areas
of archaeology and chemistry, and open new vistas on the past. Molecular Archaeology
is just emerging as a discipline, but it could well represent the future of
archaeology.
Related links:
Patrick McGovern's homepage
has additional information about his research.
The world's oldest wine jar (more than 7,000 years old, ca. 5400-5000 BC), discovered by Dr. McGovern, placed MASCA in the Guinness Book of World Records.
Visit the award-winning Web site on the origins and ancient history of wine.
Read more about Dr. McGovern's research of the banquet food and drink at King
Midas' funerary feast and his discovery of the earliest
known chemical evidence of beer.
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