Anne R. Skinner
Senior Lecturer in Chemistry
at Williams since 1967
Education
- B.A., Radcliffe College, 1961
- MSc, Yale University, 1963
- Ph.D., Yale University, 1965 (physical chemistry)
Contact Information
Courses Taught
- CHEM
151: Concepts of Chemistry Laboratories
- CHEM
256: Concepts of Chemistry - Special Laboratory Section
- CHEM
262T: Applying the Scientific Method to Archaeology & Paleoanthropology
Research Students
- Ashwin Chandar '09, Summer '07
- Claudia Lord '09, Summer '07
- Kelly Smith '09, Summer '07
- Ophelia Adipa '06, Summer '04
- Abelee Ruth Esparza '07, Summer '04 & '05
- Sara Martin '05, Summer '02 & '04
- LaVonna Bowen '06, Summer '03
- Joanna Lloyd '05, Summer '03
- Catherine Mercado '06, Summer '03
- Terry-Ann Suer '05, Summer '03
- Drew Thompson '05, Summer '03
- Dean Laochamroonvorapongse, Summer '02
- Ivan Manolov, Summer '02
- Terry-Ann Suer, Summer '02
- Arthur Okwesilsi, Summer '01 & '02
- Kendrid LeShawn Mays, Summer '00 & '01
- Valerie Lothian, Summer '99 & '00
- Alan Velander, Summer '99
- Haibo Gu, Summer '98
- Zuzana Tothova, Summer '98
- Stephanie Min, Summer '97
- Kristen Hem, Summer '96
Research Interests
My work focuses on the interface between chemistry and two other disciplines,
geology and archaeology. A relatively new way of determining the age of materials
is to look at radiation damage caused by radioisotopes in the material itself
and in its surroundings. Oversimplified, the longer something has been buried,
the more damage should be found. The extent of damage can be measured with electron
spin resonance (ESR), a technique that looks at the unpaired electrons often
found when a stable bond is broken.
Geological applications have included following the rise and fall
of sea levels due to ice ages by dating shells of species known to
live in shallow water, and clarifying the development of soils in the
Mississippi Valley. Other sites have ranged from the coral reefs of
the Bahamas to ancient sea shores in Australia. Usually the geologist
has a broad sense of probable scenarios, and ESR dating allows one to
choose the best one.
Applications to archaeology (and paleoanthropology) cover the time
range from New World flint artifacts to teeth and bones from
million-year old sites associated with human evolution. The usual samples are teeth of large mammals found in the same site as hominid remains and/or artifacts. Hominid teeth themselves are generally too rare and too small to yield good results.
Recent Publications
- "ESR Dating at Mezmaiskaya Cave, Russia". A.R. Skinner, B.A.B. Blackwell, Sara Martin*, J.I.B. Blickstein, L.V. Golovanova & V.B. Doronichev,. Applied Radiation and Isotopes, 62, 219-224 (2005).
- "Fossilization Effects on U Uptake by Tooth Enamel: Insights into an ESR Dating Problem". A.R. Skinner, N.D. Chasteen, J.L. Shao, G.A. Goodfriend, B.A.B. Blackwell. Quaternary International, 135, 13-20 (2005).
- "New Clues to Limits on ESR Dating," Anne R. Skinner, N. Dennis
Chasteen, Pierre Brassard, and Bonnie A.B. Blackwell, Proceedings of the
International Symposium on New Prospects in ESR Dosimetry and Dating (2003).
- "Geochronology of Quaternary Coastal Plain Deposits, Southeastern Virgina,
U.S.A.," June E. Mirecki, John. F. Wehmiller and Anne R. Skinner, Journal
of Coastal Research (in press).
- "Dating the Naisiusiu Beds, Olduvai Gorge, by Electron Spin Resonance
(ESR)," A.R. Skinner, R.L. Hay, F. Masao, B.A.B. Blackwell, Quaternary Geochronology, 22,
1361-1366 (2003).
- "Recent findings on the Acheulian of the Hungsi and Baichbal valleys,
Karnataka, with special reference to the Isampur excavation and its dating,"
K. Paddayya, B.A.B. Blackwell, R. Jhaldiyal , M. D. Petraglia, S. Fevrier*,
D. A. Chaderton II, J.I.B. Blickstein, A.R. Skinner, Current Science,
83, 641-647 (2002).
- "Calibrating ESR ages in the 2-Ma range at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania,"
A.R. Skinner, B.A.B. Blackwell, V. Lothian*, Paleoanthropology Society, Kansas,
MO, Journal of Human Evolution, 40, (3), A22 (2001).
- "ESR dating: Is it still an "experimental" technique?," Anne R.
Skinner, Applied Radiation & Isotopes, 52, 1311-1316 (2000).
- "Improvements in dating tooth enamel by ESR," A.R. Skinner, B.A.B.
Blackwell, D.E. Chasteen, J.M. Shao, S.S. Min*, Applied Radiation &
Isotopes, 52, 1337-1344 (2000).
- "Dating Flint Artifacts with Electron Spin Resonance: Problems and Prospects,"
Anne R. Skinner and Mark N. Rudolph*, In: Archaeological Chemistry
V, M. V. Orna, Ed., (ACS Advances in Chemistry Series), pp. 37-46 (1996).
- "The Use of the E' Signal in Flint for ESR Dating," Anne R. Skinner and
Mark N. Rudolph*, Applied Radiation and Isotopes, 47, (11/12),
1399-1404 (1996).
- "ESR Dating of Terrestrial Quaternary Shells," Anne R. Skinner and Catherine
E. Shawl*, Quaternary Geochronology, 13, 679-684 (1995).
- "ESR Dating of Terrestrial Mollusks: Is It Just A Shell Game?," Anne R.
Skinner and June Mirecki, Applied Radiation and Isotopes, 44,
139-144 (1993).
- "ESR Dating of Chione Cancellata and Chama Sinuosa," A. R. Skinner and N.
Weicker* Quaternary Science Reviews, 11, 225-230 (1992).
* Williams student collaborator
Williams Chemistry