Arleyn W. Simon

Associate Research Professor
Director, Archaeological Research Institute
Ph.D., Archaeology, Arizona State University

SHESC Themes: Culture, Heritage and Identity

Field Specializations: Archaeology, Ceramic Technology, Quantitative Methods, Social Organization  

Regional Focus: North America (Southwest)

Contact: Arleyn W. Simon  

ASU Directory Profile

Research:
Arleyn Simon has interests in the study of prehistoric social organization and craft production through technological and compositional analysis of ceramics and other artifacts; materials science; and quantitative methods. She currently directs the activities of the Archaeological Research Institute, including collection management and research projects. Previously, she was the laboratory director for the Roosevelt Platform Mound Study (1989-1998). She has directed field projects in the U.S. Southwest (Arizona) and Northern Plains (North Dakota, Montana, South Dakota and Wyoming). Simon is a faculty associate of the ASU Center for Solid State Science (CSSS) and the Partnership for Research in Spatial Modeling (PRISM). She is a board member (and past president) of the Society for Archaeological Sciences.

Simon's research actively uses compositional and physical analysis of material artifacts, such as ceramics, stone tools and fine goods (turquoise and obsidian) for the purpose of identifying prehistoric exchange networks and production loci on both inter-regional and intra-regional scales using quantitative analysis. She is involved in interdisciplinary research using geology, chemistry and materials science. Most recently, she was a co-PI on an interdisciplinary multi-year NSF grant through PRISM for the development of an artifact digital archive and a visual query interface for shape-based search and classification purposes.     

     Research Projects:
     Long-Term Coupled Socioecological Change in the American Southwest and Northern Mexico
     Preserving the Petroglyphs of South Mountain Park
    
Select Publications: 
Simon, A. W., Van Alfen, D., Razdan, A., Farin, G., Bae, M. & Rowe, J. (2005). 3D modeling for analysis and archiving of ceramic vessel morphology: A case study from the American Southwest. In H. Kars & E. Burke (Eds.), Proceedings of the 33rd International Symposium on Archaeometry, April 22-26, 2002 (pp. 257-263). Geoarchaeological and bioarchaeological studies, volume 3. Amsterdam: Institute for Geo- and Bioarchaeology, Vrije Universiteit.

Kim, J., Simon, A. W., Ripoche, V., Mayer, J. W. & Wilkens, B. (2003). Proton-induced x-ray emission analysis of turquoise artifacts from Salado platform mound sites in the Tonto Basin of central Arizona. Measurement Science and Technology, 14, 1579-1589.

Simon, A. W. & Gosser, D. C. (2001). Conflict and exchange among the Salado of Tonto Basin: Warfare motivation or alleviation? In G. E. Rice & S. LeBlanc (Eds.), Deadly landscapes: Case studies on prehistoric Southwest warfare (pp. 219-238). Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.