During the 1968–1969 school year, Smith taught 7th grade math in Inkster, Michigan instead of serving in the Vietnam War.[3] He then joined the United States Army Reserve for five years as a combat medic. For his reserve training periods he wore a short-hair wig so he would not have to cut his hair.[3] During his graduate school time he was part of a group of graduate students who belonged to the New Archaeology movement. His PhD dissertation was on the animal bones that had been found in the Missouri sites, focusing on why that culture hunted a small number of animal species.[1]
Smithsonian career
While at the Smithsonian, Smith has worked as an anthropologist, archaeologist, archaeobiologist, and curator. Much of his work there involves the National Museum of Natural History. While at the Smithsonian, Smith has been a member of several organizations, including the National Academy of Sciences and American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Interested in humanity's transition from hunter-gatherer societies to agricultural societies, after arriving at the Smithsonian Smith began focusing on proving that plant domestication arose independently in eastern North America rather than having spread to there from Mexico.[4][5] This work began in the early 1980s with a cigar box full of seeds that had been stored in the attic of the Smithsonian.[3] This box contained about 50,000 Chenopodium berlandieri (lamb's quarters, gooseberry) seeds. Helianthus (sunflower) and Iva annua (marshelder) had already been shown to have been domesticated early, but Cucurbita (squash and pumpkin) proved to have been domesticated even earlier. Using genetic analysis, Smith and others showed that Cucurbita pepo had been independently domesticated twice, once in Mexico and once in eastern North America.[1]
Smith married Melinda Zeder, who is an archaeobiologist at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. Because she studies Old World animals and he studies New World plants, they have only co-authored three articles.[1][6][7][8]
Honors
Smith has published nine books and over 120 articles and received these awards and honors:[1]
1972 Horace H. Rackham Prize Fellowship, University of Michigan
1986 Regent's Publication Program Fellow for 1987, Smithsonian Institution
1987 Robert L. Stigler, Jr. Lectures in Archaeology, University of Arkansas
1988 Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Fellowship
1990 W. S. Webb Lecture in Archaeology, University of Kentucky
1993 Presidential Recognition Award, Society for American Archaeology
1995 Special Achievement Award, Society for American Archaeology
1996 James Henry Breasted Prize, American Historical Association. Rivers of Change selected as the best book in any field of history prior to A.D. 1000
1997 Book Award, Society for American Archaeology. The Emergence of Agriculture selected as the best book in archaeology written for a general audience
1997 Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science
2002 Brittingham Visiting Scholar, University of Wisconsin, Madison
2003 Elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences
2005 R. Fryxell Award and Medal for Interdisciplinary Research, Society for American Archaeology
2006 Distinguished Lecturer, 2006, Department of Anthropology, University of Kentucky
2007 NMNH 2006 Science Achievement Award
2010 Presidential Recognition Award, Society for American Archaeology.
2011 Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Selected works
Smith, Bruce D. (1978). Prehistoric Patterns of Human Behavior: A Case Study in the Mississippi Valley. Waltham, MA: Academic Press. ISBN978-0-12-650650-1.
Smith, Bruce D., ed. (1990). The Mississippian Emergence. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. ISBN978-0-87474-844-4. JSTOR1185810.
Smith, Bruce D. (1992). Rivers of Change: Essays on Early Agriculture in Eastern North America. Clinton Corners, NY: Eliot Werner Publications. ISBN978-1-58834-046-7.
Smith, Bruce D., ed. (2011). The Subsistence Economies of Indigenous North American Societies. Landover, MD: Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Publications, Rowman-Littlefield. ISBN978-1-935623-01-4.
References
^ abcdefg"Bruce D. Smith"(PDF). Smithsonian Institution. May 2011. Retrieved November 13, 2014.
^Zeder, Melinda; Emshwiller, Eve; Smith, Bruce D.; Bradley, Dan (2006). "Documenting Domestication: The Intersection of Genetics and Archaeology". Trends in Genetics. 22 (3): 139–155. doi:10.1016/j.tig.2006.01.007. PMID16458995. (cover article)
^Zeder, Melinda; Smith, Bruce D. (2009). "A Conversation on Agricultural Origins: Talking Past Each Other in a Crowded Room". Current Anthropology. 50 (5): 681–690. doi:10.1086/605553. S2CID41194691.