[情報] UVM professor killed in Brazil
http://anthropology.tamu.edu/news.htm
http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050815/NEWS01/5
08150305/1009/NEWS05
UVM professor killed in Brazil
Published: Monday, August 15, 2005
SAO PAULO, Brazil -- A University of Vermont anthropology professor on a
research trip to Brazil was killed Saturday during a robbery in a rainforest
town near the Amazon River, an American Embassy spokesman said Sunday.
James Petersen, 51, of Salisbury, Vt., died in the confrontation in a
restaurant in the town of Iranduba, said the spokesman, John Wilcock.
Iranduba, home to about 35,000 residents, is about 1,650 miles northwest of
Sao Paulo.
Three suspects were taken into custody, according to CBN radio. Wilcock said
he could not confirm that information.
UVM Provost John Bramley said Petersen, who was with colleagues when the
robbery happened, was shot and died a short time later.
"I am very saddened to inform the UVM community of a tragic incident in Brazil
resulting in the death of our colleague Dr. Jim Petersen," Bramley said. "
Dr. Petersen, associate professor and chair of the department of anthropology,
was on a research field trip with colleagues in Manaus, Brazil. Sometime on
Saturday night, 13th August, he and his colleagues were attacked and robbed.
Dr. Petersen was shot during the robbery and died shortly afterwards.
"We have no further information on the circumstances at this time and our
attention is focussed on ensuring that Jim's wife and family have the help and
support they need at this terrible time," said Bramley.
Federal police in the jungle city of Manaus, about 12 miles from Iranduba,
could not be reached to comment.
Petersen was in Brazil for a couple of weeks to check in with colleagues
concerning ongoing research on the Amazon's distant past, said Luis Vivanco,
associate professor of anthropology at UVM and director of the school's
Latin American Studies Program.
Petersen and other researchers had changed assumptions about life in the
Amazon hundred and thousands of years ago, Vivanco said. Scientists had
assumed that indigenous people were essentially nomadic and did little farming
in any one spot because of poor soils. But Petersen was able to demonstrate
that the Amazon inhabitants engaged in intensive mulching, fertilization and
cultivation, Vivanco said.
Beyond his research, Petersen was a highly popular professor at UVM, Vivanco
said. "He was deeply loved by students. He was a guy who could fill a
lecture hall with hundreds of seats and students would be rapt with attention.
He was very passionate with what he did," Vivanco said.
Petersen frequently guided students toward careers in anthropology and was
always quick to help people find jobs, Vivanco said.
Before joining UVM, Petersen founded the Archaeology Research Center at the
University of Maine at Farmington, where he was also a professor from 1983
to 1997. He was also a graduate school professor at the University of Maine in
Orono.
The American Embassy was monitoring the police investigation into the
killing and helping Petersen's family arrange for his body to be sent home,
Wilcock said.
"We expect Mr. Petersen's family to receive justice," he said.
Petersen graduated from UVM in 1979 and started doctoral studies at the
University of Pittsburgh, where he developed an interest in the tropics. He
then returned to the University of Vermont as a visiting professor where one
of his students was Michael Heckenberger, now an assistant professor at the
University of Florida.
Heckenberger, who would become one of Petersen's colleagues in the Amazon
work, recalled in an article in a UVM magazine meeting Petersen in that
first life-changing field course.
"Jim is an infectious person and teacher," he was quoted in the Vermont
Quarterly. "He attracts so many people to anthropology. He is without a
doubt one of the most powerful and influential teachers I had."
Petersen and Heckenberger worked together in partnership with the University
of Sao Paulo in the Central Amazon Project.
"We formally began in 1995, not fully understanding what we were into," said
Petersen in an interview with Vermont Quarterly. "It's some of the richest,
most exciting archaeology anywhere on the planet."
Vivanco said Petersen's death made no sense. "He's not the type of guy to
fight over a wallet," he said.
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