Elizabeth Anne Slater | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1946-06-13)13 June 1946 |
| Died | 11 September 2014(2014-09-11) (aged 68) |
| Academic background | |
| Education | University of Cambridge (BA, 1969; PhD, 1973) |
| Thesis | Metallurgical Aspects of Bronze Age Technology (1973) |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | Archaeologist |
| Sub-discipline | Archaeometallurgy |
| Institutions |
|
Elizabeth Slater (13 June 1946 – 11 September 2014) was a British archaeologist specialising inarchaeometallurgy. She was the first femaleprofessor of archaeology appointed by theUniversity of Liverpool, where she held the Garstang Chair in Archaeology from 1991 to 2007.[1]
Elizabeth Anne Slater was born inPreston, Lancashire on 13 June 1946, the daughter of two school teachers.[2] She was educated at a girl's grammar school before going to study atNew Hall College, Cambridge, where she gained a BA inNatural Sciences in 1969.[2] Slater developed an interest in the history of metallurgy while working with archaeological materials and went on to undertake postgraduate research onBronze Age metallurgy at theUniversity of Cambridge. She completed a PhD in 1973 on “Metallurgical Aspects of Bronze Age Technology” with an emphasis on the interpretation of analytical data.[3]
In 1974 Slater joined the Department of Archaeology, chaired by ProfessorLeslie Alcock, atUniversity of Glasgow, as lecturer in archaeological sciences. Slater remained at the University of Glasgow until 1991 when she took up the Garstang Chair in Archaeology and became the first female professor of theUniversity of Liverpool Department of Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology. Slater undertook extensive analytical research on copper metals, ceramics and other vitreous materials as part of major field work and excavation programmes in the UK, Italy, Greece, Turkey and Egypt.[3] She had an interest in experimental archaeology and undertook experimental projects to study pyrotechnological processes and explore the processing of raw materials into completed artefacts.[3]
Slater remained at the University of Liverpool until her retirement in 2007 and subsequently devoted her time to travel and charity work.[2] She died near her home inHoylake on 11 September 2014, and was cremated at Landican Crematorium, Birkenhead.[4]
In 2015 the University of Liverpool opened the new Professor Elizabeth Slater Archaeological Research Laboratories inAbercromby Square. The facility houses apalaeodiet laboratory, imaging suite, ancient technologies workshop,GIS lab, ascanning electron microscope, microwave plasma atomic emission spectrometer, in addition to lithics and sample preparation laboratories.[5]
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