Elizabeth G. Tarulis
United States
Affiliation: University of Tennessee Knoxville
Member since: 2023
Topics of Interest: Archaeological Science, Ceramics, Digitalisation, Education, teaching & training, Museum Management
Focus areas: Late Middle Ages, Newer Era, 1930–1950, Newest Era
I am a historical archaeologist specializing in the Post-Medieval period. My research focuses on trade and colonialism, with an emphasis on intercultural interactions, identity, and relationality. Currently, I am analyzing tobacco smoking practices and the production of local tobacco pipes in 17th-century New England. Combining Laser Ablation-Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) on pipes from legacy collections with documentary analysis, I am working to identify patterns in the production, use, and discard of these pipes.
I have two other ongoing projects. The first is a study of condom manufacture, use, and identification in the archaeological record. As part of this project, my colleagues and I recreated an intestinal condom using published 19th century recipes to determine whether tanning processes impact collagen yield for the purposes of collagen peptide fingerprinting analysis (specifically, ZooMS). We also analyze differing attitudes around sexual health in 18th century Europe and North America.
The second project looks at the archaeological remains of the early-19th-century Overfield Tavern in Troy, Ohio, USA in collaboration with the Overfield Tavern Museum. A frontier tavern and inn, the site also served as the earliest courthouse in Miami County. My research here focuses on the landscape changes surrounding the tavern.
Feel free to reach out at etarulis@vols.utk.edu if you'd like to discuss these projects or a potential collaboration!
Open For research collaboration In the following topics
Archaeological Science, Ceramics, Communication and Outreach, Digitalisation, Education, teaching & training, Living History, Museum Management, New Media
Happy to mentor and share my experience in the following skills
Archaeological Science, Ceramics, Communication and Outreach, Digitalisation, Education, teaching & training, Living History, Museum Management, New Media