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99-cv.qmd
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<!-- A brief curriculum vitae of the author is included at the end of the dissertation. This curriculum vitae should specify the following:
a. Date of birth b. Place of birth
c. The period during which the candidate followed his/her pre-university education or its equivalent and the relevant institution
d. Any qualifications pertaining to the diplomas obtained
e. Details of professional activities following the completion of the candidate’s academic education, and
f. If appropriate, the institute at which the PhD research was conducted. -->
# Curriculum Vitae {-}
Bjørn Peare Bartholdy, born in the Great White North in a time where we
still thought Compact Discs and disposable cameras were pretty neat.
I obtained my BSc (honours) in archaeology with a concentration in physical
anthropology at the University of Calgary in 2015. My thesis was supervised
by Dr. Mary Anne Katzenberg and explored the application of micro-CT in
archaeological examination of osteoarthritis lesions in the vertebrae of
un-provenanced skeletal remains. I went on to get my MSc in Osteoarchaeology at
Leiden University in 2017. Here, my thesis research was supervised by Dr. Andrea
Waters-Rist, where I looked for relationships between enamel properties and dental
disease in the deciduous dentition, using micro-CT. The materials used for this
research were from a 19th century Dutch population.
I started my PhD position in 2017, under the supervision of Dr. Amanda Henry.
The main focus of the research involved developing and validating a protocol
to develop a model dental calculus system, which could be used to explore
dietary research questions from an archaeological perspective. The protocol was
validated using Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy to assess the
mineral composition, and metagenomic analysis to characterise the microbiome.
The protocol was then applied to explore questions related to the incorporation
and retention of dietary starches in dental calculus.
Alongside my PhD research, I participated in a variety of activities both related
and completely unrelated to my dissertation research. I helped develop and
co-instructed the Quantitative Methods in Archaeology course for two consecutive
years. I co-supervised multiple Master's students in the MSc Osteoarchaeology
specialisation.
I also taught a number of guest lectures on dental calculus, dental diseases,
statistics, and open science. I was a teaching assistant in the Osteoarchaeology
course for third year Bachelor's. I received my Data Carpentry teaching certification
and co-instructed multiple Data Carpentry workshops teaching the R Statistical
Programming language to social scientists,
co-hosted by Leiden University, TU Delft, Erasmus University Rotterdam, and
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. In 2022 I started as a Data Steward at TU Delft. I've
done lots of other stuff, too, which you can find in the CV I can actually keep updated.