Kyle Bocinsky
Assistant Research Professor; Director of Climate Extension, Montana Climate Office
Contact
- Office
- FOR 307
- Phone
- 770-362-6659
- kyle.bocinsky@umontana.edu
- Office Hours
By appointment only. Please .
- Curriculum Vitae
Personal Summary
Dr. Kyle Bocinsky is an assistant research professor in the Department of Society and Conservation and the Director of Climate Extension for the Montana Climate Office, housed in the WA Franke College of Forestry and Conservation at the Ñý¼§Ö±²¥. He serves users of climate data and information in Montana, including outreach supporting agriculture, forestry, recreation, and urban and rural resilience planning, with a special emphasis on partnering with Native Nations to meet their climate resilience goals. Kyle is an anthropological archaeologist who specializes in cross-disciplinary, computational approaches to studying resilience in socio-ecological systems, with a focus on high-elevation arid agricultural systems. In addition to his positions at UMT, Kyle holds appointments at the Division of Earth and Ecosystem Sciences at the Desert Research Institute and the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center. He loves living in the Northern Rockies — and especially being outdoors with his husband, daughters, and dogs year round.
Education
Washington State University, Pullman, Washington
PhD, Anthropology, December 2014
Dissertation title: Landscape-based Null Models for Archaeological Inference
Committee: Timothy Kohler (chair), Jade d’Alpoim Guedes, Andrew Duff, and Colin Grier
MA, Anthropology, May 2011
Thesis title: Is a Bird in Hand Really Worth Two in the Bush? Models of Domestication on the Colorado Plateau
Committee: Timothy Kohler (chair), Andrew Duff, Donna Glowacki, and Brian Kemp
University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana
Glynn Family Honors Program, 2004–2008
BA, Anthropology, May 2008
Thesis title: Rodent Stable Carbon-isotope Ratios as a Measure of Maize Production
Advisor: Mark Schurr
Courses Taught
FORS350/GPHY488: (Forestry) Applications of GIS
Research Interests
human dimensions of climate change • computational social science • paleo-environments complex systems • plant and animal domestication • Indigenous ecologies • reproducibility
Affiliations
Research Faculty,
Research Associate,