Overview
In addition to serving as an associate professor in the Department of Horticulture, I am also director of the American Indian Program at Cornell University, with research and teaching responsibilities in both units. My research focuses on indigenous cropping systems and plants and human well being. I lecture frequently on indigenous agriculture and its links to contemporary agricultural sustainability, and am considered a national expert in Iroquois agriculture.
Research Focus
My agronomic research has focused on understanding the characteristics and management options for growing open-pollinated corn, particularly traditional Iroquois varieties. More recently, using my agronomic expertise, I have been exploring Iroquois agriculture from a multi-disciplinary perspective that includes history, archeology, paleobotany, and cultural/social anthropology in order to provide a critically needed bridge between scholars in the humanities and social sciences who work in Iroquois Studies.
Outreach and Extension Focus
I teach a First-Year Writing Seminar in American Indian Studies, "Science Meets Spirit," that contrasts western science approaches to natural resource management with resource management based on indigenous knowledge. In addition, I teach a 200-level course in Horticulture, "Plants and Human Well Being," that exposes students to the multiple ways that we interact with plants and plant products in order to increase their awareness of the many non-traditional career and avocational opportunities within the field of Horticulture
Additional Links
Selected Publications
- Mt.Pleasant, J. (in review) Traditional Iroquois Corn: Its History, Cultivation, and Use. Natural Resource, Agriculture and Engineering Service Publications.
- The Science Behind the Three sisters Mound system: An Agronomic Assessment of an Indigenous agricultural system in the North East. Chapter 38, pp. 529-537. In Histories of Maize, Staller,J., R.Tykot,B.Benz(EDS) Acaedemic Press Rand Ed. 2006
Return to the faculty list for the Department of Horticulture
[top]