Awards

About the SAA Awards

The Society for American Archaeology Awards recognize and honor knowledge and professional achievements at all career levels--from student and early career archaeologists to those who have made lasting contributions to the Society and the profession. The Call for Nominations opens in the fall of each year.

The 2024 Call for Award Nominations is open.
Deadlines and nomination information vary by award.
Round 2 of the Meeting Access Grants (under Travel Awards) will open later in fall 2023.

Prior to any award recommendation being finalized and publicly announced, anyone recommended for an award, scholarship, or grant will be required to certify the following:

(a)  I am not and have not ever been the subject of a discrimination or harassment lawsuit or related administrative complaint that resulted in an adverse finding; and

(b)  I do not have and have not had a current or pending disciplinary action such as suspension or termination of registration, resulting from a Register of Professional Archaeologists’ grievance investigation.

Professional Awards

Print

Douglas C. Kellogg Fellowship for Geoarchaeological Research

Nomination/Submission Deadline: 01 Dec 2023

Award Description

The Douglas C. Kellogg Fellowship provides support for dissertation research, with emphasis on fieldwork and/or laboratory analyses, for graduate students in the Earth sciences and archaeology.

Under the auspices of the SAA's Geoarchaeology Interest Group, family, friends, and close associates of Douglas C. Kellogg formed a memorial in his honor.

Who Is Eligible to Submit Nominations or Apply for the Award

Recipients of the Kellogg Fellowship will be

  • actively pursuing a Ph.D. degree in Earth sciences or archaeology,
  • applying Earth science methods to archaeological research, and
  • members of the Society for American Archaeology.

Nomination/Submission Materials Required

Complete applications for the D.C. Kellogg Fellowship consist of

  • a research proposal no more than three pages in length (excluding references) that describes the research, its merit, and its importance to the discipline of Geoarchaeology,
  • a curriculum vitae, and
  • a letter of support from the dissertation committee chair that includes certification that the student is conducting the proposed research and the expected date of completion of the degree.

Applicants should send their proposals and CVs as a single PDF to the committee chair. File names must include the applicant’s surname and SAA member number. The Kellogg Fellowship must be part of the proposal title. Applicants should instruct their advisors to send recommendation letters directly to the Awards Committee chair.

Other Special Requirements

Prior to any award recommendation being finalized and publicly announced, anyone recommended for an award, scholarship, or grant will be required to certify the following:

(a)  I am not and have not ever been the subject of a discrimination or harassment lawsuit or related administrative complaint that resulted in an adverse finding; and

(b)  I do not have and have not had a current or pending disciplinary action such as suspension or termination of registration, resulting from a Register of Professional Archaeologists’ grievance investigation.

Nature of Award (e.g. monetary, medal, symposium)

For 2024, the awardee receives $1,000. As the fund grows, the award amount may increase as the annual interest increases. In addition, the SAA recognizes the awardee with a plaque presented during the business meeting held at the Annual Meeting, a citation in The SAA Archaeological Record, and acknowledgment on the Kellogg Fellowship page of the SAA website.


Current Committee Charge

The committee solicits proposals and selects recipients for the Douglas C. Kellogg Fellowship for Geoarchaeological Research and the Paul Goldberg Award. These awards are presented in support of research, with emphasis on the field and/or laboratory parts of this research, for graduate students in the Earth sciences and archaeology at the Doctoral level and the Master’s level, respectively.

Committee Composition

Committee composition is one chair and at least four members. 

Term Length

Three years.

Award Cycle

N/A 

Committee Chair and End of Term

Jessie Halligan [2026]

Committee Chair Contact Information

Committee Members and Ends of Terms

Selection or Evaluation Criteria

Important questions the committee considers include

  • Does the applicant seek to do interesting and novel research?
  • Are the methods and theory sound and applicable to the research questions?
  • Is the proposal well-written and coherent?
  • Is the proposal feasible for the stated timeframe?

Committee Deliberation Process (e.g. dates, venue)

The committee chair redacts the proposals for identity information in order to limit implicit sociocultural bias, favoritism, and/or nepotism in application assessment. The committee members then read and rank all eligible proposals. After each committee member reads and ranks the applications, the chair tallies the rankings. A simple majority is sufficient to declare an awardee; if there is a tie, the chair provides the deciding vote.

2023    Alana Pengilley

2022    Rocío M. López

2021    Helen Thompson

2020    A.J. White

2019    Jacob P. Warner

2017    Naomi Frances Miller

2016    Jennifer Kielhofer

2015    Bryn Letham

2014    Michael Aiuvalasit

2013    Craig Fertelmes

2012    Joe D. Wilson, Jr.

2011    Teresa Wriston

2010    None

2009    Benjamin Vining

2008    Kurt Rademaker

2007    Katherine A. Adelsberger

2006    Heidi Luchsinger

2005    Ian Buvit

2004    None

2003    Aleksander Borejsza

 

 

 

 Travel Awards

Print

Douglas C. Kellogg Fellowship for Geoarchaeological Research

Nomination/Submission Deadline: 01 Dec 2023

Award Description

The Douglas C. Kellogg Fellowship provides support for dissertation research, with emphasis on fieldwork and/or laboratory analyses, for graduate students in the Earth sciences and archaeology.

Under the auspices of the SAA's Geoarchaeology Interest Group, family, friends, and close associates of Douglas C. Kellogg formed a memorial in his honor.

Who Is Eligible to Submit Nominations or Apply for the Award

Recipients of the Kellogg Fellowship will be

  • actively pursuing a Ph.D. degree in Earth sciences or archaeology,
  • applying Earth science methods to archaeological research, and
  • members of the Society for American Archaeology.

Nomination/Submission Materials Required

Complete applications for the D.C. Kellogg Fellowship consist of

  • a research proposal no more than three pages in length (excluding references) that describes the research, its merit, and its importance to the discipline of Geoarchaeology,
  • a curriculum vitae, and
  • a letter of support from the dissertation committee chair that includes certification that the student is conducting the proposed research and the expected date of completion of the degree.

Applicants should send their proposals and CVs as a single PDF to the committee chair. File names must include the applicant’s surname and SAA member number. The Kellogg Fellowship must be part of the proposal title. Applicants should instruct their advisors to send recommendation letters directly to the Awards Committee chair.

Other Special Requirements

Prior to any award recommendation being finalized and publicly announced, anyone recommended for an award, scholarship, or grant will be required to certify the following:

(a)  I am not and have not ever been the subject of a discrimination or harassment lawsuit or related administrative complaint that resulted in an adverse finding; and

(b)  I do not have and have not had a current or pending disciplinary action such as suspension or termination of registration, resulting from a Register of Professional Archaeologists’ grievance investigation.

Nature of Award (e.g. monetary, medal, symposium)

For 2024, the awardee receives $1,000. As the fund grows, the award amount may increase as the annual interest increases. In addition, the SAA recognizes the awardee with a plaque presented during the business meeting held at the Annual Meeting, a citation in The SAA Archaeological Record, and acknowledgment on the Kellogg Fellowship page of the SAA website.


Current Committee Charge

The committee solicits proposals and selects recipients for the Douglas C. Kellogg Fellowship for Geoarchaeological Research and the Paul Goldberg Award. These awards are presented in support of research, with emphasis on the field and/or laboratory parts of this research, for graduate students in the Earth sciences and archaeology at the Doctoral level and the Master’s level, respectively.

Committee Composition

Committee composition is one chair and at least four members. 

Term Length

Three years.

Award Cycle

N/A 

Committee Chair and End of Term

Jessie Halligan [2026]

Committee Chair Contact Information

Committee Members and Ends of Terms

Selection or Evaluation Criteria

Important questions the committee considers include

  • Does the applicant seek to do interesting and novel research?
  • Are the methods and theory sound and applicable to the research questions?
  • Is the proposal well-written and coherent?
  • Is the proposal feasible for the stated timeframe?

Committee Deliberation Process (e.g. dates, venue)

The committee chair redacts the proposals for identity information in order to limit implicit sociocultural bias, favoritism, and/or nepotism in application assessment. The committee members then read and rank all eligible proposals. After each committee member reads and ranks the applications, the chair tallies the rankings. A simple majority is sufficient to declare an awardee; if there is a tie, the chair provides the deciding vote.

2023    Alana Pengilley

2022    Rocío M. López

2021    Helen Thompson

2020    A.J. White

2019    Jacob P. Warner

2017    Naomi Frances Miller

2016    Jennifer Kielhofer

2015    Bryn Letham

2014    Michael Aiuvalasit

2013    Craig Fertelmes

2012    Joe D. Wilson, Jr.

2011    Teresa Wriston

2010    None

2009    Benjamin Vining

2008    Kurt Rademaker

2007    Katherine A. Adelsberger

2006    Heidi Luchsinger

2005    Ian Buvit

2004    None

2003    Aleksander Borejsza

 

 

 

 Student Awards

Print

Douglas C. Kellogg Fellowship for Geoarchaeological Research

Nomination/Submission Deadline: 01 Dec 2023

Award Description

The Douglas C. Kellogg Fellowship provides support for dissertation research, with emphasis on fieldwork and/or laboratory analyses, for graduate students in the Earth sciences and archaeology.

Under the auspices of the SAA's Geoarchaeology Interest Group, family, friends, and close associates of Douglas C. Kellogg formed a memorial in his honor.

Who Is Eligible to Submit Nominations or Apply for the Award

Recipients of the Kellogg Fellowship will be

  • actively pursuing a Ph.D. degree in Earth sciences or archaeology,
  • applying Earth science methods to archaeological research, and
  • members of the Society for American Archaeology.

Nomination/Submission Materials Required

Complete applications for the D.C. Kellogg Fellowship consist of

  • a research proposal no more than three pages in length (excluding references) that describes the research, its merit, and its importance to the discipline of Geoarchaeology,
  • a curriculum vitae, and
  • a letter of support from the dissertation committee chair that includes certification that the student is conducting the proposed research and the expected date of completion of the degree.

Applicants should send their proposals and CVs as a single PDF to the committee chair. File names must include the applicant’s surname and SAA member number. The Kellogg Fellowship must be part of the proposal title. Applicants should instruct their advisors to send recommendation letters directly to the Awards Committee chair.

Other Special Requirements

Prior to any award recommendation being finalized and publicly announced, anyone recommended for an award, scholarship, or grant will be required to certify the following:

(a)  I am not and have not ever been the subject of a discrimination or harassment lawsuit or related administrative complaint that resulted in an adverse finding; and

(b)  I do not have and have not had a current or pending disciplinary action such as suspension or termination of registration, resulting from a Register of Professional Archaeologists’ grievance investigation.

Nature of Award (e.g. monetary, medal, symposium)

For 2024, the awardee receives $1,000. As the fund grows, the award amount may increase as the annual interest increases. In addition, the SAA recognizes the awardee with a plaque presented during the business meeting held at the Annual Meeting, a citation in The SAA Archaeological Record, and acknowledgment on the Kellogg Fellowship page of the SAA website.


Current Committee Charge

The committee solicits proposals and selects recipients for the Douglas C. Kellogg Fellowship for Geoarchaeological Research and the Paul Goldberg Award. These awards are presented in support of research, with emphasis on the field and/or laboratory parts of this research, for graduate students in the Earth sciences and archaeology at the Doctoral level and the Master’s level, respectively.

Committee Composition

Committee composition is one chair and at least four members. 

Term Length

Three years.

Award Cycle

N/A 

Committee Chair and End of Term

Jessie Halligan [2026]

Committee Chair Contact Information

Committee Members and Ends of Terms

Selection or Evaluation Criteria

Important questions the committee considers include

  • Does the applicant seek to do interesting and novel research?
  • Are the methods and theory sound and applicable to the research questions?
  • Is the proposal well-written and coherent?
  • Is the proposal feasible for the stated timeframe?

Committee Deliberation Process (e.g. dates, venue)

The committee chair redacts the proposals for identity information in order to limit implicit sociocultural bias, favoritism, and/or nepotism in application assessment. The committee members then read and rank all eligible proposals. After each committee member reads and ranks the applications, the chair tallies the rankings. A simple majority is sufficient to declare an awardee; if there is a tie, the chair provides the deciding vote.

2023    Alana Pengilley

2022    Rocío M. López

2021    Helen Thompson

2020    A.J. White

2019    Jacob P. Warner

2017    Naomi Frances Miller

2016    Jennifer Kielhofer

2015    Bryn Letham

2014    Michael Aiuvalasit

2013    Craig Fertelmes

2012    Joe D. Wilson, Jr.

2011    Teresa Wriston

2010    None

2009    Benjamin Vining

2008    Kurt Rademaker

2007    Katherine A. Adelsberger

2006    Heidi Luchsinger

2005    Ian Buvit

2004    None

2003    Aleksander Borejsza

 

 

 

 Student Fellowship Awards

Print

Douglas C. Kellogg Fellowship for Geoarchaeological Research

Nomination/Submission Deadline: 01 Dec 2023

Award Description

The Douglas C. Kellogg Fellowship provides support for dissertation research, with emphasis on fieldwork and/or laboratory analyses, for graduate students in the Earth sciences and archaeology.

Under the auspices of the SAA's Geoarchaeology Interest Group, family, friends, and close associates of Douglas C. Kellogg formed a memorial in his honor.

Who Is Eligible to Submit Nominations or Apply for the Award

Recipients of the Kellogg Fellowship will be

  • actively pursuing a Ph.D. degree in Earth sciences or archaeology,
  • applying Earth science methods to archaeological research, and
  • members of the Society for American Archaeology.

Nomination/Submission Materials Required

Complete applications for the D.C. Kellogg Fellowship consist of

  • a research proposal no more than three pages in length (excluding references) that describes the research, its merit, and its importance to the discipline of Geoarchaeology,
  • a curriculum vitae, and
  • a letter of support from the dissertation committee chair that includes certification that the student is conducting the proposed research and the expected date of completion of the degree.

Applicants should send their proposals and CVs as a single PDF to the committee chair. File names must include the applicant’s surname and SAA member number. The Kellogg Fellowship must be part of the proposal title. Applicants should instruct their advisors to send recommendation letters directly to the Awards Committee chair.

Other Special Requirements

Prior to any award recommendation being finalized and publicly announced, anyone recommended for an award, scholarship, or grant will be required to certify the following:

(a)  I am not and have not ever been the subject of a discrimination or harassment lawsuit or related administrative complaint that resulted in an adverse finding; and

(b)  I do not have and have not had a current or pending disciplinary action such as suspension or termination of registration, resulting from a Register of Professional Archaeologists’ grievance investigation.

Nature of Award (e.g. monetary, medal, symposium)

For 2024, the awardee receives $1,000. As the fund grows, the award amount may increase as the annual interest increases. In addition, the SAA recognizes the awardee with a plaque presented during the business meeting held at the Annual Meeting, a citation in The SAA Archaeological Record, and acknowledgment on the Kellogg Fellowship page of the SAA website.


Current Committee Charge

The committee solicits proposals and selects recipients for the Douglas C. Kellogg Fellowship for Geoarchaeological Research and the Paul Goldberg Award. These awards are presented in support of research, with emphasis on the field and/or laboratory parts of this research, for graduate students in the Earth sciences and archaeology at the Doctoral level and the Master’s level, respectively.

Committee Composition

Committee composition is one chair and at least four members. 

Term Length

Three years.

Award Cycle

N/A 

Committee Chair and End of Term

Jessie Halligan [2026]

Committee Chair Contact Information

Committee Members and Ends of Terms

Selection or Evaluation Criteria

Important questions the committee considers include

  • Does the applicant seek to do interesting and novel research?
  • Are the methods and theory sound and applicable to the research questions?
  • Is the proposal well-written and coherent?
  • Is the proposal feasible for the stated timeframe?

Committee Deliberation Process (e.g. dates, venue)

The committee chair redacts the proposals for identity information in order to limit implicit sociocultural bias, favoritism, and/or nepotism in application assessment. The committee members then read and rank all eligible proposals. After each committee member reads and ranks the applications, the chair tallies the rankings. A simple majority is sufficient to declare an awardee; if there is a tie, the chair provides the deciding vote.

2023    Alana Pengilley

2022    Rocío M. López

2021    Helen Thompson

2020    A.J. White

2019    Jacob P. Warner

2017    Naomi Frances Miller

2016    Jennifer Kielhofer

2015    Bryn Letham

2014    Michael Aiuvalasit

2013    Craig Fertelmes

2012    Joe D. Wilson, Jr.

2011    Teresa Wriston

2010    None

2009    Benjamin Vining

2008    Kurt Rademaker

2007    Katherine A. Adelsberger

2006    Heidi Luchsinger

2005    Ian Buvit

2004    None

2003    Aleksander Borejsza