Sorry if you read it wrong, but what my post says is that the PHD from T AM is in conservation. They do have the MA in nautical .
Well, if I am now reading you clearly, forgive me if I still am not but are you saying at A&M, you can't get a PhD from the Nautical Archaeology program with any other specialty than conservation? If so, that is not true either. The program is the Nautical Archaeology and is part of the Anthropology Department and your PhD specialty specifically from the Nautical Archaeology program can be related to a variety of topics.
Trade, piracy, and naval warfare in the central Mediterranean: the maritime history and archaeology of Malta
The Continental Gondola Philadelphia
The Pepper Wreck: A Portuguese Indiaman at the Mouth of the Tagus River
The Lake Champlain Sailing Canal BoatBlood and Water; The Archaeological Excavation and Historical Analysis of the Wreck of the Industry, A North-American Transport Sloop Chartered by the British Army at the End of the Seven Years War: British Colonial Navigation and Trade to Supply Spanish Florida in the Eighteenth Century
T AM does not offer there own field schools. If so please direct me to their field school page. The field schools they participate in are actually headed by other organizations. ie PAST and Flinders. So, I do know what I am talking about as I have been talking to some archaeologist trying to decide on a MA program.
The Nautical Archaeology Program is a part of the Department of Anthropology at Texas A&M University. The program was established in 1976. Students and faculty conduct underwater archaeological research in conjunction with the Institute of Nautical Archaeology in various regions of the world, delving into time periods from prehistory to the recent past, and working with a plethora of societies and cultures. Students attending the program work in the classroom as well as in the field, and are encouraged to pursue individual projects that will help direct nautical archaeology's future. I personally have worked on 4 INA/ Nautical Archaeology field project - Eygpt, Morocco, St. Vincent and here in Texas.
If you have any advice I would appreciate your input as well. Personally I have been leaning towards T AM. Do you think doing a MA and PHD at the same school is a good idea?
I almost went back to get my PhD at A&M but decided not to. I was really not that sure how much more I would learn. Having gone to school there for 4 years, I had all the courses I could really take. Going on for my PhD I would have gone to some of the same courses only focusing on more specific details. I instead decided to go a different direction completely.
I have a double major in History and Anthropology with an emphasis in archaeology would I be ok going to ECU and recieving their Maritime history MA degree with the AMH course headings? Could one go to T AM and get a PHD in Anthro or is that possible due to having a MA in history?
ECU is a great program and depending on what you want to do with your MA or PhD when you get out, it could be a better choice. It just depends. If you want to actually work in cultural resource management or environmental engineering, I would chose ECU. If you want to be a professor and run your own digs and hob nob with culturals, than A&M might be a better option.
Just to be clear,
Also UWF has all the remote sensing equipment and they have a GIS program too. (bonus!). They do have their own fieldschools and allow undergrads to attend so this would be a great option for someone starting down this career path,.Included in their fieldschool and throughout the year is the utilization of the remote sensing equipment.
Now ROV operation is something I am interested in . Where might one go for this training ?
If you really want to work in the field, getting remote-sensing training and experience as well as GIS experience, maybe even ROV training, would be really helpful...
Anyway thanks for your time, and lighten up. Life is too short
No problem, I didn't know I was getting annoyed.