• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

University of Arkansas System

  • About
  • Campuses & Units
  • Leadership
  • System Office
  • Policies
  • News
  • Benefits
  • Campus Resources
You are here: Home / Leadership / Chancellors and Directors / Arkansas Archeological Survey

Arkansas Archeological Survey

Dr. Alex Barker headshotDirector Alex Barker

Alex W. Barker was named Director of the Arkansas Archaeological Survey Jan. 1, 2022. He succeeded longtime director and ARAS station archaeologist Dr. George Sabo III. Barker has continued building the national and international stature of the Survey as a world-class cultural heritage institution.

Barker is a Michigan-trained anthropological archaeologist whose doctoral research focused on Coles Creek-era polities just across the border in northeastern Louisiana.  His dissertation, “Chiefdoms and the Economics of Perversity,” compared prehistoric settlement sizes by period relative to their catchment productivity to model changing rates of mobilized resources moving through a prestate political economy; the work received the 2000 Society for American Archaeology Dissertation Award.

He received his undergraduate degree from Marquette, a Jesuit university in Milwaukee, and earned a masters at Wichita State University with a thesis examining the increasing complexity of ceramic design motifs (based on information density statistics) at settlements with larger numbers of face-to-face inhabitants across St Helena Phase sites in northeastern Nebraska.

Interested in archaeology from a very young age, Barker began archaeological fieldwork while in high school through the Northwestern University program at Kampsville, Illinois, including seasons at Worthy-Merrigan and Macoupin. He went on to work across the Southeast, Midwest and Plains, including two seasons at Cahokia and one season teaching high school students at Hogpen Hill, an early Moundville lower-order center, through the Alabama Museum of Natural History Expedition program.

In addition to his North American work, Barker has also conducted projects in eastern Europe (mainly at Bronze age sites in Romania and Hungary), as well as northern Greece. In 1997, Barker coordinated a National Geographic-funded visit by leading prehistorians to Monte Verde, Chile, to assess claims that the site predated Clovis occupations. The unanimous consensus that the excavators had correctly dated the human occupations at the site was widely viewed as breaking the so-called “Clovis Barrier” for human arrival in the New World. He insists, however, that his role was organizational, and he is not a specialist in the peopling of the New World. In 2002, he led a project documenting the first demonstrably Mesoamerican object from Mississippian contexts in the American midcontinent, despite the better part of two centuries of speculation on the topic, using XRF spectrometry to show that a peralkaline obsidian scraper from the Craig Mound at Spiro came from the Sierra de Pachuca source near Mexico City.

Most of Barker’s career has been spent in museums, with a focus on documenting cultural heritage and digitizing extant collections. He joined the staff of the Dallas Museum of Natural History as Curator of Archaeology before completing his dissertation, and rose to become Chief Curator and later Interim Director. He returned to his hometown of Milwaukee in 2000 to chair the Anthropology Department at the Milwaukee Public Museum, and later served as Vice President for Collections, Research and Exhibitions, before becoming Director of the Museum of Art and Archaeology at the University of Missouri in 2006. When the Director of the MU Museum of Anthropology left in 2016, he assumed those duties as well, stepping down from both positions in late 2020. At Milwaukee, he negotiated loans of Dead Sea Scroll fragments from the Israeli Antiquities Authority, as well as collecting samples for recreating the caves at Wadi Qumran as part of the accompanying exhibition, and at Missouri developed a partnership with the Capitoline Museum in Rome to study previously undocumented Roman antiquities. In a project The New York Timesdescribed as “unprecedented,” the Capitoline sent antiquities to Missouri where they were studied stylistically and chemically using XRF and Neutron Activation Analysis, imaged using high-resolution 3D scanning and characterized in accordance with applicable EU and Italian cultural metadata standards, then returned so another lot of objects could take their place.

A graduate of the prestigious Getty Museum Leadership Institute, Barker is past president of the American Anthropological Association and of the Council for Museum Anthropology, served as Vice President of the Association of Systematic Collections, and as Treasurer of the Society for American Archaeology. From 2011-15 he was a federal appointee to the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act National Review Committee, and he served on the American Association of Museums committee that drafted the current guidelines for the acquisition of antiquities by US museums. He has served as an accreditation and Museum Assessment Program assessor for many years, and has received both the Presidential Award from the Society for American Archaeology and the National Peer Service Award from the American Alliance of Museums.

Primary Sidebar

Leadership

  • Chancellors and Directors
    • University of Arkansas at Monticello
    • University of Arkansas - Pulaski Technical College
    • Winthrop Rockefeller Institute
    • Criminal Justice Institute
    • Arkansas Archeological Survey
    • Division of Agriculture
    • Clinton School of Public Service
    • Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences and the Arts
    • University of Arkansas Community College at Morrilton
    • University of Arkansas Community College at Hope-Texarkana
    • University of Arkansas Community College at Batesville
    • Phillips Community College of the University of Arkansas
    • Cossatot Community College of the University of Arkansas
    • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff
    • University of Arkansas at Little Rock
    • University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
    • University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
  • Board of Trustees of the University of Arkansas
  • Office of the President

Recent News

Drafts of Proposed Board Policy Amendments Release for Sept. 26 BOT Meeting

UA-EACC Chancellor Cline to Retire in July 2026

UA Trustees to Retreat Aug. 5-6 at Rockefeller Institute

Contact Us

University of Arkansas System
2404 North University Avenue
Little Rock, Arkansas 72207
(501) 686-2500
Staff Directory | Privacy Policy

Accessibility issues? Email: accessibility@uasys.edu

UA System Internal Audit Fraud Hotline: (866) 252-9838

Footer

Universities

  • University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
  • University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
  • University of Arkansas at Little Rock
  • University of Arkansas at Monticello
  • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff
  • University of Arkansas at Fort Smith
  • University of Arkansas Grantham

Two-Year Colleges

  • Phillips Community College of the University of Arkansas
  • University of Arkansas Community College at Hope-Texarkana
  • University of Arkansas Community College at Batesville
  • Cossatot Community College of the University of Arkansas
  • University of Arkansas Community College at Morrilton
  • University of Arkansas Community College at Rich Mountain
  • University of Arkansas Pulaski Technical College
  • University of Arkansas East Arkansas Community College

Other Units

  • Division of Agriculture
  • Arkansas Archeological Survey
  • Criminal Justice Institute
  • Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences and the Arts
  • Winthrop Rockefeller Institute
  • University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service

© 2025 · University of Arkansas System · All Rights Reserved