
Academy of Underwater Arts & Sciences Presenter of the NOGI Award


Olivia L. Thomas
Nautical Anthropology – 2020
Olivia Thomas is currently a Ph.D. student at Texas A&M University where she is studying anthropology with a specialization in nautical archaeology. Olivia grew up in a rural town in southern Indiana and attended Indiana University where she earned her Bachelor’s degree, majoring in anthropology, classical art & archaeology, and underwater archaeology, as well as minoring in medieval studies, and earning a certificate in underwater resource management. In order to major in underwater archaeology, designated as an “Individualized Major Program,” Olivia created her own curriculum and completed an undergraduate research project on artifacts discovered during a field school in the Dominican Republic. Olivia took her first scuba classes at IU and worked all the way through her Divemaster certification at the university. She worked at her local dive shop, Southern Indiana Scuba, and later became an instructor and technical diver.
Before graduating from college, Olivia taught scuba diving in the quarries of Indiana, Illinois, and Ohio for several months. She moved to the island of St. Croix, USVI, where she taught scuba diving and volunteered with the Nature Conservancy’s coral restoration project. While living in the Caribbean, Olivia gained a greater appreciation for not only the local culture and biodiversity, but cultural heritage management and heritage tourism.
Olivia left the Caribbean to enroll in East Carolina University to pursue her Master’s degree in maritime studies. Her Master’s thesis focused on foodways [the eating habits and culinary practices] artifacts from various shipwrecks of two eighteenth-century Spanish fleets. While at ECU, Olivia began presenting her research at international conferences and was inspired by two of her mentors to pursue her doctorate and teach at the collegiate level.
Olivia’s doctoral dissertation research focuses on the maritime cultural landscape of the island of St. Croix, USVI, during the eighteenth century. Her research will include shipwrecks, land remains, natural havens, and areas of traditional use related to the maritime culture and history of the island. Her research interests also include coastal and island archaeology, life on board ships, the maritime culture and history of the Atlantic world, material culture of eighteenth-century shipwrecks, iconography of maritime culture during the age of sail, and the lives of women on board whaling ships.
With a career goal of teaching anthropology courses at a college or university where she can also conduct research and mentor her students, she is very passionate about multidisciplinary research projects and creating opportunities for students to get hands-on experience. Olivia’s love for the ocean and the water is not limited to culture and archaeology; she is a passionate supporter of wildlife and environmental protection organizations.
“Everything is connected. An archaeological site doesn’t exist in a vacuum; it has associated biology, geology, and history, all of which deserve protection.”
