Dr. Brett R. Lenz
Brett R.
Lenz, Ph.D., LG, LEG, RPA is President,
Columbia
Geotechnical Associates Inc. His
specialties
include Quaternary and forensic geology, geoarchaeology, and expertise
in
the
energy and hydroengineering industry.
After completing his undergraduate work in Anthropology and Geology,
Brett
undertook an MS in Geology on the topic of paleoseismic liquefaction.
For
his Ph.D. research he studied the archaeology of colonization with an
emphasis in Ice Age cultures of North and South America. Shortly after,
he
founded Columbia Geotechnical Associates, based out of Redmond,
Washington.
Along the way he’s married (Danielle Clingman), and had three sons,
Garreck,
Haydn, and Carver.
Brett is an Officer in the Geologic Society of America’s Archaeological
Geology Division — an outlet for his long-standing interest in
Geoarchaeology. He has applied his skills in forensic geology as a
consultant to federal and state law enforcement in murder
investigations,
his skills in ground penetrating radar applications to identifying
prehistoric burial locations, and in reconstructing the geologic history
of
ancient earthquakes.
These days his research is focused on
the Upper
Pleistocene to Holocene transition — in particular, geomorphic and
pedogenic
response to late-glacial climate change, particularly as it applies to
prehistoric use of the landscape. He’s defined two Cordilleran geosols,
the
Bishop geosol which formed across the North American Cordilleran
between
~13.5 and 11.2 KBP and the Badger Mountain geosol which formed between
10
and 7.7 KBP. Both are time-stratigraphic marker horizons which help us
understand timing of late-Quaternary deformation along the west coast of
North America, provide a baseline for understanding timing of the
earliest
archaeology of the region, and ultimately, the ice age colonization of
the
North and South American continents.
Brett has presented the results of his research at dozens of National
and
International professional meetings, coauthored
Recent
geoarchaeological
discoveries in central
Washington,
and
Cultural stratigraphy at Mezhirich, an Upper Palaeolithic site in
Ukraine
with multiple
occupations.
He is currently completing a textbook on Archaeological Geology of the
Pacific Cordillera. Read his
LinkedIn
profile.