From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Myra Lesley Shackley (born about 1945) is
Professor of Culture Resource Management and Head of the Centre for
Tourism and Visitor
Management at Nottingham Business School.
She is also a priest in the
Church of
England and has been the Tourism Advisor of Southwell
diocese since 2005. Part of her current research is concerned with
the management of sacred sites as visitor attractions. She has
written several books and about two hundred of academic articles
and international conference papers. She has been involved in
research in sub-Saharan Africa (mostly Namibia but also Lesotho, Botswana and South Africa), West Africa (Mali), Kingdom of Lo
(northern Nepal/Tibet), Rajasthan and Arunachal Pradesh (India), Guyana (consultancy for Esmée Fairbairn Charitable
Trust), and Uzbekistan.
After gaining a Ph.D. in Archaeology at the University of Southampton she
spent four years as head of the laboratory at the Institute of Archaeology at Oxford before becoming a lecturer
in Archaeology at the University of Leicester during
which time she reported on the geology of Saxon Southampton.
She has investigated the stories about Yeti creatures, as in her book Still Living?
Wildmen: Yeti, Sasquatch and the Neanderthal Enigma, where she
refers to a description of a family of Almas. Her research into residual
Neanderthal
populations took her to Mongolia in 1969 but she abandoned this
research in the late 1980s.
Bibliography
- Myra Shackley, Rocks and Man (London: Allen Unwin,
1977) ISBN 0-312-68799-0
- Myra L Shackley, 'The Hamwih Brickearths' in Philip Holdsworth,
CBA Research Report No. 33: Excavations at Melbourne Street,
Southampton, 1971-76 (Oxford: Council for British Archaeology,
1980) ISBN 0-900312-82-3
- Myra Shackley (1980), Neanderthal Man
- Myra Shackley, Wildmen: Yeti, Sasquatch and the Neanderthal
Enigma (London: Thames & Hudson, 1983) ISBN 0-500-01298-9
(also published as Still Living?: Yeti, Sasquatch and the
Neanderthal Enigma ISBN 0-500-01298-9)
- Myra Shackley, Environmental Archaeology (London:
Allen Unwin, 1982)
- Myra Shackley, 'Palaeolithic archaeology in the Mongolian
People's Republic: a report on the state of the art',
Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 50 (1984)
- Myra Shackley, Using Environmental Archaeology
(London: Batsford, 1985) ISBN 0-7134-4850-4
- Deanna Swaney, and Myra Shackley. Lonely Planet Survival
Kit: Zimbabwe, Botswana and Namibia (London: Lonely Planet,
1995) ISBN 0-86442-313-6
- Myra Shackley, Wild Life Tourism (London: Thomson
Learning, 1996) ISBN 0-415-11539-6
- Myra Shackley, Visitor Management: Case Studies from World
Heritage Sites (London: Butterworth-Heinemann, 1998) ISBN
0-7506-3279-8
- Deanna Swaney, and Myra Shackley. Lonely Planet Country
Guide: Zimbabwe, Botswana and Namibia (London: Lonely Planet,
1999) ISBN 0-86442-545-7
- Myra Shackley, Managing Sacred Sites: Service Provision and
Visitor Experience (London: Thomson Learning, 2001) ISBN
0-8264-5141-1
- Deanna Swaney, Myra Shackley, Tione Chinula, and Vincent
Talbot. Lonely Planet Country Guide: Zimbabwe (London:
Lonely Planet, 2002) ISBN 1-74059-043-0
- Myra Shackley, 'Management challenges for religion-based
attractions' in Alan Fyall, Brian Garrod, and Anna Leask (eds.),
Managing Visitor Attractions: New Directions (London:
Butterworth-Heinemann, 2003) ISBN 0-7506-5381-7
- Myra Shackley, Atlas of Travel and Tourism Development
(London: Butterworth-Heinemann, 2006) ISBN 0-7506-6348-0