Join us as we talk with archaeologist, Jack Fisher about his career as an archaeologist. We discuss his archaeological research among the Efe people in the Ituri Forest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, his work at First People’s Buffalo Jump in Montana, his research partnership with John Parkington of the Department of Archaeology at the University of Capetown in South Africa, and his work on an antelope kill site called Lost Terrace. For further reading, be sure to read Jack’s chapter in Pisskan: Interpreting First Peoples Bison Kills at Heritage Parks. His chapter, co-written with Tom Roll, is entitled “First Peoples Buffalo Jump Archaeology: Research Results and Public Interpretation.” Dr. Jack Fisher taught anthropology at Montana State University (Bozeman) for 30 years and now serves as an Emeritus Associate professor at Montana State University. During his career, his archaeological research focused on the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains of Montana. He also did archaeological research in the Western Cape of South Africa in collaboration with archaeologists at the University of Cape Town, South Africa. At the beginning of his career, he did ethnoarchaeological research for one year among Efe people, part-time hunter-gatherers, in the Ituri Forest, Democratic Republic of the Congo.