News & Events
- Robin Bernstein was interviewed by NBC news radio last Friday about her study: 鈥淢other's milk changes with the seasons, influencing baby's well-being鈥. Seasonally-influenced changes in a mother鈥檚 environment and diet can have a profound impact on
- Sarah KurnickDr. Sarah Kurnick joined our Archaeology faculty last year as a Chancellor鈥檚 Post-Doctoral Fellow with an option for tenure track, which she won handily. Kurnick specializes in ancient Mesoamerica and her research focuses on the
- Hale Science Building, CU Boulder campus. by CU Boulder Anthropology - 3D model sketchfab.com1894, Richardsonian Romanesque style. Home of the Department of Anthropology.Gerardo Gutierrez, Project Map, IRISS/Grand Challenge.
- Tom Sever and Payson Sheets pointing out two parallel ancient footpaths. They date to AD 600-1300 and connect the cemetery at the top of the photo with a village far down to the right.After teaching for 43 years in this wonderful department, I
- Forest regeneration through seed dispersal. Photo credit: Alain HouleJoanna Lambert co-authored landmark research covered recently in the New York Times. Our fellow primates are in dire straits
- Willi Lempert (PhD candidate) just finished his first podcast. Titled "Haircuts and Billionaires," it's the first in a three part AnthroPod series on the anthropology of outer space. Dr. David Valentine discusses topics as varied as haircuts in
- Erin Hughes gave a successful defense of her Master鈥檚 thesis on Tuesday and will be awarded the MA in May.Her research was on Cutting Corners: The Transition from Corner to Side Notched Points During the Central Plains Tradition. Three cheers for
- Meryleen Mena (PhD candidate) has garnered another award. CARTSS awarded her $1000 in GraduateStudent Funds in support of her project entitled Women Detained: Justice and Institutional Violence in the San Paulo Criminal Justice System.
- Professor Michelle Sauther. The ring-tailed lemur, an iconic primate that is emblematic of the wild and wonderful creatures inhabiting the tropical island of Madagascar, is in big trouble.According to a new study by the University of Victoria in
- Kelly O鈥橳oole and Sara Stiehl have passed their comprehensive exams and will be awarded the MA in May 2017.Congratulations to them and to advisors, Terrry McCabe and Carla Jones.