Biological Anthropology

Biological Anthropology Photos The department offers training in primate and human anatomy and evolution, primate behavior and ecology, human variation and ecology, and nutritional anthropology.  Faculty research interests include the following: primate health and disease ecology, general ecology, and conservation biology (with research sites in Madagascar, Guyana, Panama and Vietnam); primate evolution (with research sites in Wyoming and Vietnam); early hominid paleoecology (with study areas throughout Africa); human reproductive and nutritional ecology (with research sites in Colombia and Brazil); skeletal biology of Medieval Nubians; and biogeochemical techniques for studying the diets and habitats of modern and fossil fauna.  Please note that we do not train students specifically in forensics.

Additionally, the biological faculty have interests and research strengths that cross sub-disciplinary boundaries and foster collaboration with faculty and graduate students in both archaeology and cultural anthropology. For example, we share an interest in human ecology, the broad integrative area of anthropology that focuses on the interactions of culture, biology and the environment. We also share an interest in the processes of globalization, which are rapidly changing many aspects of the modern world. As biological anthropologists, we are well positioned to analyze the impact of globalization on the interaction between biology and behavior, including changes in fertility and mortality rates, nutritional status and disease prevalence. We are also well positioned to analyze human and primate adaptations to changing environments and declining biodiversity.

Every summer, the CU Department of Anthropology conducts a full-credit field school for qualifying undergraduate and graduate students.

Biological Faculty

Herbert Covert –Conservation and ecology of Southeast Asian colobines and the biology of the earliest primates of North America, Europe, North Africa;

                               Research & Field Work Website

Darna Dufour—Biological & behavioral responses of human populations to nutritional problems    

Michelle Sauther—Socioecology and biology of nonhuman primates;

                                The Beza Mahafaly Lemur Biology Project Website    

Matt Sponheimer—Ecology of early human ancestors in Africa;

                                News, Links and Publications Website

Dennis Van Gerven—Paleopathology, paleodemography  & etc. of ancient populations of the Nile Valley   

Faculty Biographies