News & Events
- Announcing Emeritus Professor Paul Shankman's new book Margaret Mead - available now from Berghahn Books! Introduction: Tracing Mead’s career as an ethnographer, as the early voice of public anthropology, and as a public figure, this
- Will Taylor Receives CAORC - National Endowment for the Humanities Senior Research Fellowship. The CAORC-NEH Senior Research Fellowship supports advanced research in the humanities and enables fellows to spend four to six consecutive months at
- Research into how Maasai in Tanzania use their phones shows how dialing errors can also breed friendships and business opportunities. Professor J. Terrence McCabe and colleagues share on The Conversation. Sometimes wrong numbers work. On the East
- Kelly Zepelin was awarded the 2021 American Anthropological Association David M. Schneider Award for her paper, "Root Mothers and Reciprocity: Ethical Frameworks of Wild Plant Harvest in Modern North American Foraging Communities." This
- Graduate Student Carlton Gover Awarded a WARD Weekly Scholarship by the Colorado Council of Professional Archaeologists. This scholarship is awarded to students who are doing work in Colorado Archaeology; this work must
- A big thanks to Alison Davidson, Diana Wilson, and Robin Bernstein for creating a beautiful lactation space in Hale hall which recently received recognition from Boulder County Public Health and was featured in Arts and Sciences
- Congratulations to Professor Robin Bernstein who will join the National Science Foundation later this summer as a program director. NSF offers a chance for scientists, engineers, and educators to join NSF as temporary program
- Ph.D. Student Jenny Washabaugh Successfully Defended Her Dissertation, "First Foods, Intestinal Ecology, and Early Life Health and Growth Outcomes." Many thanks to committee members Dr. Darna Dufour, Dr. Terry McCabe, Dr. David Mills (University of
- Congratulations to Will Taylor for his recent grant with Dr. Muhammad Zahir of Hazara University from the CAORC (Council of American Overseas Research Centers) for their project on glacial archaeology in the Himalayas. You can read about
- Thirteenth-century Angkor was home to more people than modern Boston. New research suggests that the southeast Asian city of Angkor was home to as many as 900,000 people. The team's study combines several research methods to model the