Archaeology
Archaeology links with biological anthropology in a number of ways. For instance, archaeologists encountering burials frequently turn to biological anthropologists for analyses of stature, health, and other topics. Many archaeologists and biological anthropologists share a deep interest in human ecology, i.e. the ways people have adapted to their environments and affected those environments. Archaeology also relates to cultural anthropology in significant ways, since much archaeological theory is derived from cultural theory. Given the vast diachronic interests of archaeology, significant archaeological theory is also derived independently from ethnography. Ethnoarchaeology spans the two subdisciplines, as archaeologists study the material culture of functioning contemporary societies to learn how better to make inferences about past behavior. Both archaeology and cultural anthropology study ethnic and political groups in contact with each other, including topics of migration, acculturation, trade and tribute, conquest, information sharing, elite emulation, and the rise of multiethnic powers.
Every summer, the Â鶹Ãâ·Ñ°æÏÂÔØDepartment of Anthropology conducts anÌýarchaeological field schoolÌýfor qualifying undergraduate and graduate students.
Ìý
Archaeology Faculty
- Douglas BamforthÌý–ÌýPre-contact archaeology of the North American Great Plains
- Catherine Cameron** –ÌýArchaeology of the North American Southwest
- Gerardo GutiérrezÌý– Mesoamerican Archaeology and Ethnohistory
- Arthur JoyceÌý–ÌýOrigins and development of complex societies of Mesoamerica
- –ÌýMaya archaeology, community archaeology, social inequality, and political authority
- Steve Lekson** –ÌýCurator of Anthropology-Archaeology of the North American Southwest
- Scott OrtmanÌý– Historical Anthropology of the North American Southwest
(** Not accepting graduate students at this time.)