News & Events
- Cristian Figueroa (Archaeology PhD in Progress) awarded a Center for Humanities & the Arts (CHA) 2025 Graduate Summer Fellowship. The CHA Summer Graduate Fellowship provides funds to support Cristian's summer research project.
- Professor Sharon DeWitte has been elected as a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in recognition of her research on medieval England. The Fellowship is a mark of respect within the Society of Antiquaries, recognizing individuals
- Thank you to everyone for making the The Hale Research Symposium a huge success. A special shoutout to all of the students who shared their posters.
- Tom Hanson successfully defended his PhD thesis, "This paradise burns; community, wildfire, and ecological change in the Bolivian Chiquitania." His committee members were professors Gerardo Gutierrez (chair), Terry McCabe, Kate Goldfarb,
- Professor Carla Jones's research on women's Indonesian fashion featured in A&S Magazine. CU º£½ÇÉçÇø researcher Carla Jones finds that what Indonesian women wear in court can convey messages of piety and shame, or just the appearance of them.Read
- Libby Brown, M Jordan, and Emily Reardon (BA Anthropology in Progress) won top prize at the Studio Lab End-of-year Poster Session for their project with Dr. Lauren Hosek entitled "Numbers to Narratives: Using Biological Profiles to Reconstruct
- Meg Hardie (Biological Anthropology, PhD in Progress) has successfully passed her qualifying exam. Her committee consisted of Professors Sharon Dewitte, Lauren Hosek, Scott Ortman and Fernando Villanea.
- Jack Dalton (Biological Anthropology, PhD Candidate) has been selected to receive the Graduate School Summer Fellowship. This fellowship will allow Jack to work on his dissertation on galago cognition.
- Professor Fernando Villanea Awarded an NSF CAREER Award for his research,"Archaic hominin genomic variation in modern human populations."AbstractLiving people carry archaic genetic material inherited from other hominins such as Neanderthals and
- Grace Thompson (BA Anthropology in Progress) has been selected as a 2025 Savit Scholar. Only three students were selected this year. Grace was selected because her proposal promises to push disciplinary boundaries and create new space for creativity