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A collection of news and information related to Anthropology published by this site and its partners.

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    May 19, 2013 |Story| Hartford Courant
  1. READER SUBMITTED: Copes Named To The Founding Faculty Of The Frank H. Netter MD School Of Medicine At Quinnipiac

    Hamden
    Lynn E. Copes, of New Haven, has been appointed to the founding faculty of the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University. As an Assistant Professor of Medical Sciences, Copes will teach anatomy to students at Connecticut's newest...

    Tags: Physiology, Colleges and Universities, Science and Technology, Arizona State University, Arts and Culture

  2. May 17, 2013 |Story| Daily Pilot
  3. New AP prep tool: pancakes

    "Good luck AP test takers" scrolled across Costa Mesa High School's electronic marquee Friday morning. At Newport-Mesa Unified high schools this week, Advanced Placement classes culminated with exams that will determine whether students receive college...

    Tags: Foods and Beverages, High Schools, Mountains, Geography, Science and Technology

  4. May 16, 2013 |Story| LAT - HOLD Archive
  5. Eating bugs: Would you dine on cicadas? Crickets? Buttered beetles?

    Mmmm. Just look at that plump little cicada. Can you imagine plucking it off its leaf and popping it in your mouth? Too much? How about after it's flash fried with a little butter, garlic and sea salt? Face it, America. We're inch-worming our way closer...

    Tags: Restaurants, Dining and Drinking, Sports, United Nations, Culture

  6. May 14, 2013 |Story| Reuters
  7. Exclusive: Brazil's Rousseff sides with farmers in Indian land fight

    Reuters
    BRASILIA/SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff has ordered her government to stop confiscating farmland to create new Indian reservations, government officials say, a policy reversal with major implications for one of the world's top...

    Tags: Judges, Dilma Rousseff, Justice System, Interior Policy, Politics

  8. Apr 18, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. Jewish legacy inscribed on genes?

    Gregory Cochran has always been drawn to puzzles. This one had been gnawing at him for several years: Why are European Jews prone to so many deadly genetic diseases?
    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    Gregory Cochran has always been drawn to puzzles. This one had been gnawing at him for several years: Why are European Jews prone to so many deadly genetic diseases? Tay-Sachs disease. Canavan disease. More than a dozen more. It offended Cochran's sense...

    Tags: National Institutes of Health, Colleges and Universities, Health and Safety at School, Symptoms, Rutgers University

  10. Sep 11, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Free-lunch foragers

    For lunch in her modest apartment, Madeline Nelson tossed a salad made with shaved carrots and lettuce she dug out of a Whole Foods dumpster. She flavored the dressing with miso powder she found in a trash bag on a curb in Chinatown. She baked bread made with yeast plucked from the garbage of a Middle Eastern grocery store.
    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    For lunch in her modest apartment, Madeline Nelson tossed a salad made with shaved carrots and lettuce she dug out of a Whole Foods dumpster. She flavored the dressing with miso powder she found in a trash bag on a curb in Chinatown. She baked bread...

    Tags: Los Angeles, Colleges and Universities, Midtown, Bagels, Labor Legislation

  12. Dec 11, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. Study finds humans still evolving, and quickly

    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    The pace of human evolution has been increasing at a stunning rate since our ancestors began spreading through Europe, Asia and Africa 40,000 years ago, quickening to 100 times historical levels after agriculture became widespread, according to a study...

    Tags: Lactose Intolerance, Science and Technology, Medical Research, Malaria, Arts and Culture

  14. Jan 30, 2007 |Story| Daily Press
  15. Decrypting old bones at St. Luke's Church

    A Smithsonian Institution scientist shrugged off claustrophobic working conditions Monday to recover the remains of a late-1600s skeleton buried under the floor of America's oldest standing English church.
    A Smithsonian Institution scientist shrugged off claustrophobic working conditions Monday to recover the remains of a late-1600s skeleton buried under the floor of America's oldest standing English church.     Scuttling into a shallow cavity under an...

    Tags: Isle of Wight (Isle of Wight, Virginia), Religion and Belief, Science and Technology, Archaeology, Arts and Culture

  16. May 6, 2013 |Story| LAT - HOLD Archive
  17. 'Cultural Politics of Seeds' at UCLA on May 17

    The UCLA Center for the Study of Women will be presenting a symposium on the &quot;Cultural Politics of Seeds" on May 17, as part of the <a href="http://www.csw.ucla.edu/research/projects/life-un-ltd/life-un-ltd">Life (Un)Ltd</a> project which explores the impact of recent developments in biotechnology and biosciences on feminist studies.<strong></strong>
    The UCLA Center for the Study of Women will be presenting a symposium on the "Cultural Politics of Seeds" on May 17, as part of the Life (Un)Ltd project which explores the impact of recent developments in biotechnology and biosciences on feminist studies....

    Tags: Biology, Geography, Science and Technology, Arts, Cultural Development

  18. Apr 9, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  19. Field has mulled selling artifacts

    When the Field Museum sold more than 30 works of 19th-century Western art for millions of dollars in 2004, it eased controversy by announcing plans to spend the proceeds on new artifacts and by holding on to four of the best paintings from the collection.
    When the Field Museum sold more than 30 works of 19th-century Western art for millions of dollars in 2004, it eased controversy by announcing plans to spend the proceeds on new artifacts and by holding on to four of the best paintings from the collection....

    Tags: University of Miami, Finance, Colleges and Universities, Religion and Belief, John James Audubon

  20. Mar 23, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. 'His name was Joseph'

    The poem Joshua Travis read to other teenage alumni of the state's child welfare system described in his own words how his mentally ill mother killed his 3-year-old brother.
    The poem Joshua Travis read to other teenage alumni of the state's child welfare system described in his own words how his mentally ill mother killed his 3-year-old brother. Amanda Wallace waved goodbye and hanged him from the transom of their West...

    Tags: Behavioral Conditions, September 11, 2001 Attacks, Justice System, Illinois State University, Politics

  22. May 1, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. Jamestown settlers ate 14-year-old girl, researchers say

    The early American settlers called it &quot;the starving time," and accounts of the winter of 1609-1610 were so ghastly, and so morbid, that scholars weren't sure if the stories were true.
    The early American settlers called it "the starving time," and accounts of the winter of 1609-1610 were so ghastly, and so morbid, that scholars weren't sure if the stories were true. George Percy, then president of the English settlement of Jamestown...

    Tags: Colonial Williamsburg, Jamestown (Jamestown, Virginia), Museum of Natural History, Historic Jamestowne, Dismemberment

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Anthropology Photos
Central Michigan University anthropology students clear...
(August 13, 2012)
Central Michigan University anthropology students clear away dirt Friday near what is thought to be a posthole from a barn that once stood at McGulpin Point Lighthouse.
Joshua Travis studies on campus. His ISU professor Fred...
(March 18, 2012)
Anthropology major
John "Cliff" Galloway, University of Baltimore laborato...
(February 9, 2012)
Sex at the Zoo at the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore