News & Events
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 (³Ô¹ÏÍø of
Congratulations to Will Taylor for his recent grant with Dr. Muhammad Zahir of Hazara ³Ô¹ÏÍø 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
Rob has recently published two lead author, peer-reviewed articles in two different Anthropological Journals. The first is "Great Houses for Whom?: Chacoan Monumental Architecture in Cross-Cultural, Cognitive, and Ethnohistorical Perspective"
Pet trade may pose threat to bushbaby conservation Southern lesser galagos (Galago moholi), a species of primate that lives in southern Africa, boast big, round eyes and are so small they can fit in your hand. A new study from an international team
Jennifer Shannon is one of seven scholars nationwide to win a Whiting Public Engagement Program fellowship, the Whiting Foundation has announced. The $50,000 fellowship will support “Kumeyaay Comics: Indigenous Histories of
Ph.D.student Emily Hite successfully defended her dissertation entitled, "Inside the Climate Frontier: Intersecting Indigenous Rights and Hydropower Development in Costa Rica." Congratulations, Dr. Emily Hite!