Jesse Casana, W.J. Bryant 1925 Professor of Archaeology, is quoted in Nautilus about using artificial intelligence with remote imaging to identify archaeological sites.
News
June 07, 2025
An article in The New York Times describes research by a team of Dartmouth anthropologists that reveals the most complete ancient agricultural location in the eastern United States.
June 06, 2025
In an NPR segment, Dartmouth anthropologists Madeleine McLeester and Jesse Casana discuss their research in Michigan that uncovered what is likely the largest intact remains of an ancient Native American agricultural site in the eastern half of the United States.
December 10, 2021
Findings of research on the Dronkvlei Cave System in South Africa, which was funded by the Claire Garber Goodman Fund for the Anthropological Study of Human Culture, have been published in the November/December Issue of the South African Journal of Science.
April 06, 2021
Dartmouth archaeologists have been awarded a Neukom Institute CompX grant to support remote sensing of ancient settlements in the Upper Connecticut River Valley.
April 09, 2020
Dartmouth's Neukom Institute announced next year's class of Neukom Postdoctoral Fellows, recruited out of a pool of 106 applicants. Incoming...
April 17, 2018
Chad Hill, Julie Hruby, Jesse Casana, Deborah Nichols, and Elise Laugier were at the Society for American Archaeology 83rd Annual Meeting from April 11—15, 2018.
November 29, 2017
At the end of the fall term, Prof. Casana and students in ANTH 29 used new technology to find footprints of campus buildings beneath the Baker Library lawn.
November 06, 2017
Find out how drones are enabling today's archaeologists to preview sites of interest before taking out the shovel and brush....
March 04, 2016
Professor Casana talked with BBC Radio about archeology and looting in Syria, and his work with villagers who are now internally displaced, living in a camp on the border with Turkey. The interview is an episode in a BBC series called The Museum of Lost Objects.