A study shows how the rulers transformed cities to reshape memories of the landscape.
News
September 16, 2021
In a story debating the oldest archeaological site, anthropologist Jeremy DeSilva argues for Kenya's Lomekwe 3 where stone artifacts were...
July 28, 2021
Sergei Kan has been invited to join the Scientific Committee of the 2022 Congress of the International Union of Anthropological and...
July 01, 2021
Desert locusts Schistocerca gregaria are threatening the food security of millions of people and devastating economies in eastern Africa and northern India. The ongoing outbreak is the largest in seven decades. These events give us cause to reflect on the natural history of locusts, our fraught relationship with them, and how they are represented in American popular culture and others.
May 18, 2021
Dartmouth alumna, Anjali M Prabhat and EEES PhD candidate, Kate Miller are lead authors of a newly published anthropology paper titled, "Homoplasy in the evolution of modern human-like joint proportions in Australopithecus afarensis."
May 03, 2021
In the early 19th century in North America, parasitic infections were quite common in urban areas due in part to population growth and...
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 06, 2021
A "New York Times" reviewer writes that in DeSilva's new book, "First Steps: How Upright Walking Made Us Human," the associate professor of anthropology "proposes that our bipedalism is at the root of our uniqueness as a species ... neatly braiding his own research with the wider narrative and history of human evolution."
March 03, 2021
Woolly mammoths may have walked the landscape at the same time as the earliest humans in what is now New England, according to a Dartmouth...
January 07, 2021
Egyptian mummified baboons may help unlock secrets of a lost civilization known as the Land of Punt, according to a new study by Nathaniel...