Americans have long been fascinated with "jumbo" things: jumbo shrimp, jumbo jets, jumbotrons. Perhaps few know, however, that the word and...
News
December 07, 2022
Striations and residue found on stone tools in China reflect harvesting methods.
October 21, 2022
Anthropology scholars and energy justice advocates Maron Greenleaf, Sarah Kelly, and Elizabeth Carpenter-Song illuminate the local implications of rising energy costs, and how regular citizens can help.
September 16, 2022
Dartmouth College anthropology professor Sergei Kan was born in the Soviet Union just a few months after the death of Stalin. He came to the United States in 1974 at the age of 21 and received his undergraduate degree from Boston University and his doctorate in anthropology from the University of Chicago. He teaches courses at Dartmouth on the native peoples of Alaska, on the Jewish diaspora, and on Russia. Next year—the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of The Gulag Archipelago—Dr. Kan will teach a course titled "Red Terror: The History and Culture of the Stalin Labor Camps." Dr. Kan has been kind enough to offer our viewers a preview of the seminar in advance.
August 08, 2022
Deborah (Deb) L. Nichols, William J. Bryant 1925 Professor of Anthropology, passed away on Wednesday, July 27. She was 70 years old.
May 25, 2022
Students unearth Hanover history alongside the Green.
February 14, 2022
Dung-rich sediment provides definitive evidence of millet farming in the region.
January 04, 2022
Anne Johnakin '23 made a stone and clay oven to test fuels used in ancient ceramics.
December 10, 2021
Centuries before the pharaohs emerged in Egypt, the local elites used a thick porridge-like beer in their ceremonies.
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.