Physical anthropology (or biological anthropology) focuses on studies of evolution, human variation, genetic inheritance, primatology, and forensic science. It considers issues of the significance of physical variation in modern populations, the origin and adaptive value of technology, the rise of the race concept and the social meaning of this concept, racism and genocide, among other issues.
Last update:
12/13/07
SPOTLIGHT
Anthropology Student and Faculty Papers at the 71st Annual Meetings of the Society for American Archaeology, Puerto Rico. April 2006.
(CSULB Participants are in BOLD)
Ileana Bradford, Hector Neff and Bret Plaskey - Laser Ablation ICP-MS for the Chemical Characterization of Glass Beads from the Great Basin Area of Eastern California
Janine Gasco, Hector Neff and Gloria Evins -- Postclassic Ceramics in the Soconusco: Patterns of Production and Exchange
Hector Neff and Sonia Medrano -- Central Mexicans on the Guatemalan Coast
Susana Gonzalez, Gregory Hodgins, George Burr, Jeffrey Dean and Hector Neff—Differences in Measurable Radiocarbon Due to Latitude and Elevation
Maria Masucci and Hector Neff -- Ceramic Production and Societal Change in the Manteno of Coastal Ecuado
Krzysztof Makowski, Ivan Ghezzi and Hector Neff -- LA-ICPMS Analysis of Ceramics from Pueblo Viejo (Lurin, Peru): Discussion of Results
Lisa N. Schaaf, Mary Ann Vicari, Eugene W. Domack, George T. Jones and Michael D. Cannon -- Geoarchaeological Investigations at Smith Creek Cave, White Pine County, Nevada
Mike Cannon -- Efficiency, Risk, and the Evolution of Agricultural Economies
Terry Hunt, Carl Lipo and Sergio Rapu-Haoa -- An Elephant in the Room: Current Problems in Easter Island Archaeology
Carl Lipo and Terry Hunt -- The Cultural Phylogeny of Monumental Statues on Easter Island
Sachiko Sakai -- Investigation of Olivine Tempered Ceramics and Clay Procurement Patterns in the Virgin Branch Anasazi Region
Paul Buck and Sachiko Sakai -- Testing of Virgin Anasazi Sites at Mt. Trumbull, Arizona