We are livestreaming commencement on Friday, Dec. 13 – so your friends or family can watch you graduate from wherever they are! 🎥 The live webcast can be accessed via the link on our commencement website 15 minutes before the ceremony begins. Link at: https://t.co/a6aczsrLb2
University Distinguished Professor of Anthropology Kathleen Galvin recently spoke about her career and work with dryland pastoralists and the importance of interdisciplinary anthropological and ecological study with CSU SOURCE's The Art of Research https://t.co/BUh5Pdag4R
Cutting-edge drone-based lidar allowed archaeologists, including Dr. Ed Henry from @CSUAnthGR, to capture stunning details of two newly documented trade cities high in the mountains of Uzbekistan.
Study recently published in @Nature
https://t.co/knZPg0MOnU
#ColoradoState's Archaeology of Ancient Roman Food class is all about how food has – and hasn’t – changed in the past 2,700 years.
Learn more about the ancient Romans, familiar cooking ingredients and a surprising recipe for cooked flamingo: https://t.co/He0ULUbr88
We’re ready to celebrate Graduate Student Appreciation Week Feb. 12 – 16 with @CSUgsc! Join us for a week of events, all to honor the hard work and dedication of Grad Rams 🙌 Details on: https://t.co/LheIhd0Ixi
Heading west to Colorado for a few days - looking forward to giving a talk and leading a workshop at @CSUAnthGR and attending the Rocky Mountain Biological Anthropology Association conference!
We are particularly interested in candidates whose work addresses disease disparities, urban health, environmental health, and/or socio-ecological processes shaping health dynamics and access. For a full announcement and to apply visit: https://t.co/iu41tusbuc
CSU Anthropology and Geography seeks to hire a tenure-track assistant professor in health geography to begin August 16, 2024. The candidate is expected to have a Ph.D. in Geography or related discipline. For a full announcement and to apply visit: https://t.co/iu41tusbuc
The first “Insights” Speaker Series is happening this Thursday from 3 – 4:30 p.m. in LSC 390.
This month’s event will feature presentations from four award-winning faculty.
Click the link below for more info!
https://t.co/08Rfk5FlU4
In a new, open-access article in the journal, Radiocarbon, CSU ANTH PhD candidate Kelton Meyer suggests Rhizocarpon lichens are an underused tool for determining the age of stone structures built by hunter-gatherers in the Colorado mountains. Read more https://t.co/wVDKYK1sGn
Check out more stories from CSU SOURCE’s special report, “Summer of Smoke” highlighting wildfire research and outreach from across CSU https://t.co/S79LkUlr8L
@ColoStateNews
Read a Q&A with Geography Prof. Jason Sibold about the declining value of tree-ring data, new GIS and digital tools for forest and fire management, and how his research supports forest conservation amid climate change https://t.co/YKDW3JQZTc
“Looking back and providing managers and conservation groups and scientists and policymakers with [tree-ring data] of what’s happened in the last 400 or 500 years was starting to lose its value,” says Sibold. “As I tell students, the past isn’t what it used to be.”
My new job this summer for @CSUAnthGR is to finish unpacking, organizing, and cataloging the amazing collection of books our chair, Mica Glantz, inherited from her advisor Alan Mann into a useable research library space.
Want crickets with that burger? Shaylee Warner, @ColoradoSPH MPH, with CSU Assoc Prof of Geography @HHausermann, studied how climate change could elevate insects’ places on plates and menus in years to come and how to reduce the stigma of eating bugs. https://t.co/hgh4tAZz8P