2025-2026 Undergraduate General Catalog

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ANTH 2320 Cultural Anthropology

Join us in a class that makes the strange familiar and the familiar strange. An anthropological study of diverse local and global cultures invites you to explore humanity. Explore religious perspectives, kinship systems, family practices, power structures, and so much more. This course delves into the Cultural sub-discipline of Anthropology while engaging students with skills necessary in a rapidly globalizing world.

Credits

3

Offered

Every Fall

Notes

Previously: ANTH 271, SOCI 271

ANTH 2620 Introduction to Biological Anthropology and Forensics

This course is designed to provide a general introduction to Biological Anthropology. The course traces the nature of human evolution, the hominin past, including the study of primates. Further, it examines human skeletal remains as a means of understanding the evolutionary and archaeological past. Finally, the study of Forensics provides practical, real-world applications for the principles of Biological Anthropology.

Credits

3

Offered

Every Fall and Spring

Notes

Previously: ANTH 274

ANTH 2630 Ethics in Human Remains

In this course we will reflect and discuss ethical perspectives surrounding the handling, treatment, display, curation, trade, and research of human remains. In doing so, we will consider how ethical perspectives vary according to national, legal, spiritual, and cultural contexts. Additionally, we will consider debates on how the state of human remains, whether mummified, skeletonized, dissected, desiccated, etc., factors into ethical discussions on what is deemed permissible (or prohibited) in the handling of human remains.

Credits

3

Offered

Every Spring

Notes

Previously: ANTH 268

ANTH 2640 Forensic Anthropology

In this class we will learn about the human skeleton and explore the key methods that are used in the identification of individuals, such as age-at-death estimation, sex determination, stature, ancestry, and personal identification. We will also deal with the assessment of differing types of trauma, and whether or not such trauma can inform us of the cause and manner of death. Finally, the broader ethical responsibilities of forensic anthropologists will be discussed, including discussions of how we determine (or, debate) race/ancestry, human rights abuses, disasters, criminal inquiries, and genocides.

Credits

3

Offered

Occasionally

Notes

Previously: ANTH 265

ANTH 2720 Introduction to Methods of Archaeology

We have all seen the mysteries of the past uncovered in documentaries but how do archaeologists know what they know? This course provides a methodological and theoretical introduction to how archaeologists make sense of material culture to reconstruct the lives of those in the past. Learn how we can reconstruct timelines, analyze artifacts, and read changing landscapes to better understand our deepest human prehistory.

Credits

3

Offered

Every Fall

Notes

Previously: ANTH 272

ANTH 2970 Topics:

Special Topics in Anthropology.

Credits

3

Notes

Previously: ANTH 297