Biological Anthropologists |
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Research interests include biocultural theory and practice; political economy of health; biology of poverty; political ecology; health and nutrition; ecology and adaptability; coping with marginal conditions; seasonality; growth and development; Andes, Yucatan, and Southeast U.S. University of South Carolina.
Kent State University professor who researches biomechanics, forensics, skeletal biology and human evolution.
Kent State University instructor who teaches primate ecology and behavior. Offers an article that discusses various aspects of his research interests and a link to his CV.
Research centers on primate and human evolution, with a special emphasis on using comparative analyses of living species to understand the morphology and adaptations of extinct species. University of Arkansas.
A biocultural anthropologist at the University of Pittsburgh, currently working on facial expression and schizophrenia, as well as on the adaptive significance child behavior cross-culturally.
Distinguished Teaching Professor at the University of Buffalo who teaches craniofacial growth and development, and biological anthropology.
Phyisical anthropologist ath the University of Buffalo interested in adaptive human biology.
Professor of Anthropology at the University of Washington. Includes vitae, publications, and information for prospective graduate students.
Research interests are primarily in the area of forensic anthropology and skeletal biology, particularly as studied through the quantitative histological analysis of bone. University of Missouri.
Research focuses on determining relationships between diet and the sizes, shapes and wear of teeth in living primates. University of Arkansas.
Science /
Earth_Sciences /
Paleontology /
Paleontologists /
Vertebrate /
Mammal
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