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The center cannot hold: A Bayesian chronology for the collapse of Tiwanaku
Mar. 26, 2025—Anthropology Guest Speaker Friday April 18th Noon-1:30 Center Bldg 200 Classroom Erik Marsh, Ph.D. CONICET, Universidad Nacional de Cuyo The center cannot hold: A Bayesian chronology for the collapse of Tiwanaku Tiwanaku, known as ‘the stone in the center,’ was one of the Andes’ first cities. In the 600–900s CE, it became famous...
“When Informants Become Knowledge Producers: Reframing Great Zimbabwe Using Indigenous Knowledge”
Mar. 3, 2025—“When Informants Become Knowledge Producers: Reframing Great Zimbabwe Using Indigenous Knowledge“ March 21 12:15pm 101 Buttrick Hall Shadreck Chirikure Edward Hall Professor of Archaeological Science University of Oxford Archaeology in Africa, like elsewhere, was introduced as a tool of empire. The first westerners to encounter Great Zimbabwe speculated that it was exotic in...
“Marginalized in Mississippi: Addressing disparities and invisible data in missing persons cases”
Feb. 5, 2025— “Marginalized in Mississippi: Addressing disparities and invisible data in missing persons cases” Dr. Jesse GoliathAssistant ProfessorDepartment of Anthropology and Middle Eastern CulturesMississippi State UniversitySenior Research Associate – Cobb Institute of Archaeology Thursday February 27th at 6:00 PM 101 Buttrick Hall Abstract: Currently, Mississippi lacks state laws requiring the reporting of missing...
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