On a mobile device?

View the LSU Libraries Mobile Website at
http://www.lib.lsu.edu/m/

On a mobile device?

View the LSU Libraries Mobile Website at
http://www.lib.lsu.edu/m/

Physical Anthropology


<< Anthropology Subject Guide
>> Visit Our Blog!
>> Get Involved in Anthropology!
>> Anthropology @ LSU




Narrow Your Search

Associations_Organizations (1)

Career (0)

Featured.Resource (2)

Field.School (0)

Forensics (0)

Grant.Resources (0)

Introductory.Resource (0)

Paleoanthropology (1)

Physical.Anthropology.Site (0)

Primatology (1)

Reference (0)

Style.Guide (0)



Access Requirements

LSU.Login.Required (0)

Middleton.Library (0)

Open.Access (16)



Resource Types

Blog (16)

Book (0)

Database (1)

eBook (0)

eDocument (0)

eJournals (0)

eMuseums_ePublications (0)

Mailing.List (1)

www (0)


 

16 Bookmarks Found with These Tags:

Blog [X]



A Hot Cup of Joe

I’m a graduate of the University of Texas at Arlington’s anthropology program, where I received my bachelor of arts in anthropology with a focus on archaeology. I’m about to begin my graduate studies with an eye on at least an M.A. in the field of archaeology if not a Ph.D. My desire is to work in the field of cultural resource management but also to write about anthropology and, in particular, archaeology. I have a fascination with pseudoarchaeology and so-called “alternative” archaeology and what it is that drives people to believe in this and other pseudoscientific notions, so I also find it interesting and, perhaps, necessary to write about these topics with an intent on clarifying and exposing them for the poor science that they are.

Tagged With: Blog Archaeology Open.Access Physical.Anthropology

American Anthropological Association Blog

The American Anthropological Association (AAA) has created this blog as a service to our members and the general public. It is a forum to discuss topics of debate in anthropology and a space for public commentary on association policies, publications and advocacy issues. We will post select items that we think are of interest to our members or that you, the reader, have voiced an interest in. We invite you to use this domain to spur intellectual discussion and critique that is grounded in anthropological and other scientific research. Please feel free to contact us with any suggestions, queries or potential contributions you might have.

Tagged With: Blog Cultural.Anthropology Linguistic.Anthropology Archaeology Physical.Anthropology Associations_Organizations Featured.Resource Open.Access

Anthropology.net

Anthropology.net’s mission is to create a cohesive online community of individuals interested in anthropology. This website intends to promote and facilitate discussion, review research, extend stewardship of resources, and disseminate knowledge. To serve the public interest, we seek the widest possible engagement with all segments of society, including professionals, students, and anyone who is interested in advancing knowledge and enhancing awareness of anthropology.

Tagged With: Blog Cultural.Anthropology Physical.Anthropology Linguistic.Anthropology Archaeology Open.Access

Cognition and Culture

The International Cognition & Culture Institute is an initiative of the Department of Anthropology of the London School of Economics and Political Science made possible by an initial grant from the LSE and support from the Institut Jean Nicod (ENS, EHESS, CNRS) in Paris. (Further support from other scholarly institutions and foundations would be very welcome!)

Tagged With: Blog Cultural.Anthropology Physical.Anthropology Open.Access

Dienekes' Anthropology Blog

Dienekes' Anthropology blog is dedicated to human population genetics, physical anthropology, archaeology, and history. Feel free to send e-mail to Dienekes Pontikos, or to visit my other two sites: Anthropological Research Page, and Γενετική των Ελλήνων. You can also follow dienekesp on Twitter.

Tagged With: Blog Archaeology Physical.Anthropology Open.Access

Four Stone Hearth - The Anthropology Blog Carnival

The Fourth Stone Hearth is a blog carnival that specializes in anthropology in the widest (American) sense of that word. Here, anthropology is the study of humankind, throughout all times and places, focussing primarily on four lines of research: archaeology socio-cultural anthropology bio-physical anthropology linguistic anthropology Each one of these subfields is a stone in our hearth. Four Stone Hearth is published bi-weekly, Wednesdays in odd-number weeks.

Tagged With: Blog Cultural.Anthropology Linguistic.Anthropology Archaeology Physical.Anthropology Open.Access

john hawks weblog | paleoanthropology, genetics, and evolution

I'm an anthropologist, and I study the bones and genes of ancient humans. I was trained as a paleoanthropologist. ``Paleoanthropology'' is more than a speciality within anthropology, or biology. It is an integrated study involving methods and insights from many fields. Unlike many paleoanthropologists, my study extends across the entire span of human evolution, the last 6 million years, as I examine the genetic and environmental causes that made the foundation of our origins. My academic position is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Wisconsin—Madison. I've been in Madison since 2002. In the fall of 2009 I am on leave from the university working on several projects. I started writing this blog for two basic reasons: first, because there are some really interesting issues in paleoanthropology that are not well covered in the mainstream science press, and second, because I needed a good way to organize my notes.

Tagged With: Blog Physical.Anthropology Paleoanthropology Open.Access Featured.Resource

Medical Humanities

This site, established in 1994 at New York University School of Medicine, is dedicated to providing a resource for scholars, educators, students, patients, and others who are interested in the work of medical humanities. We define the term "medical humanities" broadly to include an interdisciplinary field of humanities (literature, philosophy, ethics, history and religion), social science (anthropology, cultural studies, psychology, sociology), and the arts (literature, theater, film, and visual arts) and their application to medical education and practice. The Literature, Arts, and Medicine Database holds annotations of works of literature, art, and film relevant to the illness experience, medical education and practice -- fiction; poetry; memoir, biography, autobiography; literary, cultural, and social criticism; visual art; film; drama. The annotations are written by an invited editorial board of scholars from all over North America.

Tagged With: Open.Access Database Cultural.Anthropology Physical.Anthropology Linguistic.Anthropology Blog Mailing.List

Museum Anthropology

Online supplement to museum anthropology, the journal of the council for museum anthropology, a section of the American Anthropological Association

Tagged With: Blog Cultural.Anthropology Archaeology Physical.Anthropology Linguistic.Anthropology Applied.Anthropology Open.Access

Neuroanthropology

Neuroanthropology is a collaborative weblog created to encourage exchanges among anthropology, philosophy, social theory, and the brain sciences. We especially hope to explore the implications of new findings in the neurosciences for our understanding of culture, human development, and behaviour. If you would like more information, please contact Greg Downey at Macquarie University gdowney (at) mq.edu.au (remove spaces).

Tagged With: Blog Physical.Anthropology Cultural.Anthropology Linguistic.Anthropology Open.Access

Open Access Anthropology — Promoting Open Access in Anthropology

This is the blog for Open Access Anthropology, an organization of volunteers interested in creating open access alternatives to anthropological publications. This blog will be the news outlet for the organization where we will announce news like current events progress within the discipline.

Tagged With: Blog Archaeology Cultural.Anthropology Physical.Anthropology Linguistic.Anthropology Open.Access

OPEN ANTHROPOLOGY

If anthropology claimed the world for study by Europeans and Americans, OPEN ANTHROPOLOGY is (also) about “the world” reclaiming anthropological knowledge for its own self-understanding, self-expression, and self-identification.

Tagged With: Blog Cultural.Anthropology Physical.Anthropology Linguistic.Anthropology Archaeology Open.Access

Primatology.net

Primatology.net is a blog run by a group of volunteers interested in the research, preservation, and conservation of primates. Our mission to post current research, news, book reviews, videos, and other forms of media that are related to primates. We come from all different backgrounds. Some of us have direct experience in the care of primates, while others conduct research in the field. Examples of related topics that we will cover are ecology, psychology, biology, anthropology, medicine, as well as others.

Tagged With: Blog Physical.Anthropology Primatology Open.Access

Savage Minds | Notes and Queries in Anthropology — A Group Blog

Savage Minds is a collective web log devoted to both bringing anthropology to a wider audience as well as providing an online forum for discussing the latest developments in the field. We are a group of Ph.D. students and professors teaching and studying anthropology and are excited to share it with you. You can find out more about the contributors by clicking on the ‘about’ pages on the right for each of us. The title of our blog comes from Lévi-Strauss’s book Pensée Sauvage. And yes: those are pansies on the mast head.

Tagged With: Blog Cultural.Anthropology Physical.Anthropology Archaeology Linguistic.Anthropology Open.Access

Somatosphere

A collaborative weblog covering the intersections of medical anthropology, science and technology studies, cultural psychiatry and bioethics.

Tagged With: Blog Physical.Anthropology Cultural.Anthropology Open.Access

Teaching Anthropology

A discussion forum run by a seasoned Community College Instructor for those who want to share the pluses, minuses, rants, and fist bumps that come from teaching Anthropology at the undergraduate level. Gather up your pigs, yams, and banana leaf bundles and join the fun.

Tagged With: Blog Cultural.Anthropology Linguistic.Anthropology Archaeology Applied.Anthropology Physical.Anthropology Open.Access