Dr. David Daegling

University of Florida
March 17, 2025
"Reconstruction of Foraging Behavior from Skeletal Remains: the Surprising Role of Inactivity in Building Strong Bones"
Dr. Daegling's research is aimed at the development of methods and collection of data to enhance the quality of functional and adaptive inference in the paleontological record, particularly with respect to primate and human evolution.
Bruce Winterhalder
Professor of Anthropology
University of California-Davis
February 11, 2019
(Bridging Theme Lecture – Evolution and Ecology)
Panelists: Sheela Athreya, Deborah Bolnick, Jon Marks
Department of Anthropology Mini-Symposium & Luncheon
“Pop Culture Racism? Identity and the Dangers of Genetic Ancestry Testing"
Location: Texas A&M University Hotel and Conference Center
Time: 10:00 – 2:30
Carolyn White
Associate Professor & Department Chair
Department of Anthropology
University of Nevada – Reno
April 10, 2017
“On People and Things: Identity and Objects in Transatlantic Perspective”
(Bridging Theme Lecture – Technology & Material Culture)
Quentin Mackie
Associate Professor
Department of Anthropology
University of Victoria
February 20, 2017
“Recent Developments in the Late Pleistocene Archaeology of the Coast of British Columbia, Canada”
(Bridging Theme Lecture – Dispersals, Diasporas and Migration)
Steven Churchill
Professor
Department of Evolutionary Anthropology
Duke University
October 25, 2015
“In the company of killers: Neandertals and carnivores in Ice Age Europe”
(Bridging Theme Lecture – Evolution and Ecology)
Women’s Week Speakers
Whitney Battle-Baptiste
Associate Professor
Department of Anthropology
University of Massachusetts – Amherst
March 7, 2017
“Be Content to Stand in the Light”: Black Feminist Archaeology in Praxis”
“It Is the Mothers Who Seem to Count”: A Black Feminist Perspective of the Damnation of Women by W.E.B. Du Bois”
Kate Clancy
Assistant Professor
Department of Anthropology
University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign
September 28, 2015
“’I’ve always thought about leaving’: The Effects of Harassment and Assault on Female Scientists’ Careers”
“Ecological Contexts in the Study of Women’s Reproductive Functioning: Insights from the U.S. and Rural Poland”