Richley H. Crapo
Ph.D. University of Utah 1970

Old Main 245 C
Office Hours: MWF 10:30-11:20 am
Or by appointment

(435) 797-1080
richley.crapo@usu.edu

Dr. Crapo's Website!

Like many anthropologists, Dr. Crapo began his university studies in another field.  He originally planned to major in mathmatics, but became enamored with anthropology after taking a course about native North Americans.  As a graduate student, Dr. Crapo chose to specialize in linguistics and cultural anthropology - focusing his efforts in the Great Basin and Mesoamerica. Since joining the USU faculty, Dr. Crapo has taught a variety of courses, including ones on religion, asthetics, personality and gender.

Dr. Crapo's classes include:


 

 

Bonnie Glass-Coffin
Ph.D. University of
California - Los Angeles 1992

Old Main 245 E
Office Hours: T,W 9:30-10:20 and W 2:30-3:20
Or by appointment
(435) 797-4064
bonnie.glasscoffin@usu.edu

Dr. Glass-Coffin's interests include both historical transformations and contemporary dynamics in Peruvian shamanism (including the role played by gender in symbolic constructions of illness, and the emergence and impacts of mystical of spiritual tourism on cultural traditions). Since the Fall of 2000 she has also been engaged in participatory and action research with local Latino groups in Cache Valley. Selected publications include "Anthropology, Shamanism and the New Age", in the Chronicle of Higher Education, (1994); The Gift of Life: Female Shamanism in Northern Peru, published by the University of New Mexico Press (1998); "Engendering Peruvian Shamanism through Time: Insights from Ethnohistory and Ethnography', in Ethnohistory (1999) and "Reflections on the Experience of Healing: Whose Logic, Whose Experience?", in Healing Logics: Culture and Medicine in Modern Health Belief Systems (2001, edited by Erika Brady). Since Summer 2002, she has also led an Ethnographic Field School in Peru (for more information see www.usu.edu/anthro/peru). For a look at her CV click here.

Dr. Glass-Coffin's classes include:


 

Emily L. Jones
Ph.D. University of Washington 2004

Brigham City Campus
Office Hours: By appointment
(435) 734-9958, ext. 283
emily.jones@usu.edu

 

Dr. Jones is a zooarchaeologist whose interests focus on human-environment interactions in the "two southwests": the Paleolithic of Southwestern France, and the late prehistoric and early historic of the American Southwest. She has worked in New Mexico, Colorado, and Arizona as well as in southwestern France, and Chihuahua, Mexico. She has also been active in indigenous archaeology, and has worked at Diné College and with the Navajo Nation Archaeology Department to develop programs for Navajo students. Dr. Jones' current research projects concern Athabaskan origins in the Four Corners region, and the development of broad spectrum diets in Paleolithic France and Spain. Her work has been funded by the Embassy of France, the National Institute of Health, and Sigma Xi, and has been published in a number of academic journals and edited volumes, including the Journal of Archaeological Science and the Journal of Anthropological Archaeology.

Dr. Jones' Classes Include:

  • World Archaeology
  • Biological Anthropology
  • Zooarchaeology Lab at Brigham City

 

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Patricia M. Lambert
Ph.D. University of
California - Santa Barbara 1994

Old Main 245 A
Office Hours: By appointment
M 11:00-12:00 pm
T/H 12:00-1:00 pm
(435) 797-2603
patricia.lambert@usu.edu

 

Dr. Lambert is currently the Anthropology Program Director at USU. Despite her professed love of warm weather, Dr. Lambert continues to find herself working in some pretty cold places, most recently on a Viking Age excavation in the Mosfell Valley of southwestern Iceland. Dr. Lambert is a specialist in New World bioarchaeology with research interests in prehistoric warfare, ancient disease, the biological impacts of gender roles, and the health consequences of social and economic transitions. She has conducted research in California, the Great Basin, the Southeast, the Southwest, and north coastal Peru. Her work has been published in a number of academic journals, including American Antiquity, American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Antiquity, Journal of Forensic Sciences, and Nature. She currently serves as an associate editor for the American Journal of Physical Anthropology and is nearing completion on a book about her research on prehistoric warfare in California and elsewhere in ancient North America.

Dr. Lambert's classes include

David F. Lancy
Ph.D. University of Pittsburgh 1975
RM 245 D

Office Hours: 2:00-4:00
pm
By appointment

(435) 797-1322
david.lancy@.usu.edu

 Dr. Lancy's first experience with a different culture occurred when he was a
high school exchange student in the Bavarian Alps. After graduating from
college, he did research on the Kpelle people of West Africa, eventually
completing a Ph.D. dissertation on them in 1974. From 1976 to 1980, Dr.
Lancy conducted a major comparative study, The Indigenous Mathematics
Project, in Papua New Guinea. He has published 6 books and more than
fifty articles and chapters. He is currently at work on Cherubs, Chattel,
Changelings: The Anthropology of Children treatment of the topic.

Dr. Lancy's classes include:

 

Chris Morgan
Ph.D. University of
California - Davis 2006

Old Main 245 B
Office Hours: MWF 1:30-2:30 pm
Or by appointment
(435) 797-1178
chris.morgan@usu.edu

 

Dr. Morgan’s research focuses on the archaeology of hunter-gatherers and the way climate change, migration, and population dynamics affect behavior. He uses GIS and models derived from behavioral ecology to analyze foraging economies and the way these interact with and inform social and political structure, particularly for groups living in marginal environments like mountains and deserts. Most of his fieldwork is in the American west, especially California’s Sierra Nevada, where he’s modeled how late Holocene settlement patterns were used to adapt to changing climatic and environmental regimes. Most recently he’s moved to looking at the spread of modern humans into East Asia and the adoption of agriculture in north China, correlating these phenomena with fundamental changes in settlement, technology, and environment. He has subsidiary interests in geoarchaeology and lithic analyses and is currently looking at the environmental and behavioral variables conditioning the success or failure of different types of foraging economies in marginal and high-altitude environmental settings worldwide.

Dr. Morgan's classes include:

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Jon R. Moris
Ph.D. Northwestern University 1970

University Extension- Blanding

Office hours: T/W/R 9:30-11:00 am

jonm@ext.usu.edu

Dr. Moris was born and raised in East Africa.  He recieved his Ph.D. in anthropology from Northwestern in 1970, based on studies of farm innovation in central Kenya.  Before coming to USU, Dr. Moris worked 17 years in East Africa, including a period as a project manager of a large range development project among the Maasai.  Since 1980, his research has focused on irrigation, extension and the fate of Africa's pastoralists during recent droughts.  Dr. Moris has co-authored six textbooks on African development and qualitative methods.   He is currently writing texts on applied anthropology and international development.

Dr. Moris' classes include:


Bonnie Pitblado
Ph.D. University of Arizona 1999

Old Main 245 F
Office hours: By appointment
On sabbatical
(435) 797-1496
bonnie.pitblado@usu.edu

 

Dr. Pitblado joined the Utah State University anthropology faculty as an assistant professor in 2002. She is now an associate professor of anthropology and serves as director of the USU Museum of Anthropology.  She teaches courses in archaeology and museum studies and serves as the advisor for USU's "Museum Studies" certification program.  Dr. Pitblado specializes in the earliest human occupations of the Rocky Mountains, and she has an active research program aimed at trying to better understand how people used the mountains and adjacent landscapes, 10,000-7,500 years ago.  Currently, Dr. Pitblado has grants from the National Science Foundation and the Bureau of Land Management to conduct field research in the Gunnison Basin of southwest Colorado, and she is initiating a new, long-term research program based in northern Utah and southeast Idaho.  In 2003, Dr. Pitblado published a book with University Press of Colorado, Paleoindian Occupation of the Southern Rocky Mountains. In October 2007, the same press released a volume co-edited by Dr. Pitblado, Frontiers in Colorado Paleoindian Archaeology. Dr. Pitblado teaches archaeological field school in odd-numbered years, and she offers many other vehicles for her students to gain hands-on experience in both archaeology and museum studies.

Dr. Pitblado's classes include:

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Steven R. Simms
Ph.D. Univeristy of Utah 1984

Old Main 245 G
Office Hours: M,W 10:00-11:00 am and TR 1:30-3:00 pm or by appointment

(435) 797-1277
s.simms@usu.edu

I received my Ph.D. in 1984 from the University of Utah and began
working at Utah State University in 1988. My first archaeology
experience was in 1972-73 under the tutelage of the legendary “Dark
Lord,” Jesse D. Jennings at the University of Utah. I learned from other
great field archaeologists by doing archaeology in most western states
and in the southeastern United States. I also studied at the University
of Nevada, Reno, the University of Pittsburgh, and then again at the
University of Utah. At each of these schools I had the good fortune to
learn from theoretically sophisticated scholars who showed me that the
questions are more powerful than the answers. My general interests are
the prehistory of the American Desert West, archaeological method and
theory, paleoecology, ethnoarchaeology, and evolutionary ecology. I also
enjoy the history and theory of anthropology. Between 1986 and 1997 I
studied the ethnoarchaeology of Bedouin in Jordan. In recent years, my
fieldwork aims to provide undergraduate students with field training and
research opportunities in Utah and to prepare them for work in Cultural
Resource Management, the major job track for entry-level archaeology
students.

Dr. Simms' classes include:


Affiliated Faculty:

Christopher Conte, African History
Ph.D. Michigan State University, 1995

Joanna Endter-wada, Forest Resources

Ph.D. University of California, Irvine, 1987

John E. Lackstrom, Linguistics
Ph.D. University of Washington, 1970

John E. Mclaughlin, English
Ph.D. University of Kansas

Ronald G. Munger, Nutrition and Food Science
Ph.D. University of Washington, 1985

Steven Siporin, Folklore of Italy
Ph.D. Indiana University, 1982

Barre Toelken, Navajo and Japanese Folklore
Ph.D. University of Oregon, 1964

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