The University of New Mexico
ANTH: Anthropology Catalog Description

  Three Year Fall Semester Average
Course Catalog Description Enrollment Section
Capacity
Credits
ANTH101 Surveys the breadth of anthropology, introducing students to archaeology, biological anthropology, ethnology, human evolutionary ecology and linguistics. Meets New Mexico Lower Division General Education Common Core Curriculum Area IV: Social/Behavioral Sciences (NMCCN 1113). 554.67 752.33 1,664.00
ANTH110 (Also offered as LING 101.) Fundamentals of anthropological linguistics. The biological, structural, psychological and social nature of language; implications for cross-cultural theory, research and applications. 148.67 225.33 446.00
ANTH121L Introduction to archaeological method and theory. Lectures cover basic concepts and strategy. Labs provide hands-on experience with methods of analyzing archaeological remains. 100.33 120.00 401.33
ANTH130 Basic concepts and methods of cultural anthropology. Selected cultures, ranging from preliterate societies to aspects of urban civilization. Meets New Mexico Lower Division General Education Common Core Curriculum Area IV: Social/Behavioral Sciences (NMCCN 2113). 229.67 272.33 689.00
ANTH134 (Also offered as AMST, SUST 134.) An introduction to creating a sustainable future that supports environmental health and restoration, social equity, and economic vitality. Examines challenges and examples of integrated, creative strategies on local, regional, national, and global levels.
ANTH150 Fundamentals of biological anthropology and principles of organic evolution, in relation to the biology, ecology and behavior of primates and fossil humans. Biological anthropology concentrators are required, and others are encouraged, to enroll concurrently in 151L. Meets New Mexico Lower Division General Education Common Core Curriculum Area IV: Social/Behavioral Sciences. 342.67 564.67 1,028.00
ANTH151L The factual basis of human evolution, from the comparative study of living and fossil primates to interpretation of recent human fossils. Recommended, but not required, that this be taken concurrently with 150. Two hrs. lab. 107.00 138.67 107.00
ANTH160 Biology and behavior of the human life course, including the evolution of the life history patterns specific to humans and the impact of population growth and of adaptation to local conditions in promoting human diversity. Students are encouraged, but not required, to enroll concurrently in 161L. 102.33 102.67 307.00
ANTH161L Introduces the computer as a tool in biological and social science research, provides first-hand experience in data collection, analysis and modeling behavior. No prior computer experience required. Pre- or corequisite: 160. 26.33 40.33 26.33
ANTH220 Illustrated lecture survey of the development of human culture from its Stone Age origins through the inception of complex societies world wide. 46.67 80.00 140.00
ANTH230 Experimental courses on topics of current interest. May be repeated for credit as subject matter varies, no limits. 56.67 95.67 170.00
ANTH230A  
ANTH238 Basic concepts of cultural anthropology, illustrated with overviews of social and cultural patterns of Southwest Indians and Hispanics. Interethnic relations of these with other American populations. Meets New Mexico Lower Division General Education Common Core Curriculum Area IV: Social/Behavioral Sciences. {Offered periodically} 9.67 18.33 29.00
ANTH251 This course is designed to introduce students to the forensic investigation of death. Emphasis will be on current methods and techniques and include the role of the anthropologist as an integral member of the investigation process. 111.00 134.67 333.00
ANTH304 This course familiarizes students with current, active research in Anthropology by the University of New Mexico faculty and visiting scholars. It also teaches students to critically assess and discuss research questions. (A, B, E, HEE) 6.00 7.33 18.00
ANTH310 (Also offered as CJ 319, LING 359.) Examination of the interrelations of language and speech with other selected aspects of culture and cognition. Prerequisites: 110 or LING 101 or LING 292. (E) 27.67 29.33 83.00
ANTH312 Western and non-Western myths, epics, folk tales, life-stories and personal experience narratives as cultural and aesthetic expressions. (E) {Offered periodically}
ANTH317 (Also offered as LING 304.) Introduction to patterns in sound structure, with an emphasis on problem-solving. Topics include distinctive features, common phonological processes, autosegmental theory and syllable structure. Prerequisite: LING 292 or LING 303 or SHS 303. (E) {Fall} 0.67 7.67 2.00
ANTH318 (Also offered as LING 322 and 522.) Principles of morphological and syntactic analysis and introduction to functional and formal theories of grammar. Descriptive analysis of grammatical structures and problems from a variety of languages. Prerequisite: LING 292 or SIGN 305 or SPAN 351. (E) {Spring} 1.33 6.00 4.00
ANTH320 The purpose and theory of the study of archaeology; relates archaeology to anthropological principles and the practice of science. Prerequisites: 101 and either 121L or 220. (A) {Yearly} 27.00 37.00 81.00
ANTH321 An intensive survey of Southwest prehistory including discussion of major interpretative problems. Covers the period from 11,000 years ago to historic times. (A) 15.67 26.67 47.00
ANTH323 A survey of the archaeology of Eastern North America that begins with human entry into the East and terminates with European discovery and settlement. (A) {Alternate years} 6.67 20.00 20.00
ANTH324 Archaeology of South America from the Paleo-Indian to the European colonial period. Emphasizes the origins and evolution of Andean civilization and associated interpretive problems. (A) {Alternate years}
ANTH325 The prehistory of Europe with emphasis on hunter-gatherer adaptations of the Pleistocene and early Holocene, using primary data sources. Prerequisite: 101 or 121L or 220. (A) {Alternate years}
ANTH326 An intensive survey of the later prehistory of Europe, from the development of agricultural communities through the Roman Empire. (A) {Alternate years}
ANTH327 The prehistory of Africa from the appearance of the first hominids to the development of complex societies. Prerequisite: 101 or 121L or 220. (A) {Alternate years}
ANTH328 A survey of the Near Eastern culture area from the origins of agriculture to the development of Bronze Age civilization. (A) {Offered periodically} 14.00 13.33 42.00
ANTH329 Comparative approach to origin and development of stratified societies and pristine states as known from the archaeological record. (A)
ANTH330 Development of ideas and theories in sociocultural anthropology; focus on topics such as integration of human societies, sources of change in economic and cultural systems. (E) 43.67 51.67 131.00
ANTH331 Major culture types and selected ethnographic examples of North American Indian cultures. (E) {Offered periodically} 8.67 6.67 26.00
ANTH332 Culture and history of indigenous peoples of South America. Selected examples from lowland and highland regions. (E) {Offered periodically}
ANTH333 (Also offered as RELG 333.) Comparative analysis of ritual processes, symbolic systems and world views in the context of social structure. (E) {Offered periodically} 3.33 8.33 10.00
ANTH337 Topics will vary from instructor to instructor but will deal with specific social and cultural matters of anthropological interest in New Mexico such as folklore and expressive culture; social relations; tourism; environmental issues. (E) {Offered periodically}
ANTH339 A description and analysis of competing theories about the content of human rights; the history, politics and economics of human rights situations. Emphasis on the interplay among power, difference, 'culture' and human rights abuses. (E)
ANTH340 Current topics in sociocultural anthropology to be explored in experimental courses. May be repeated for credit as subject matter varies, no limits. (E) 97.33 122.67 292.00
ANTH340A  
ANTH340B  
ANTH340C  
ANTH340E  
ANTH340G  
ANTH340H  
ANTH341 (Also offered as NAS 441.) Videos produced by indigenous peoples in the western hemisphere will be used to examine cultures within modern and historical contexts that address political, personal and social concerns which invite new questions about indigenous history and cultural understanding. (E)
ANTH343 Cultural and social institutions common throughout Latin America and their historical antecedents. Contemporary social movements and their prognosis for the immediate future. Analysis of the variations among selected Latin American societies. (E) {Offered annually} 11.33 10.00 34.00
ANTH344 Ethnic and race relations are examined through focus on case studies from the Americas. Basic questions are pursued about the nature of and relationships among ethnicity, race, gender and class. (E) {Alternate years}
ANTH345 Analysis of the ethnohistory and modern culture patterns of Spanish-speaking peoples of the Southwest. (E) {Alternate years}
ANTH346 The comparative study of selected verbal, visual, musical, dramatic and cultural arts as cultural and aesthetic expressions. (3) {Alternate years}
ANTH350 Human heredity, variation and adaptation within and between different ecological and cultural settings; genetics; quantitative variation; elements of human population biology and human ecology. Prerequisites: 150 or BIOL 110, or BIOL 123, or BIOL 201, or BIOL 202. (B) {Spring} 68.67 91.67 206.00
ANTH351L A laboratory course in the identification of human skeletal materials with attention to problems in the evolution of primates. Three lectures, 2 hrs. lab. (B) {Fall} 10.00 10.00 40.00
ANTH357 The events and processes involved in the emergence and evolution of the human lineage-from the origins of Australopithecus, through the emergence of the genus Homo, to the evolution of early modern humans-based on the human fossil record. Prerequisite: 220 or 150. (B) {Alternate years} 29.33 33.33 88.00
ANTH360 Introduces students to the fundamental principles of evolutionary theory and their application to human behavior. It surveys current research on human sexuality, mate choice, reproduction and parenting from the perspective of human evolutionary ecology. Prerequisite: 150 or 160 or BIOL 110. (B, HEE) 5.33 8.33 16.00
ANTH361 Uses the perspective of evolutionary biology to examine the diversity of sex roles played by men and women in the historical and cross-cultural record. Restriction: upper division standing. (HEE) {Alternate years}
ANTH362 Explores recent research in both captivity and the wild on cognition and behavior of great apes (chimpanzees, gorillas, bonobos, orangutans), the closest living relatives of humans. Restriction: upper division standing. (HEE) {Alternate years) 24.67 26.67 74.00
ANTH363 Special emphasis will be on strategies of survival, reproduction, mating and rearing, in the complex social systems of apes and monkeys. The costs and benefits of alternative strategies are used to understand individual life histories. Restriction: upper division standing. (HEE) {Alternate years} 8.33 8.33 25.00
ANTH364 This course offers specific, in-depth discussions of topics of current faculty interests and student demand including collective action, single parenthood and child health, hunter-gatherers, psychological anthropology and conservation of resources. May be repeated for credit as subject matter varies, no limits. (HEE) 14.33 23.33 43.00
ANTH364A  
ANTH365 Analysis of systems of health, curing and disease in aboriginal, western and pluralistic societies. (B, HEE) {Offered periodically}
ANTH369 Various methods of observational data collection on human and nonhuman primates will be examined. Student designed research on campus or at the zoo will focus on the importance of determining appropriate data collection methods. Recommended: Upper division standing and 360 or 362 or 363. Can be taken concurrently with 363. (HEE) {Alternate years}
ANTH371 Archaeological survey of the cultures of ancient Mexico from earliest inhabitants to the period of the Spanish Conquest. This course explores environmental, social, and political aspects of the rise and fall of societies across Mexico. (E)
ANTH372 Introduction to basic qualitative and quantitative analytic methods in anthropology. (A) {Fall}
ANTH373 Technical course with variable content dealing with such issues as dating, paleoenvironmental and subsistence studies in archaeology. (A) {Offered periodically} 5.00 5.67 15.00
ANTH375 Intensive instruction in archaeological field and laboratory techniques and the opportunity for independent student research. Restriction: permission of instructor. (A)
ANTH376 Surveys the development of the Maya civilizations in Mesoamerica from the origins of agriculture through the Spanish Conquest. The course will explore archaeological, ethno-historical, linguistic, and environmental data and accounts. Prerequisite: 101, 121L or 220 or 320. (A)
ANTH380 (Also offered as WMST 380.) An overview of women's and men's experience in our own and other cultures. We will read case studies about gender relations in Native North America, Mexico, Africa, the Middle East and differing ethnic and class segments of the U.S. Issues to be covered include reproduction, the family, work and colonialism. (E)
ANTH381 The class examines topical issues such as human rights, indigenous rights, researcher rights, and professional and scientific responsibility that face the various subfields of anthropology in its everyday practice. {Spring}
ANTH384 Emergence of the modern Indian and Mestizo cultures of Mexico and Guatemala. Persistence and change in social institutions and cultural patterns. (E) {Alternate years}
ANTH385 Analysis of literary, historical, ethnographic and contemporary texts, written by both Indians and non-Indians, to understand Native American peoples' reaction and adjustment to conquest and domination. (E) {Offered periodically} Prerequisite: 331.
ANTH387 (Also offered as AFAM 386.) Outlines the sociocultural transformation of the region since 1492. Emphasis upon cultural legacies of and resistance to colonialism, the Afro-Caribbean and Hispanic heritages, and the contemporary trans-nationalization of island identities. (E) 13.67 13.33 41.00
ANTH393 Ancient New Mexico is Part I of a two-semester general series on the archaeology of New Mexico. The period of New Mexico's earliest settlement at 10,000 B.C. to the advent of early pithouse villages at about A.D. 500 is covered each fall semester. (A) {Alternate years}
ANTH394 Ancient New Mexico is Part II of a two-semester general series on the archaeology of New Mexico. The period from the advent of early pithouse villages (A.D. 500) through the rise and fall of Chacoan Society, to the arrival of Spanish settlers in 1595. (A) {Alternate years} 3.67 6.67 11.00
ANTH399 Directed study under the supervision of a faculty member. Restriction: permission of instructor. (A, B, E, HEE) {Offered upon demand} 2.67 758.33 8.33
ANTH401 (Also offered as ARTH 402.) Archaeological and historic art forms of the Arctic Northwest coast and the eastern woodlands of North America. (E) {Fall}
ANTH402 (Also offered as MSST, ARTH 407.) History, philosophy and purposes of museums. Techniques and problems of museum administration, education, collection, exhibition, conservation and public relations. (E)
ANTH403 (Also offered as ARTH 406.) Archaeological and historic art forms of the Plains, Southwest and western regions of North America. (E) {Spring} 5.67 9.00 17.00
ANTH410 Topics from various areas of anthropological linguistics including, but not limited to, ethnosemantics, the ethnography of communication and the biology of language. (E) 1.00 8.00 3.00
ANTH413 (Also offered as LING 413.) Practice in transcribing from oral dictation, phonemic analysis, introduction to problems of morphology. Prerequisite: (317 or LING 304) and (318 or LING 322). Restriction: permission of instructor. (E) {Offered upon demand}
ANTH415 (Also offered as LING 415.) Survey of Indian languages of North America, with special emphasis on languages of New Mexico. Topics: linguistic structure in particular languages and language families; relationship of languages and cultures; and language loss, maintenance and preservation. (E)
ANTH416 (Also offered as LING 446.) Theories and methods of comparative and historical linguistics, emphasizing change in English, Indo-European and Native American languages. Prerequisite: 317 or LING 304. (E) {Alternate years} 1.00 6.00 3.00
ANTH420 Topics of archaeological interest including gender in archaeology, European contact and post-processualism. (A) 21.33 22.67 64.00
ANTH420A  
ANTH420B  
ANTH420C  
ANTH420H  
ANTH421 Using archaeology and history, this course focuses on change and continuity of native populations that occurred with Spanish colonization across the Borderlands. Topics include demography, missionization, technologies and settlement organization. Format includes lecture and discussion. (A) {Offered periodically}
ANTH434 (Also offered as AMST, ARCH, SUST 434.) Presents frameworks for complex and creative analysis, including systems think-ing and synergistic integration of the three pillars of sustainability: environment, equity, economy. Examines innovative local and international case studies in environment, business, policy, and community development. Prerequisite: SUST 134 and (ECON 106 or ECON 203.)
ANTH444 (Also offered as MUS 444.) The study of musical globalization, concentrating on the 100 year background of indigenous and ethnic sound recordings that led to the creation of the 'World Music' genre in the late 20th Century. (E)
ANTH448 (Also offered as MUS 448./548.) The cultural study of music and sound. Course materials are drawn from written and audio music enthnographies of contemporary indigenous, diasporic, refugee, exile, and industrial communities. (E)
ANTH449 Through writings, films, radio, and Internet, the course explores how the island of New Guinea has been represented, both by indigenous New Guineans, and by visiting explorers, adventurers, colonizers, missionaires, tourists, scientists and artists. (E)
ANTH450 (B) 36.33 62.33 113.33
ANTH450A  
ANTH450B  
ANTH450C  
ANTH450D  
ANTH450E  
ANTH451 The analysis of the skeletal remains from past human populations, oriented at the mortality, morbidity and genetic affinities of those extinct populations. Prerequisite: 351L. (B) {Alternate years} 6.33 8.00 19.00
ANTH454 Ancient disease through the study of normal and abnormal bone remodeling processes and dental conditions. Population health evaluated by descriptive and radiologic analyses of human remains. Prerequisite: 351L. (B) {Alternate years} 3.33 4.67 10.00
ANTH455 Also offered as BIOL 452.) Fundamentals of human transmission, cellular, molecular, developmental and population genetics. Prerequisite: 150 or BIOL 110 or BIOL 123 or BIOL 201 or BIOL 202. (B) {Alternate years} 0.67 6.67 2.00
ANTH456 A course in the field and laboratory techniques used in Biological Anthropology. The focus varies by instructor to include human osteology, primate and human evolution, or geneticsPrerequisite: 150 or BIOL 110 or BIOL 123 or BIOL 201 or BIOL 202. (B) {Intersession and Summer}
ANTH457 Events and processes leading from the appearance of the human lineage to the beginnings of agriculture, with discussions of Australopithecus and the genus Homo, through Homo sapiens. Prerequisite: 351L. (B) {Alternate years}
ANTH462 The capstone course for Anthropology concentrators in Human Evolutionary Ecology. Provides students with a broad, but deep, overview of the major theoretical issues in HEE and of empirical data brought to bear on them. Prerequisite: 360. (HEE) 19.33 20.00 58.00
ANTH473L  
ANTH480 Basic concepts, methods and approaches used in the analysis of archaeological pottery. Lectures cover concepts and strategies. Labs give practical experience with techniques of analysis. (A) {Spring}
ANTH482L (Also offered as EPS 482L.) Application of geological concepts to archaeological site formation with emphasis on pre-ceramic prehistory of the southwestern United States. Quaternary dating methods, paleoenvironment, landscape evolution, depositional environments. Quaternary stratigraphy, soil genesis, sourcing of lithic materials, site formation processes. Required field trip. Prerequisites: (121L and 220) and (EPS 101 and EPS 105L). Restriction: junior standing. (A) {Alternate years} 2.33 4.00 7.00
ANTH485 (Also offered as MSST, ARTH 485.) Theoretical and practical work in specific museum problems. Prerequisite: 402 or ARTH 407. (E)
ANTH486 (Also offered as MSST, ARTH 486.) Practicum in museum methods and management. Prerequisite: 402 or ARTH 407. Restriction: permission of instructor. (E) 0.00 6.33 0.00
ANTH491 This course investigates how genetic variation is patterned within and between populations, and how these patterns change over time. Topics include neutral theory, population structure, phylogenetics, coalescent theory, the molecular clock, and laboratory methods.
ANTH497 Directed study of topics not covered in regular courses. (A, B, E, HEE) 19.33 927.67 42.33
ANTH498 Readings and discussions concerning anthropological research methods, sources, goals and professional ethics. Open to upper division majors and concentrators whose applications for the honors program have been approved. (A, B, E, HEE) Restriction: permission of instructor. {Fall}
ANTH499 Field research for qualified advanced undergraduate or graduate students with previous experience in archaeology, biological anthropology, human evolutionary ecology, linguistics or general ethnology. Problems are selected on the basis of student-faculty interest and field research opportunities. Restriction: permission of instructor. (A, B, E, HEE) {Offered upon demand} 2.67 820.00 9.00
ANTH501 (Also offered as ARTH 502.) Archaeological and historic art forms of the Arctic Northwest coast and the eastern woodlands of North America. {Fall} (E)
ANTH503 (Also offered as ARTH 506.) Archaeological and historic art forms of the Plains, Southwest and western regions of North America. {Spring} (E) 1.00 3.00 3.00
ANTH504 This course familiarizes students with current, active research in Anthropology by the University of New Mexico faculty and visiting scholars. It also teaches students to critically assess and discuss research questions. (A, B, E, HEE)
ANTH509 (Also offered as ARTH 559.) Restriction: permission of instructor. May be repeated for credit, no limit. {Offered upon demand} (E) 0.33 3.00 1.00
ANTH510 Topics from various areas of anthropological linguistics including, but not limited to, ethnosemantics, the ethnography of communication and the biology of language. (E) 8.00 14.67 24.00
ANTH511 (Also offered as CJ 519 and LING 559.) Examination of the interrelations of language and speech with other selected aspects of culture and cognition. Prerequisites: 110 or LING 101 or LING 292. (E) {Spring}
ANTH512 (Also offered as LING 513.) Practice in transcribing from oral dictation, phonemic analysis, introduction to problems of morphology. Prerequisites: 317. (E) {Offered upon demand} 0.00 8.00 0.00
ANTH513 (Also offered as LING 523.) Description and explanation of morphological, syntactic and discourse phenomena, both in language-specific and topological perspective, in terms of their cognitive representations and the cognitive and interactional processes in which they function. Prerequisite: LING 322. (E)
ANTH514 (Also offered as LING 554.) Current topics and issues in phonology, syntax or semantics. (E) 0.00 3.33 0.00
ANTH515 (Also offered as LING 515.) Survey of Indian languages of North America, with special emphasis on languages of New Mexico. Topics: linguistic structure in particular languages and language families; relationship of languages and cultures; and language loss, maintenance and preservation. (E)
ANTH516 (Also offered as LING 546.) Theories and methods of comparative and historical linguistics, emphasizing change in English, Indo-European and Native American languages. Prerequisite: 317. (E) {Alternate years} 0.67 2.67 2.00
ANTH517 (Also offered as LING 504.) Introduction to patterns in sound structure, with an emphasis on problem-solving. Topics include distinctive features, common phonological processes, autosegmental theory and syllable structure. Prerequisite: LING 303. (E) {Fall} 0.00 2.00 0.00
ANTH519 (Also offered as LING 519.) Introduction to cognitive linguistic approaches (e.g., Cognitive Grammar, Construction Grammar) to syntax, morphology, and semantics. Grammatical phenomena at various scales from morpheme to discourse and in a variety of languages. Prerequisites: LING 322 or 522 or SPAN 351. 0.00 6.00 0.00
ANTH520 The purpose and theory of the study of archaeology; relates archaeology to anthropological principles and the practice of science. Prerequisites: 101 and either 121L or 220. (A) {Yearly}
ANTH521 An intensive survey of Southwest prehistory including discussion of major interpretative problems. Covers the period from 11,000 years ago to historic times. (A) {Fall}
ANTH523 A survey of the archaeology of Eastern North America that begins with human entry into the East and terminates with European discovery and settlement. (A) {Alternate years}
ANTH524 Archaeology of South America from the Paleo-Indian to the European colonial period. Emphasizes the origins and evolution of Andean civilization and associated interpretive problems. (A) {Alternate years}
ANTH525 The prehistory of Europe with emphasis on hunter-gatherer adaptations of the Pleistocene and early Holocene using primary data sources. Prerequisite: 101 or 121L or 220. (A) {Alternate years}
ANTH526 An intensive survey of the later prehistory of Europe, from the development of agricultural communities through the Roman Empire. (A) {Alternate years}
ANTH527 The prehistory of Africa from the appearance of the first hominids to the development of complex societies. Prerequisite: 101 or 121L or 220. (A) {Alternate years}
ANTH528 A survey of the Near Eastern culture area from the origins of agriculture to the development of Bronze Age civilization. (A) {Offered periodically} 1.00 1.67 3.00
ANTH529 Comparative approach to origin and development of stratified societies and pristine states as known from the archaeological record. (A)
ANTH530 Current topics in ethnology to be explored in experimental seminars. Repetition unlimited. (E) 9.33 15.67 28.00
ANTH530A  
ANTH530B  
ANTH530D  
ANTH530E  
ANTH530F  
ANTH530G  
ANTH531 Major culture types and selected ethnographic examples of North American Indian cultures. (E) {Offered annually} 0.67 1.67 2.00
ANTH532 Culture and history of indigenous peoples of South America. Selected examples from lowland and highlands regions. (E) {Offered periodically}
ANTH533 (Also offered as RELG 533.) Comparative analysis of ritual processes, symbolic systems and world views in the context of social structure. (E) {Offered annually} 0.33 1.67 1.00
ANTH535 Analysis of the ethnohistory and modern culture patterns of Spanish-speaking peoples of the Southwest. (E) {Alternate years}
ANTH536 An overview of a variety of anthropological approaches to ritualized activity, including symbolic, semiotic and performative approaches.
ANTH537 Examination of data and theories relevant to study of Indian, Hispanic and dominant society cultures in southwestern U.S. and northwestern Mexico. Student research generated from students professional interests. Non-majors admitted. (E)
ANTH539 A description and analysis of competing theories about the content of human rights; the history, politics and economics of human rights situations. Emphasis on the interplay among power, difference, 'culture' and human rights abuses. (E)
ANTH540 Current topics in sociocultural anthropology to be explored in experimental courses. Repetition unlimited. (E) 7.00 22.00 21.00
ANTH540B  
ANTH541 A practicum in ethnographic methods and theory. (E) 1.33 4.00 4.00
ANTH542 Historical overview of urban anthropology development. Introduction to research on contemporary urban issues. Focus on cases from Brazil, Mexico, Japan, Germany and Vietnam. Recent research on U.S. cities that examines industrial decline, immigration and homelessness. (E)
ANTH543 Cultural and social institutions common throughout Latin America and their historical antecedents. Contemporary social movements and their prognosis for the immediate future. Analysis of the variations among selected Latin American societies. (E) {Offered annually} 1.00 3.33 3.00
ANTH544 (Also offered as MUS 544.) The study of musical globalization, concentrating on the 100 year background of indigenous and ethnic sound recordings that led to the creation of the 'World Music' genre in the late 20th Century. (E)
ANTH546 Early history of anthropology from 19th-century cultural evolutionists to anthropology of the mid-20th century. Contributions of Historical School, Structural Functionalists and Neo-Evolutionists. (E) {Fall}
ANTH547 Recent trends in ethnological theory including processual analysis, structuralism, cognitive and symbolic anthropology, Marxist, feminist and interpretive approaches. (E) {Spring} 8.33 12.00 25.00
ANTH548 (Also offered as MUS 548./448.) The cultural study of music and sound. Course materials are drawn from written and audio music enthnographies of contemporary indigenous, diasporic, refugee, exile, and industrial communities. (E)
ANTH549 Through writings, films, radio, and Internet, the course explores how the island of New Guinea has been represented, both by indigenous New Guineans, and by visiting explorers, adventurers, colonizers, missionaires, tourists, scientists and artists. (E)
ANTH550   9.33 27.67 29.00
ANTH550A  
ANTH550B  
ANTH550C  
ANTH550D  
ANTH550E  
ANTH552 Basic overview of quantitative methods, including randomization, multivariate statistics, ordination and cladistics, used to explore problems in systematics, functional morphology, population genetics and skeletal biology. Restriction: permission of instructor. (B) {Alternate years} 0.00 2.67 0.00
ANTH554 Ancient disease through the study of normal and abnormal bone remodeling processes and dental conditions. Population health evaluated by descriptive and radiologic analyses of human remains. Prerequisite: 351L. (B) {Alternate years} 1.00 2.33 3.00
ANTH555 Fundamentals of human transmission, cellular, molecular, developmental and population genetics. Prerequisite: 150 or BIOL 110 or BIOL 123 or BIOL 201 or BIOL 202. (B) {Alternate years} 2.33 3.00 7.00
ANTH557 Events and processes leading from the appearance of the human lineage to the beginnings of agriculture, with discussions of Australopithecus and the genus Homo, through Homo sapiens. Prerequisite: 351L. (B) {Alternate years}
ANTH559 This course is to further develop the skills of graduate and senior undergraduate students in human osteology and to introduce advanced methods of skeletal analysis. Both lecture and laboratory components. Prerequisites: 351L or equivalent, upper division standing or consent of instructor. (B) 2.00 5.67 6.00
ANTH560 Topics of interest including Critical reading, Anthropological economics, Life history strategies, Primate reproductive strategies, Game theory. (HEE) 4.00 19.33 12.00
ANTH560D  
ANTH560E  
ANTH561 Investigates relationships between ecology, ontogeny and reproduction in terms of energy allocation trade-offs faced by individuals and age/sex/group-specific behavioral/physiological solutions which together describe human life history strategy variation. (B, HEE) {Alternate years.}
ANTH562 In-depth treatment of human life history evolution. Covers basic population demography; mortality, senescence, menopause, mating, reproduction, parental investment with additional focus on brain evolution. Experiences in evaluation and building mathematical models of fitness trade-offs. Prerequisite: (360, or BIOL 300) and MATH 121. (B, HEE) 4.67 6.00 14.00
ANTH563 Special emphasis will be on strategies of survival, reproduction, mating and rearing in the complex social systems of apes and monkeys. The costs and benefits of alternative strategies are used to understand individual life histories. (HEE) {Alternate years} 1.00 1.67 3.00
ANTH567 Introduces students to the fundamental principles of evolutionary theory and their application to human behavior. It surveys current research on human sexuality, mate choice, reproduction and parenting from the perspective of human evolutionary ecology. (B, HEE)
ANTH568 Analysis of systems of health, curing and disease in aboriginal, western and pluralistic societies. (B, HEE) {Offered periodically}
ANTH570   20.67 51.00 62.00
ANTH570A  
ANTH570B  
ANTH570C  
ANTH570D  
ANTH570H  
ANTH572 Introduction to basic qualitative and quantitative analytic methods in anthropology. (A) {Fall}
ANTH573  
ANTH573L  
ANTH574 Advanced discussion of concepts and theories within world archaeology. The course emphasizes the structure of archaeological thought in culture history, new archaeology, evolutionary theory and post-modernism. (A) {Fall} Restriction: admitted to ANTH graduate program.
ANTH575 Intensive instruction in archaeological field and laboratory techniques and the opportunity for independent student research. Restriction: permission of instructor. (A)
ANTH576 In-depth analysis of current research issues and topics in Southwest archaeology. (A)
ANTH577 Explores critical issues and debates in different periods of European prehistory, based on primary sources. (A)
ANTH579 Advanced discussion of current theoretical debates in archaeology, including Processual and Post-processual paradigms, formation processes; middle-range, optimal foraging, evolutionary, hunter-gatherer mobility theories; cultural ecology; and origins of agriculture and complex society. (A) 5.67 12.00 17.00
ANTH580 Basic concepts, methods and approaches used in the analysis of archaeological pottery. Lectures cover concepts and strategies. Labs give practical experience with techniques of analysis. (A)
ANTH581 The class examines topical issues such as human rights, indigenous rights, researcher rights, and professional and scientific responsibility that face the various subfields of anthropology in its everyday practice. {Spring}
ANTH582 (Also offered as MSST, ARTH 507.) History, philosophy and purposes of museums. Techniques and problems of museum administration, education, collection, exhibition, conservation and public relations. {Offered upon demand} (E)
ANTH582L   3.00 4.00 9.00
ANTH584 Emergence of the modern Indian and Mestizo cultures of Mexico and Guatemala. Persistence and change in social institutions and cultural patterns. (E) {Alternate years}
ANTH585 (Also offered as MSST, ARTH 585.) Theoretical and practical work in specific museum problems. Prerequisite: 402 or ARTH 407. (E)
ANTH586 (Also offered as MSST, ARTH 586.) Practicum in museum methods and management. (E) Prerequisite: 585 or ARTH 585. Restriction: permission of instructor. {Offered upon demand} 0.67 14.67 2.00
ANTH587 Outlines the sociocultural transformation of the region since 1492. Emphasis upon cultural legacies of, and resistance to, colonialism, the Afro-Caribbean and Hispanic heritages and the contemporary trans-nationalization of island identities. (E) 1.00 1.67 3.00
ANTH588 Analysis of literary, historical, ethnographic and contemporary texts, written by both Indians and non-Indians, to understand Native American peoples' reaction and adjustment to conquest and domination. (E) {Offered periodically}
ANTH591 This course investigates how genetic variation is patterned within and between populations, and how these patterns change over time. Topics include neutral theory, population structure, phylogenetics, coalescent theory, the molecular clock, and laboratory methods.
ANTH592 Examines the history and philosophy of statutes, regulations, consultation processes, research directions and funding sources underlying management of archaeological sites, traditional cultural properties, historic buildings, cultural and historical landscapes, and museum collections. (A) 3.00 5.00 9.00
ANTH597 Limited to graduate majors in the master's program. (A, B, E, HEE) 5.67 857.33 13.67
ANTH598 Limited to graduate majors in the master's program. May be repeated for credit, no limit. (A, B, E, HEE) 5.00 825.00 15.00
ANTH599 Offered on a CR/NC basis only. (A, B, E, HEE) 1.67 783.33 4.33
ANTH651 The analysis of the skeletal remains from past human populations, oriented at the mortality, morbidity and genetic affinities of those extinct populations. Prerequisite: 351L. (B) 2.67 6.33 8.00
ANTH661 Lancaster Uses the perspective of evolutionary biology to examine the diversity of sex roles played by men and women in the historical and cross-cultural record. (HEE) {Alternate years}
ANTH662 Explores recent research in both captivity and the wild on cognition and behavior of great apes (chimpanzees, gorillas, bonobos, orangutans), the closest living relatives of humans. (HEE) 1.33 3.33 4.00
ANTH663 Provides an overview of research design and methods utilized in the social/behavioral sciences and public health. It introduces a 'top-down,' problem-oriented approach to question development, sample selection, design decisions, specific methods, data analysis. (B, HEE) {Alternate years} 1.67 6.00 5.00
ANTH664 Utilizes existing datasets (student- or instructor-generated). Provides 'hands-on' training in data analysis with goal of publishable article. Focuses on data issues, selection of appropriate models and problems of interpretation. Prerequisite: ECON 509 or ECON 510 or STAT 527 or STAT 528 or STAT 574. (B, HEE) 2.33 6.00 7.00
ANTH667 This course focuses on a survey of the recent literature on the evolution and behavioral ecology of human social behavior. Topics include kin selection, social group formation, cooperation, territoriality, status, striving behavior, costly signaling, ethnicity and inter-group violence. (HEE) {Offered periodically} 1.33 2.33 4.00
ANTH675 Exploration and evaluation of practical anthropological research designs. Exhaustive preparation of realistic grant proposals for specific student-generated projects, with intensive group criticism. Prerequisite: M.A. or semster in which M.A. will be received. (A, B, E, HEE) 10.00 16.00 30.00
ANTH697 Limited to graduate majors in the doctoral program. (A, B, E, HEE) 12.67 841.67 31.67
ANTH698 Limited to graduate majors in the doctoral program. (A, B, E, HEE) 17.00 850.00 51.00
ANTH699 Offered on a CR/NC basis only. (A, B, E, HEE)Arts & Sciences 74.00 816.67 591.33

"ANTH: Anthropology "Three Fall Subject Average - Enroll: 2,636.67 Capacity: 11058.00 Credits: 8,103.67'