Facilities

 

Anthropology Labs

 

 

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The Archaeology/GIS Lab is designed to accommodate instruction, student archaeological analysis and GIS research, and laboratory portions of a number of courses (e.g., ANTH-492/692 Archaeology Seminars, ANTH-211 Fundamentals of Archaeology). The space is suitable for examination of archaeological collections, including lithic, faunal, spatial and other analyses.

Three computers with ArcGIS and all extensions, including 3d Analyst and Geospatial Analyst, form the hub of the GIS laboratory. Lithic comparative and analytical collections (including material types and technologies) are available for students to use, as well as low-powered stereoscopes. Two additional computers are dedicated to materials analysis, and all five computers have SPSS statistical software and Surfer 3d mapping software.

 

For more information contact Ben Potter.

The Environmental Lab hosts a wide range of faculty, staff and student research oriented to reconstructing local environments through time and understanding long-term human ecosystem adaptations. This lab is equipped with instrumentation for the preparation of archaeological specimens (e.g., bones, teeth, soils) for isotope analysis, radiocarbon dating, soil chemistry. Instrumentation includes: freeze dryer, mixer mill, Milli-Q ultra pure water system, fume hood for chemical work, analytical balance and microbalance, multiple sizes of centrifuges, and other support equipment.

 

For more information contact Josh Reuther.

This lab houses an extensive skeletal comparative collection that is used for teaching and research. The collection focuses mainly on Alaskan fauna with additional specimens from the South Pacific and around the world.

 

For more information, contact Justin Cramb.

 

 

 

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The Forensic Anthropology Lab is equipped to teach forensic anthropological casework and research methods, and to conduct casework and skeletal analyses.

The lab contains equipment for performing skeletal analyses including osteometric boards, spreading and sliding calipers, a mandibulometer, 2 microscribes, ASUDAS plaques, pubic symphysis aging kits, as well as various software for estimating sex, age, stature, and biological affinity.

The lab is also home to human skeletal casts used for casework comparison and teaching, including reproductions representing human variation and pathological exemplars and primate and hominid fossil casts.

Additionally, the department houses the Brian Hemphill Dental Anthropology Collection; a collection of dental casts from South Asian populations compiled by Dr. Brian
Hemphill.

 

For more information, contact Petra Banks

The ADAPt Lab contributes to knowledge of ancient diets and pyrotechnologies through the analysis of organic residues in archaeological ceramics and hearth sediments. Organic residues from foods and fuels are analyzed using a combined approach integrating molecular and isotopic data.


The ADAPt Lab also conducts proteomic sex estimation of amelogenin, a sexually dimorphic protein in tooth enamel. This is a robust method of sex estimation applicable to the youngest through the oldest members of archaeological populations.

The lab is capable of analyzing other proteins in a range of dental tissues and in dental calculus, providing a novel source of information on past diets and human health.


Equipment in the lab includes a fume hood, laminar flow cabinet, chemical cabinets, Leica M80 zoom steromicroscope fitted with an IC80HD digital camera for real-time images, flex-shaft drill for cutting and preparing samples, analytical balance, thermomixer, two microcentrifuges and two compact benchtop centrifuges for standard size test tubes, a -20℃ freezer, and a drying oven. For data analysis, the lab has a PC and laptop with Mass Hunter software and NIST 7.0 Mass Spectral Library and PEAKS 12 software for DDA and DIA shotgun proteomics analysis.

ADAPt Lab

For more information contact Tammy Buonasera

This lab is PCR-free and contains two biosafety cabinets for preparation of ancient DNA specimens and ancient DNA extraction.

 

For more information contact Kara Hoover

 

The newly renovated and expanded Digital Ethnography Lab in Bunnell 309 provides students with state of the art audiovisual equipment for recording in digital audio and video and computational facilities designed for multimedia editing, acoustic analysis, transcription and discourse analysis and digitizing and archiving analog and minidisc materials.

The lab is equipped with two PowerMac quad core computers, with Adobe Premiere Professional and Final Cut programs for advanced video editing and six new Asus work stations and a new PC laptop installed with GIS software for student check out. All computers have Adobe Premiere Professional and Photoshop for visual analysis and are installed with: Praat, Audacity, Transana, Express-scribe and Elan for transcription and discourse analysis. There are digital foot pedals and studio quality headphones for transcription. We have a high speed audio cassette copier and cassette-to-CD dubbing equipment to facilitate digitizing archival CD recordings. There is a mini-DV deck for copying digital video cassettes. We also have a minidisc deck that allows digitization and copying of minidiscs for archival purposes. The lab also has numerous Marantz and small Tascam digital audio field recorders, cardiod and binaural lapel microphones, wireless lapel mics and solid state video recorders and tripods for student and faculty use.

 

For more information contact Robin Shoaps or Patrick Plattet.

The Medical Anthropology Lab in Bunnell 407 is designed to facilitate small group instruction, mixed-methods research, and anthropometric procedures. The lab has a Marantz Professional PMD660 portable solid state audio recorder, numerous Tascam DR-05 digital voice recorders (carry cases and accessories), a Sony transcription kit with foot pedal, high quality headphones for in-lab transcription, and two Dell XPS 15 laptops. The lab is also equipped with a portable stadiometer height-rod and a Tanita SC-240 Total Body Composition Analyzer. Four computer workstations are available for students to access a variety of software programs, including Atlas.ti (for qualitative data analysis), Remark Office OMR (for creating surveys, tests, assessments and evaluations), and Tanita HealthWare software (for recording, tracking, and analyzing body weight, body water, body fat, muscle mass, visceral fat rating, bone mass, BMI, and more). 
 
For more information, contact Elaine Drew

 

 

Other ÐÔÓûÉç Research Facilities

Faculty and students at the Department of Anthropology are able to utilize a wide variety of research facilities on the ÐÔÓûÉç campus.

 

The ÐÔÓûÉç DNA CORE lab contains advanced instrumentation for The Core Facility provides nucleic acid sample analysis, and maintenance and support for molecular instruments (some of which may be too expensive for individual labs to own) for both ÐÔÓûÉç and outside users. The Core Lab facilitates learning by hosting training workshops and seminars for instrumentation and techniques to help students, faculty, and staff learn to use available equipment. The Core Lab also provides tours to middle and high school students/teachers, undergraduate students, graduate students, research staff, faculty candidates, and local or out of state visitors. The Core Lab has also been involved in several undergraduate/graduate classes offered by the Biology Department and the Chemistry Department. See  for more information on lab services.

 

The UA Museum of the North has archaeological collections containing materials that document cultures in Alaska from the Late Pleistocene to the present. Extensive paleontology, geology, botany, zoology, ethnology, and fine arts collections are also available for study at the museum.

The Elmer E. Rasmuson Library contains the distinguished Alaska Polar Regions Collection, as well as an outstanding rare book and map collection. Primary sources and photographic collections on the Circumpolar North are also available in the Archive and Manuscript Division of the library.

The ÐÔÓûÉç Stable Isotope Facility is an excellent resource for bioanthropology and archaeology students interested in using advanced lab methods for their research. Student and faculty researchers alike may use our own chemical bioarchaeology lab for preparation of materials before submitting samples for analysis.

 

The Alaska Quaternary Center focuses on the natural history of Alaska from the beginning of the Pleistocene through the Holocene.

The Alaska Native Language Center offers unrivaled opportunities for the study of Alaskan languages, and provides important support for instruction and research in sociocultural anthropology.

The Alaska and Polar Regions Collections & Archives has several resources including  Archives, , and .