Mark Williams Photo: First Name: Mark Last Name: Williams Phone Number: (706)-542-9234 (archaeology lab) Read more about Mark Williams Education Ph.D. Anthropology, University of Georgia 1983 Expertise & Interests
Bram Tucker Photo: First Name: Bram Last Name: Tucker Office: 259 Baldwin Hall Read more about Bram Tucker I am fascinated by the economic lives of people in rural places, where food and other resources come from the land, forest, and sea. Rural economies are highly diversified, partially integrated into markets, and vulnerable to risk and uncertainty. We often think of them as "traditional," and traditions are important; but they have experienced long histories of social change.
Victor Thompson Photo: First Name: Victor Last Name: Thompson Read more about Victor Thompson I study big turning points in human history, especially how people have come together to form societies and how they've interacted with their environments over time. I focus on wetland and coastal areas, mainly along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the U.S., where I use the archaeology to understand how people and climate have shaped each other over thousands of years. A big part of my work looks at how Indigenous communities governed themselves, highlighting the many different ways democratic systems can look beyond what we’re used to today.
Susan Tanner Photo: First Name: Susan Last Name: Tanner Office: Baldwin Hall, 0266 Read more about Susan Tanner I study how the environment, biology, and culture shape human health and disease. My recent research in Panama focuses on Zoonotic diseases and deforestation, while in Bolivia, I study nutrition, health, and life history. I am interested in how individual and household conditions may shape disease patterns, and also how they shape childhood growth, diet, and nutrition.
Elizabeth Reitz Photo: First Name: Elizabeth Last Name: Reitz Read more about Elizabeth Reitz I am a zooarchaeologist who focuses on Latin American and southeastern archaeology with an emphasis on ecological and ecological archaeology. As the head of the zooarchaeology lab and as a consultant, I work with collections management.
Laurie Reitsema Photo: First Name: Laurie Last Name: Reitsema Office: 257 Baldwin Hall Read more about Laurie Reitsema My research seeks to explain how human beings come to physically embody the biological and social aspects of our environments. In varying sites across Europe, my work encapsulates the challenges of bioarchaeological analysis as the most direct indicator of human behavior. I examine diet change from the time of Greek colonization to the Medieval period, and I also helped geochemically assess archaeological human remains to test early written history.
Suzanne Pilaar Birch Photo: First Name: Suzanne Pilaar Last Name: Birch Office: Baldwin Hall, 265A Geography-Geology 103 Geography-Geology 318 Read more about Suzanne Pilaar Birch I have a joint appointment in Anthropology and Geography and direct the Quaternary Isotope Paleoecology Lab. My research is focused on human adaptation and resilience to climate change and natural resource unpredictability in prehistory, and how our understanding of past human response to environmental change informs current thinking about these issues. I combine archaeology and biogeochemistry to investigate changes in diet, mobility, and settlement systems in the period spanning the end of the last ice age to the arrival of farming.
Don Nelson Photo: First Name: Don Last Name: Nelson Office: Baldwin Hall, G23 Read more about Don Nelson I didn’t always plan to be an anthropologist. However, during an undergrad anthropology course I realized that the field of anthropology would provide an excellent arena to pursue my innate curiosity about the diversity of people and their interactions with each other and their environments. My goal as an anthropologist is to pursue research that is intellectually challenging and that enhances our abilities to resolve complex social and environmental issues. My intellectual interests span scales that include individual households, communities, watersheds, regions, and nations.
Virginia Nazarea Photo: First Name: Virginia Last Name: Nazarea Office: 0105B Baldwin Hall Read more about Virginia Nazarea I am interested in the interface between the way people see the elements and interrelationships in their environment with the way they decide and act in that environment. Further, I am concerned with the way the lenses people carry around in their heads are structured by the messages they received over time as they were growing up (and continue to receive when they are grown-up!) as members of a particular class, gender, and ethnicity.