Biological Anthropology: Home
Course Reserves
Log into Course Reserves, then select Find Lists to locate & add your course.
Skeletal Anatomy Resources
- The eSkeletons ProjectThis website will help you learn how to identify bones.
Search Individual E-Book Collections
- Archaeopress: Open AccessUnrestricted access
- University of California E-Books Collection, 1982-2004Unrestricted access
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Anthropology News
Daily headlines about discoveries in fossils and ruins and more ...
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Dictionaries and Encyclopedias
- The Cambridge Dictionary of Human Biology and EvolutionContains about 13,000 terms selected from glossaries and indices of major textbooks and classic works in human biology and evolution. The appendices include tables and taxonomies of extinct, recent and extant primates; a geological time scale, diagrams of anatomical landmarks, and an event timeline of human biology and evolution.
- Dictionary of Concepts in Physical AnthropologyThe entries in this useful dictionary describe the development of physical anthropological concepts followed by bibliographies including most of the major works in the field. The history of each concept is traced from its origins to the contemporary usage in physical anthropology.
- History of Physical AnthropologyThis excellent reference source contains biographies on the major contributors to physical anthropology and essays on a variety of topics in the field. The entries include primary and secondary sources, along with the location of important archival material. The name and subject indexes are an especially useful feature of this two volume set.
- Encyclopedia of Human Evolution and PrehistoryConsidered to be a standard in the field, this encyclopedia has over 800 A-Z entries covering the latest fossil finds and theories. It provides the most complete context possible for understanding the origins of humankind.
- The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Human PaleopathologyA key reference source covering most of the conditions that will produce visible lesions on skeletal or mummified remains. There are detailed lesion descriptions and over 300 photographs along with a discussion of the history, etiology and epidemiology of each pathological condition. A must for budding paleopathologists!