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Skip to contentDepartment of AnthropologyMenu Close Search Undergraduate ProgramGraduate ProgramArchaeologyBiological AnthropologySociocultural AnthropologyStudent ResourcesOur PeopleFaculty BookshelfResearchLet your curiosity lead the way:Apply TodayHomeCoursesUpcoming EventsRecent NewsContact Us Arts & Sciences Graduate Studies in A&SGraduate Program in Archaeology Why Archaeology? The PhD PathResearchFriday ArchaeologyStudent ResourcesWhy archaeology? Archaeology faculty and graduate students at Washington University in St. Louis are engaged in active field research across North and South America; East, Southeast, and Central Asia; and Africa. Although our research intersects with many diverse themes and debates within the field of Anthropology, we have notable strengths in the archaeological study of emergent social complexity in small-scale societies; social, political, economic, and ritual variability among hunter-gatherers and pastoralists; development of food production; environmental archaeology; and landscape archaeology. Archaeology doctoral students at Washington University receive generous funding. Weekly meetings of the archaeological community at the Friday Archaeology Speakers Series and interactions among faculty and students promote scholarly collaboration and a collegial atmosphere. Archaeology doctoral students enjoy diverse courses, interdisciplinary lectures, dynamic laboratory research settings and access to departmental office space. Our Research Our research utilizes a varied array of methods, but we have particular specialization in paleoethnobotany, zooarchaeology, isotopic analysis, Geographic Information Systems (GIS), geoarchaeology, and ceramic analysis. Faculty members maintain active research projects and graduate students both participate with faculty in research and also undertake their own projects.   Archaeology, Faculty, ResearchNew evidence supports idea that America’s first civilization was made up of ‘sophisticated’ engineersRead MoreNew evidence supports idea that America’s first civilization was made up of ‘sophisticated’ engineers9.10.21 | Archaeology, Faculty, ResearchThe Native Americans who occupied the area known as Poverty Point in northern Louisiana more than 3,000 years ago long have been believed to be simple hunters and gatherers. But new Washington University in St. Louis archaeological findings paint a drastically different picture of America’s first civilization.Read more Archaeology, Faculty, ResearchNew database highlights underrepresented scholars of African archaeologyRead MoreNew database highlights underrepresented scholars of African archaeology10.28.21 | Archaeology, Faculty, ResearchHelina Woldekiros, assistant professor of archaeology in the Department of Anthropology in Arts & Sciences, and her collaborators recently launched the Bibliographic Database of African Scholarship on African Archaeology (BibDAA). The new open-access database collects and shares publications on African archaeology, broadly defined, by African and Afrodescendant scholars. Recognizing that under-citation of Black scholars is a long-standing problem in archaeology and responding to renewed calls to cite Black scholarship, BibDAA supports academic research and teaching by helping scholars and educators discover under-cited work and diversify student reading lists, increasing the visibility of underrepresented researchers. Read more Your Path to a PhDYear 1 Theory coursework Subdisciplinary Requirements in Cultural and Biological Anthropology Area-Specific and Topical Coursework Methods and Language preparation Exploratory Summer Fieldwork  Year 2 Continued Coursework, including Methods and Proposal Writing  Mentored Teaching Experience Second Year Paper, research, writing, defense Exploratory Summer Fieldwork  Year 3 Coursework in consultation with advisor and committee Grant writing, Fall grant deadlines eg. Fulbright, Wenner-Gren, NSF rolling deadline Mentored Teaching Experience Proposal Writing, Fall or Spring proposal defense, Advancement to Candidacy Mentored Teaching if appropriate Year 4 Fieldwork Mentored Teaching if appropriate Years 5 and 6 Analysis and Dissertation Writing Mentored Teaching Experience Opportunities for Independent Teaching Consult the program requirements for more specific information.  Students considering applying for admission are encouraged to contact faculty with whom they share interests. Edward-Henry-1024x693.jpg Groundbreaking Archaeological Research  Michael Frachetti is associate professor of anthropology at Washington University, and Farhod Maksudov is senior researcher at the Institute of Archaeology, Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan. As project co-principal investigators, Frachetti and Maksudov lead a multidisciplinary team excavating Tashbulak, a city lost and abandoned for a thousand years high in the mountains of Uzbekistan. Researchers there are trying to understand who the inhabitants were, how they lived year-round at such elevation, why they chose the high-elevation plateau to settle and for what reason. Led by Edward Henry, a WashU anthropology graduate student specializing in geophysical analysis, the team conducted a detailed magnetometer survey of the area, pinpointing small underground variations in the natural magnetic field. The sensitive instrument detects disturbed soils and decayed organic material and reacts strongly to burned soil, stones, iron, steel, brick and other buried materials. As Frachetti would later report to NatGeo, the preliminary survey had revealed the outlines of a settlement well beyond their expectations. Read more about the Lost City research The Lost CityUsing modern, high-tech analysis tools, anthropology Professor Michael Frachetti is leading groundbreaking research on an ancient city high in the Uzbekistan mountains. Pivotal members of the research team are WashU doctoral student Edward Henry, MA ’14; Taylor Hermes, AB ’07, a doctoral candidate at Kiel University in Germany; and Farhod Maksudov, who is Michael Frachetti’s Uzbekistani co-principal investigator.Friday Archaeology Friday Archaeology is our community, space, and time to come together and share ideas, data, and our passion about archaeology. This website provides a calendar, announcements, and resources of interest to members of our WashU archaeology community and beyond!   Learn More About Friday Archaeology Student Resources Graduate Financial Supportreceive full financial support for 4-6 yearsGraduate Program in Archaeologyexplore degree requirements for the archaeology sub-disciplineGraduate Student Dissertation Researchexplore recent dissertationssearch more resourcesGraduate student workshops anthropology student publications Quick LinksResourcesEventsOur PeopleContactAdditional information Arts & Sciences Graduate Studies in A&SCopyright 2024 by:Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. LouisFollow Us Instagram Facebook Twitter Contact Us: Department of Anthropology [email protected] Visit the main Washington University in St. Louis website1 Brookings Drive / St. Louis, MO 63130 / wustl.edu

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