Karen Strassler receives a 2025 Guggenheim Fellowship

April 16, 2025

Professor Karen Strassler is a 2025 recipient of the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship. Guggenheim Fellows are selected based on their existing body of research and exceptional research promise as well as their devotion to work that responds to timely themes and issues.

Thomas Plummer receives QC Research Award

April 1, 2025

Professor Thomas Plummer recently received the 2025 Queens College School of Social Sciences Research Award for his work documenting the earliest tool use by hominins (~3 million years ago).

Thomas Plummer's research featured on CBS Saturday morning

Jan 6, 2025

Research by Professor Thomas Plummer and his team was recently featured on CBS Saturday Morning.  Professor Plummer’s work demonstrates compelling evidence for the earliest tool use by our hominin ancestors 3 million years ago on the Homa Peninsula in western Kenya, findings that were also recently published in Science. This work has also been featured in Nature and PBS News.

Welcome back to the Fall 2024 semester

August 28th, 2024

Explore our current semester course offerings here.

Thomas Plummer received NSF Award

August 21st, 2024

Thomas Plummer receives NSF Award for his ongoing research project “Collaborative Research: Early Emergence of Tool Use”. The goal of this collaborative project is to understand the significance of tool technology in the human lineage by investigating a site that dates between approximately 3 and 2.6 million years ago. Findings from this research promise to provide a more comprehensive understanding of early hominin behavior at the dawn of stone tool technology.

Explore our specialized minors

August 16th, 2024

In addition to an Anthropology major and minor, students may sign up for specialized minors including Human Ecology, Power Inequality, Cultural Heritage, and Health in Culture. For more information on our majors and minors, click here.

View our minors:

General | Human Ecology | Power and Inequality | Cultural Heritage and Memory | Health and Culture