The Department of Anthropology has vibrant graduate and undergraduate degree programs. Undergraduate students may earn an anthropology degree through either a B.A. in Anthropology or B.S. in Human Health & Biology. Depending on the program, undergraduate degrees in anthropology require courses in one or more subfields, as well as course requirements in research methods, resulting in a well-rounded understanding of people in this country and around the world, both past and present. The department offers fieldwork opportunities and is active in the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program and the Honors College, so that undergraduates who so desire can obtain actual experience in anthropology. We maintain close ties with the Oklahoma Archaeological Survey and the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, and we encourage international study to augment these opportunities. Mobility, subsistence, and territoriality of Paleo Indian and Archaic hunters of the Plains, faunal analysis (Bement)
Bioarchaeology, archaeology of death, osteology, human remains, cremations, forensic anthropology, embodiment, social identity (Cerezo-Romn)
Archaeology and ethnography of the Pueblo Southwest, landscape and human-environment interactions, indigenous archaeologies, cosmology and religion, ceramics, archaeometry, public education (Duwe)
Archaeological geophysics, social organization and labor mobilization of Mississippian societies, Caddo archaeology in eastern Oklahoma, experimental archaeology, ceramics (Hammerstedt)
Ancient pyrotechnologies, archaeological sciences, complex societies of the old and new worlds, sub-Saharan Africa, trade and exchange networks, provenance studies of archaeological Materials, Africa and South and East Asia (Fenn)