• Dept of Anthropology Morton Village Archaeological Fieldschool Launches Blog

    In order to document and communicate their ongoing research and outreach activities, the MSU Department of Anthropology Morton Village Archaeological Fieldschool in launching a blog this season.  Located at mortonvillage.anthropology.msu.edu, the blog will feature regular posts and videos by fieldschool staff and students.

    Located in the central Illinois River Valley near Lewiston, Illinois, the Morton Village Site is a late prehistoric village. This cooperative project with the Illinois State Museum focuses on the A.D. 1300-1400 community associated with a period of social integration and conflict among Oneota and Mississippian groups.

  • The 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology

    Michigan State University’s department of anthropology was very well represented at the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.  The meeting was held April 18-22, 2012, in Memphis, TN.

     

    Memphis, TN; Site of the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology

     

    Jennifer Bengtson presented a paper co-authored by Dr. Jodie O’Gorman and Ryan M. Tubbs entitled: “Impacts of Social Interaction among Women in the Past: A Central Illinois River Valley Case Study.”

    Charlotte Cable presented a poster entitled: “A Multitude of Monuments: Characterizing and Interpreting the Distribution of 3rd Millennium BC Monuments in North – Central Oman.”

    Adrianne Daggett presented a poster entitled: “Preliminary Spatial Analysis of Early Agricultural Settlements at Sowa Pan, Botswana.”

    Sylvia Deskaj organized and chaired a symposium entitled: “Recent Trends in Albanian Archaeology: A Decade in Review.”  Sylvia also presented a co-authored paper in this symposium entitled: “The 2011 Field Season of the Projekti Arkeologjikë Shkodrës.”  A total of nine scholars from both American and European universities participated.

    Sean Dunham presented his award-winning paper entitled: “Late Woodland Landscapes in the Eastern Upper Peninsula of Michigan.”

    Sarah Surface – Evans, an MSU alum, co-organized and co-chaired a symposium entitled: “Resources, Networks, Landscapes, and Family: Recent Directions in Hunter-Gatherer Research.”  In this symposium, Marieka Brouwer presented a paper entitled: “Dynamic Landscapes, Dynamic Decision-Making: Hunter-Gatherer Land Use Strategies in the Central River Valley of the Netherlands.”  Also in this symposium, Dr. William A. Lovis presented a paper entitled: “Network Maintenance in Big Rough Spaces with Few People: The Labrador Naskapi or Inuu.”

    Kate Frederick presented a co-authored poster entitled: “When the Wild Strawberries are in Bloom: Pre – Contact Food Caching in Northern Michigan.”

    Katy Meyers presented a paper entitled: “Co-Occurrence of Cremation and Inhumation in Cemeteries: A Case Study at Isola Sacra, Italy.”

    Amy Michael presented a co-authored paper entitled: “Mortuary Patterns and Use of Space at the Sapodilla Rockshelter, Belize.”  This paper was co-authored with Dr. Gabe Wrobel et al.

    Dr. Helen Pollard presented a paper entitled: “Ruling ‘Purépecha Chichimeca’ in a Tarascan World.”

    Duane Quates presented a co-authored paper entitled: “The Magic Box and the Gravestones of the Displaced: Using Remote Sensing for the Enhancement, Inventory, and Public Investment of the Historic Fort Drum Cemeteries.”

    Frank Raslich presented a paper entitled “Testing Applications of LA – ICP – MS in Lithic Analysis.”

    Maria Raviele, MSU alum, co-organized a symposium entitled: “Reflecting on the Role of Women in Archaeology.”  In addition, Maria presented a poster entitled “Winter, Spring, Summer, or Fall?: Palynological Evidence for Seasonal Mound Construction of Angel Mound A.”

    Karin Rebnegger and MSU Alum Amy Hirshman co-organized and co-chaired a symposium entitled: “Mesoamerican Tarascans, Their Forbearers and Neighbors: Essays in Honor of Helen Pollard.” Karin presented a paper in this symposium entitled: “Obsidian Sources used by the Tarascan Empire Elites and Commoners in the Pátzcuaro Basin, Michoacán, Mexico.”  Christopher Stawski authored a paper entitled: “Modeling Settlement in the Prehispanic Lake Pátzcuaro Basin, Michoacán, Mexico.”

    Beverley Smith, MSU alum, organized and chaired a symposium entitled: “Stone Street Ancestral Recovery & Reburial Project, Flint, MI.”  In this symposium, Nicole Raslich presented a paper entitled: “Artifact Analysis of Stone Street Burial Ground.”  Frank Raslich co-authored a paper entitled: “Mitigation through Collaboration.”

    Andy Upton presented a paper co-authored by Dr. Jodie O’Gorman entitled: “A Statistical Approach to Mississippian and Oneota Ceramics at Morton Village.”

    Dr. Ethan Watrall was a discussant in a forum entitled: “Capacity-Building for Archaeology in the 21st Century: How Will People Manage the Information Explosion?”

     

     

     

     

  • Terry Brock Receives Dissertation Research Grant

    Congratulations to Terry Brock on being awarded an SRI Foundation Dissertation Research Grant for his research entitled: “We All Walked Together”: The Transition From Slavery to Freedom on a 19th century Maryland Plantation.

     

     

  • “ANP 464: Archaeology Field School” Receives Honorable Mention

    Dr. Lynne Goldstein and Terry Brock (PhD Candidate) received an honorable mention for the 2012 AT&T Faculty – Staff Award Competition in Instructional Technology.  They received this honorable mention for their development of ANP 464: Archaeology Field School, which aims to engage the public with archaeology.

  • Sean Dunham is Recipient of Prestigious Award

    Sean Dunham (PhD Candidate) is the recipient of the Society for American Archaeology Student Paper Award for the paper titled “Late Woodland Landscapes in the Eastern Upper Peninsula of Michigan.” Sean was presented with this award at the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, a national organization, in Memphis, TN on April 20th, 2012.  This paper is part of Sean’s ongoing dissertation research that examines settlement and subsistence practices in the Eastern Upper Peninsula of Michigan. 

  • Undergraduate Students Present Research

    Undergraduate Students Present Research

    On Friday, April 13th, 2012, eight undergraduate students presented their research at the annual University Undergraduate Research and Arts Forum (UURAF) at MSU.

     

    James Schwaderer presented his winning poster: "Projectile Point Color at Morton Village"

    James Schwaderer: “Project Point Color at Morton Village” (Winning Poster) – Advisor: Dr. Jodie O’Gorman

    Janine Baranski: “A Study of the Associations between Offspring Survival and Birth Order, Offspring Sex and Previous Siblings in Rural Communities of Kenya” – Advisor: Dr. Masako Fujita

    Kaitlin A. Scharra: “Understanding Non-Elite Mississippian Societies: A Mortuary Analysis of the East St. Louis Stone Quarry Site Cemetery” – Advisor: Dr. Lynne Goldstein

    Circe Wilson: “Using Ceramics to Understand MSUs Past” – Advisors: Dr. Lynne Goldstein and Katy Meyers

    Ryan Jelso: “Architectural Variation at Morton Village” – Advisor: Dr. Jodie O’Gorman

    Josh Lieto: “The Broad-Rimmed Bowl: A Descriptive Study and Analysis” – Advisor: Dr. Jodie O’Gorman

    Josh Lieto: “Prehispanic Chocolate for Tarascan Kings: Detection of Cacao in Spouted Elite Serving Vessels” – Advisor: Dr. Helen Pollard

    Rachel Wise: “Identifying Different Cultural Groups at a Multi-Ethnic Archaeological Village” – Advisor: Dr. Jodie O’Gorman

  • New Application Deadline for Morton Village Fieldschool (ANP464)

    The Department of Anthropology is pleased to announce that the application deadline for the Morton Village Fieldschool (ANP464) has been extended to April 27th.

    May 21 – July 1, 2012; Anthropology 464: Field Methods in Archaeology

    As in any archaeological field school, students learn through hands-on application of methods. Students are contributing members of the research team and work closely with the instructor, teaching assistants, and other professional archaeologists and specialists. We are fortunate to have the Dickson Mounds Museum of the Illinois State Museum as partners in this research endeavor. We utilize the museum as a place to learn about the rich archaeological record of the region, and draw on the considerable expertise of the archaeologists at that institution. Our field lab is also housed at the museum.

    We excavate at the Morton Village Site, a late prehistoric village in the central Illinois River Valley near Lewistown, Illinois. This cooperative project with the Illinois State Museum will focus on the A.D. 1300-1400 community associated with a period of social integration and conflict among Oneota and Mississippian groups.   Our work builds on prior research at the site, utilizes state-of the-art geophysical techniques, and has a strong public outreach component.  Students will be exposed to survey work as well as excavation.

    As in any archaeological field school, students learn through hands-on application of methods. Students are contributing members of the research team and work closely with the instructor, teaching assistants, and other professional archaeologists and specialists. We are fortunate to have the Dickson Mounds Museum of the Illinois State Museum as partners in this research endeavor. We utilize the museum as a place to learn about the rich archaeological record of the region, and draw on the considerable expertise of the archaeologists at that institution. Our field lab is also housed at the museum.

    For more information about prehistory in the Central Illinois River Valley, visit the Illinois State Museum website Native Americansand go through the prehistory section. The Morton Village Site is in Fulton County; you will see that many of the artifacts featured are from this area.

    For more information on prior excavation of the site, the following readings are recommended:

    • Santure, Sharron K., Alan D. Harn, and Duane Esarey. 1990 Archaeological Investigations at the Morton Village and Norris Farms 36 Cemetery. Illinois State Museum Reports of Investigations, No. 45. Springfield.  Most of this report is concerned with the mortuary site designated Norris Farms 36, but background information (chapters 1-3) and information on the Morton Village Site (chapters 6-8, 15, we are particularly interested in the Bold Counselor phase) are also included.
    • Harn, Alan D. and Nicholas W. Klobuchar. 2000 Inside Morton House 7: An Oneota Structure from the Central Illinois River Valley. In Mounds, Modoc, and Mesoamerica: Papers in Honor of Melvin L. Fowler, edited by Steven R. Ahler, pp. 295-335.

    Instructor: Dr. Jodie O’Gorman

    Unique Learning Experience:

    • Excavation, survey, laboratory, classroom and museum study, field trips, guest lecturers, inter-disciplinary research
    • Learn survey and excavation methods using mechanical and laser equipment
    • Class size limited to 15 students Six credits – undergraduate or graduate level
    • Six credits – undergraduate or graduate level
    • Additional credits available for subsequent laboratory work
    • Workshops in faunal identification and flintknapping

    The Field School Experience

    This is a residential field school experience. Students, the instructor, and teaching assistants share lodging and meals during the six week course. Field work will normally take place 5.5 days a week with students doing laboratory rotations. Because of the emphasis on public outreach, we will work Saturdays. Field trips to Cahokia Mounds and other active field projects are planned.

    Central Illinois River Valley

    The Central Illinois River Valley is a beautiful, rural area where the vast floodplain is surrounded by bluffs. This rich ecological setting was home to numerous cultures throughout prehistory. As you stand on the observation deck at Dickson Mounds Museum, maps of the immediate area point you to numerous large villages. Visit the web site Of Time and the River to get a feel for the area and to read more about the prehistory and early history of the region.

    Fees

    Students register for 6 credits and there is an additional $750 course fee that includes food (5.5 days/week), lodging (7 days/week), and lab fees.

    To Apply

    In order to be considered for the Morton Village Fieldschool, students must submit an application by April 27th.  Application form can be downloaded here (PDF)

    Student Eligibility

    Students presently attending any college or university may apply as life-long learners; credits are often transferred into their home programs. Previous introductory anthropology, archaeology or related course required.

  • Tazin Karim awarded Disciplinary Leadership Endowment Fellowship from the Council of Graduate Students and the Graduate School

    Tazin Karim, doctoral candidate in medical anthropology, was recently awarded the Disciplinary Leadership Endowment Fellowship from the Council of Graduate Students and the Graduate School. This award recognizes her participation and demonstrated leadership in the field of anthropology including professional societies at the local, national and international levels. In particular, Taz was acknowledged for her involvement with the Society for Medical Anthropology and her role as chair of a special interest group on Alcohol, Drugs and Tobacco Research.

  • PhD Candidate Adrianne Daggett Awarded NSF Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant

    The Department of Anthropology is very pleased to announce that Adrianne Daggett (PhD Candidate) has just been awarded an NSF Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant for her project titled “Early Iron Age Social and Economic Organization in Sowa Pan, Botswana.”

    Adrianne will conduct archaeological survey and excavation at two sites near the present-day village of Mosu in northeastern Botswana. This project will investigate economic behavior and settlement organization patterns at these sites to understand the relationship between prehistoric farming settlements of this area and the emerging state-level societies of the time. The project will also investigate whether hunter-gatherers interacted with the Mosu farming settlements, and if so, how they may have contributed to the regional political economy. The research will take a critical look at the late first millennium AD, a crucial period of southern African prehistory during which complex societies and intercontinental trading networks were emerging. Fieldwork will be conducted in an area far from the Shashe-Limpopo Basin, the locale generally considered to be the center of cultural, political, and economic developments for this time period. Because of the distances between communities and the relative parity in natural resources among areas, reason exists to question the presumptions that the Shashe-Limpopo Basin claimed predominance in the southern African political economy from the earliest times, and that all communities of the late first millennium exercised the same cultural and social practices. Comparative research of this kind will improve understanding of the relationship between populated areas in prehistoric southern Africa as well as of localized processes of social and economic development.

  • Dr. Monir Moniruzzaman infiltrates illegal organ trafficking market

    EAST LANSING, Mich. —  A Michigan State University anthropologist who spent more than a year infiltrating the black market for human kidneys has published the first in-depth study describing the often horrific experiences of poor people who were victims of organ trafficking.

    Monir Moniruzzaman interviewed 33 kidney sellers in his native Bangladesh and found they typically didn’t get the money they were promised and were plagued with serious health problems that prevented them from working, shame and depression.

    The study, which appears in Medical Anthropology Quarterly, and Moniruzzaman’s decade-long research in the field describe a growing worldwide market for body parts that include kidneys, parts of livers and even corneas.

    Moniruzzaman said the people selling their organs are exploited by unethical brokers and recipients who are often Bangladeshi-born foreign nationals living in places such as the United States, Europe and the Middle East. Because organ-selling is illegal, the brokers forge documents indicating the recipient and seller are related and claim the act is a family donation.

    Doctors, hospital officials and drug companies turn a blind eye to the illicit act because they profit along with the broker and, of course, the recipient, said Moniruzzaman, who questioned many of the people involved.

    Most of the 33 Bangladeshi sellers in his study had a kidney removed across the border in India. Generally, the poor seller and the wealthy recipient met at a medical facility and the transplant was performed at that time, he said.

    “This is a serious form of exploitation of impoverished people, whose bodily organs become market commodities to prolong the lives of the wealthy few,” said Moniruzzaman, assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Center for Ethics and Humanities in the Life Sciences.

    Moniruzzaman recently delivered his research findings and recommendations on human organ trafficking to both the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission of the U.S. Congress and the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.

    His briefing included the experiences of Mehedi Hasan, a 23-year-old rickshaw puller who sold part of his liver to a wealthy recipient in the Bangladesh capital of Dhaka. Like many poor Third World residents, Hasan did not know what a liver was. The broker exploited this fact and told Hasan the sale would make him rich.

    The recipient died soon after the transplant. Hasan received only part of the money he was promised and is now too sick to work, walk long distances or even breathe properly. He thinks often of killing himself, Moniruzzaman said.

    Organ brokers typically snag the unwitting sellers through deceptive advertisements. One ad, in a Bangladeshi newspaper, falsely promised to reward a kidney seller with a visa to the United States. Moniruzzaman collected more than 1,200 similar newspaper ads for the study; see two examples here.

    The organ trade is thriving in Bangladesh, a country where 78 percent of residents live on less than $2 a day. The average quoted price of a kidney is 100,000 taka ($1,400) – a figure that has gradually dropped due to an abundant supply from the poor majority, Moniruzzaman said.

    One Bangladeshi woman advertised to sell a cornea so she could feed her family, saying she needed only one eye to see. That transplant didn’t happen, but Moniruzzaman said there have been cases of corneas being sold.

    Moniruzzaman said it’s important to note that most sellers do not make “autonomous choices” to sell their organs, but instead are manipulated and coerced. He said the global trade of organs is a fairly recent phenomenon – made possible by advances in medical technology in the past 30 years – that represents a form of gross exploitation unseen in human history.

    To combat organ trafficking, he recommends, among other steps:

    • Global governance. The U.S. Department of State should play an active role in putting pressure on national affairs and foreign governments to acknowledge the problem and insisting on crackdowns on brokers, recipients, doctors and businesspeople involved in the trade.
    • Transparency and accountability. The State Department should ensure all medical centers have a transplantation registry and verify the relationship between recipients and donors.
    • Cadaveric donation. Countries such as Bangladesh that do not have a system in which people can donate organs when they die should implement these systems. The United States should provide aid and encourage cadaveric organ donation through educational institutions, news media and religious centers.

    Realistically, organ trafficking will never be eliminated, Moniruzzaman told lawmakers on the Human Rights Commission.

    “But with our collaborative efforts,” he said, “we can significantly reduce this gross violation of human rights.”

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    Michigan State University has been working to advance the common good in uncommon ways for more than 150 years. One of the top research universities in the world, MSU focuses its vast resources on creating solutions to some of the world’s most pressing challenges, while providing life-changing opportunities to a diverse and inclusive academic community through more than 200 programs of study in 17 degree-granting colleges.

     

    Contact: Andy Henion, University Relations, Office: (517) 355-3294, Cell: (517) 281-6949, Andy.Henion@ur.msu.edu; Monir Moniruzzaman, Anthropology, Office: (517) 355-0189, monir@msu.edu

    Published: March 12, 2012 

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