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Culture, Society & Family Archives

September 15, 2009

New Mexico "Childhood Archaeology Project" unearths centuries of change0

SingleMarblesSMall.jpg Sunday-Eiselt%2Cgs.jpg Old restored homes — gentrified with galleries, shops and restaurants — ring the historic and picturesque plaza of Ranchos de Taos in northern New Mexico.

The plaza, once a hub of village life in Ranchos de Taos, these days is notably absent of children. Their families have been driven to the outskirts of the Catholic village by a booming tourism industry that has pushed up property values.

But the children left their mark, says archaeologist Sunday Eiselt, who for three years has led digging crews in some of the homes through her work at the Archaeology Field School of the SMU-in-Taos campus of Southern Methodist University. They've unearthed children's artifacts up to 100 years old, including pieces of clay toys, tea sets, doll parts, clothing, mechanical trains, jacks, marbles, child-care implements, modern plastic Legos, Barbie doll parts, action figures and jewelry.

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September 9, 2009

Precedent for America's move toward restitution for human rights abuses0

A growing global movement to apologize and make restitution to victims of human rights abuses is now gathering steam in the United States, but it won't be a first for the country, says the president of The Western History Association.

"In reviewing the history of reconciliation in the American West, I've found three examples of government restitution — where we acknowledge we've participated in human rights abuses and offered either an apology, restitution, reparation or all three," says Sherry Smith, associate director of the Clements Center for Southwest Studies at SMU and an SMU history professor.

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July 16, 2009

The Archaeology Channel interviews SMU's Fred Wendorf0

wendorfbook.jpgThe remarkable 60-year-career of internationally recognized field archaeologist Fred Wendorf, SMU Henderson-Morrison Professor of Prehistory Emeritus, is the subject of an interview with Richard Pettigrew, president and executive director of the nonprofit Archaeological Legacy Institute.

Pettigrew interviewed Wendorf for The Archaeology Channel, exploring Wendorf's productive career: Founding the Fort Burgwin Research Center in New Mexico, now The Archaeological Field School at SMU-in-Taos; founding SMU's Department of Anthropology; and leading the Combined Prehistoric Expedition in the Sahara Desert from 1962 to 1999, the longest international prehistoric expedition in northeastern Africa.

A collection of artifacts from the expedition are housed in The Wendorf Collection of The British Museum.

Listen to the interview

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July 15, 2009

New research partnership at The Archaeology Field School at SMU-in-Taos0

The Archaeology Field School at SMU-in-Taos begins a unique education and research partnership this summer with students and faculty from Mercyhurst College in Erie, Pa., uniting two of the nation's leading archaeology programs on Southern Methodist University's New Mexico campus.

"This collaboration will create one of the strongest archaeology field training programs in the nation, if not the world," said Mike Adler, SMU-in-Taos executive director. "It leverages the strengths of both institutions."

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May 20, 2009

Domestic violence: "Once an abuser, always an abuser" not always true0

Preliminary anthropology research in French Polynesia seems to confirm what psychology and sociology researchers have observed about domestic violence in general: There are two different types. One kind endures and escalates, while the other gradually fades away after a few years.

The findings are those of SMU's Victoria Lockwood, who for three decades has studied the lives of women on the chain of South Pacific islands that includes the tropical paradise of Tahiti.

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April 28, 2009

"Peopling of the Americas" researcher awarded highest honor0

An SMU anthropologist whose work centers on how people first came to inhabit North America has been elected a member of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS). David Meltzer, chair of SMU's Department of Anthropology, has been elected a member of the NAS in recognition for his achievements in original scientific research.

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April 25, 2009

Dig at 16th-century site explores impact of Inca's empire-building0

A 16th century estate in Peru will offer insight into how expanding empires subjugate people and appropriate their resources to promote a cause. Kylie Quave, an SMU graduate student in archaeology, has received a prestigious Fulbright U.S. Student Fellowship to conduct archaeological fieldwork and research in southeastern Peru, the heart of the ancient Inca empire.

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April 14, 2009

Evolution expert honored by Texas Freedom Network0

Evolutionary theory expert Ron Wetherington, an SMU professor of anthropology and director of the University's Center for Teaching Excellence, has received the 2009 Grassroots Hero Award from the Texas Freedom Network (TFN). Wetherington will accept the award April 16 at a ceremony in Dallas.

TFN presents the award each year to "a dedicated individual who exemplifies our work to stand up for science."

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March 6, 2009

Chimú pottery: Peru's conquering Inca left mark0

Amanda Aland, an SMU archaeology graduate student in Dedman College, and a team of students working under her direction in Peru, in 2008 unearthed evidence that the Incas left their mark after conquering the Chimú empire in the 15th century.

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January 22, 2009

Etruscan dig's common objects are unprecedented finds0

SMU's Meadows Museum honors the 15th anniversary of University Distinguished Professor of Art History P. Gregory Warden's groundbreaking archaeological excavation in Poggio Colla, Italy with an exhibition dedicated to the Etruscans.

"From the Temple and the Tomb: Etruscan Treasures From Tuscany" is the most comprehensive exhibition of Etruscan art ever undertaken in the United States, with more than 400 objects spanning the 9th through 2nd centuries B.C.

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November 13, 2008

Digging the Etruscans: Students unearth treasures in Italy0

Senior art history major Jayme Clemente was working in trench No. 35 in July at an archaeological dig 20 miles northeast of Florence, Italy, when something caught her eye.

"I saw something green in the dirt," she recalls. Green is the color of oxidized bronze.

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November 1, 2008

Psychological discomfort discourages eating disorders0

Popular culture's image of the 21st-century woman is tall, large-breasted, narrow-hipped and ultra-slender. Like cultural standards of beauty throughout history, today's "thin ideal" is unattainable for most women; for many, it also can be destructive.

Katherine Presnell, assistant professor of psychology, is helping at-risk teens challenge this ideal with the Body Project, an eating disorder prevention program that she helped develop with psychology professor Eric Stice at the University of Texas at Austin, where she earned her doctorate in 2005.

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October 24, 2008

Tribe, urban poor supply insight into diabetes0

Shawna, who is pregnant, calls diabetes a scourge. She is a member of the Akimel O'odham tribe in Arizona. "Diabetes is a sign that this life we're living isn't our life," she says. "The one our ancestors had was way better."

Before World War II, diabetes was rare among the members of the Akimel O'odhams, also known as the Pima. Today, however, Shawna is among the 12,000 tribal members on the Gila River Reservation in south central Arizona who have the highest recorded rate of diabetes of any population in the world.

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October 20, 2008

Taos: Modern archaeology goes beyond digging0

For hundreds of years the beauty and mystery of Taos, New Mexico, have lured thousands of settlers and visitors, from the ancestors of the Taos and Picuris Indians and Spanish settlers to skiing enthusiasts and artists.

Now students participating in SMU's Archaeology Field School have answered the call of Taos in their own way. In summer 2007 they began work on the first phase of a research project that will bring together University faculty and students, Taos community leaders, private landowners, and local, state and federal government agencies.

The multifaceted undertaking will involve surveying on foot and through satellite and Google Earth images, as well as archival research and excavation. The collaboration marks the first time archaeological exploration has been conducted on the Ranchos de Taos Plaza.

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August 25, 2008

Neanderthals: "Don't call me stupid!"0

New research by a U.S.-U.K. team that included SMU archaeology student Metin Eren assaults the long-held notion that Neanderthals went extinct because their stone tools were inferior to those made by Homo sapiens.

Researchers at Southern Methodist University and the University of Exeter report in the "Journal of Human Evolution" that the early stone tool technologies of Neanderthals were as good as, and sometimes even more efficient, than those of Homo sapiens.

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June 10, 2008

Gender gap at top U.S. universities for women scientists0

According to the National Research Council in 2006, women earned 44.7 percent of the doctorates awarded in the biological sciences between 1993 and 2004. Yet women comprised only 30.2 percent of the assistant professors at the top 50 U.S. universities.

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May 30, 2008

Extreme reality: Women avoid sexual assault in virtual zone0

SMU's Department of Psychology and The Guildhall at SMU have joined forces against dating violence.

Psychology Professors Ernest Jouriles and Renee McDonald, with Guildhall Lecturer Jeff Perryman and Deputy Director Tony Cuevas, are collaborating on a role-playing program that combines virtual reality with behavioral insight to help teach and test sexual assault avoidance techniques.

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July 8, 2007

Happy families can help child fight obesity0

An estimated 18 percent of adolescents in the U.S. are overweight or obese. Robert Hampson, associate professor of psychology in Dedman College, wants to know what role families can play in reducing that rate.

In collaboration with The Cooper Institute and the Family Studies Center at UT Southwestern Medical Center, and with funding from the Hogg Foundation for Mental Health, Hampson has been comparing two group interventions for obese girls and their families.

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February 10, 2007

Family Research Center helps children of family violence0

Each year more than 1 million children in the United States are brought to shelters to escape family violence. Each of their families reports, on average, more than 60 acts of aggression at home during the past year, ranging from pushes and shoves to hits and kicks. More than half of the families report an incident involving a knife or gun.

"Research that studies children who witness violence in the home is fundamental to helping them," says Paige Flink, executive director of The Family Place in Dallas. The Family Research Center, a new program of SMU's Psychology Department in Dedman College, works with shelters such as The Family Place to address the mental health problems of children facing domestic violence.

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