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New Mexico State University

Faculty Anthropology

Rani Alexander: Dr. Alexander is an archaeologist whose interests include Mesoamerican complex societies, colonial ethnohistory, and political economy.
Brenda Benefit: Dr. Benefit is a biological anthropologist focusing on the evolution of Miocene, Pliocene, and Pleistocene catarrhine primates (Old World monkeys and apes) in Africa, paleoecology, dental variation, and dental correlates of diet (including functional morphology and enamel microwear) in living and fossil primates.
Christine Eber: Dr. Eber is a cultural anthropologist whose areas of research include gender, religion, art, humanistic anthropology, feminist theory, women's studies, and indigenous peoples of Mexico.
Weldon Lamb:
Lawrence L. Loendorf: Dr. Loendorf is an archaeologist whose research focuses on the Great Plains, the U. S. Southwest, ethnography, and rock art.
Lisa Lucero: Dr. Lucero is an archaeologist whose interests include Mesoamerica, political power, and ritual. Her resource control and ritual articulate in the emergence of political leaders, particularly in the Maya lowlands.
Monte McCrossin: Dr. McCrossin is a biological anthropologist whose interests include the following topics: fossil evidence for human evolution; paleoanthropology of Africa (study of human origins that comes from integration of evidence from biological anthropology and paleolithic archaeology); the ecology, behavior, and adaptive history of non-human primates; dietary and locomotor adaptations; paleoecology.
Beth O'Leary: Dr. O’Leary’s areas of interest include both cultural anthropology and archeology. She has done research on Athapaskan cultures in Canada and the U.S. She also has 25 years of experience in cultural resource management in New Mexico and west Texas. She is also a published fiction writer.
Don Pepion: Dr. Pepion teaches courses for the minor in Native American Studies.
Terry Reynolds: As an anthropologist, Dr. Reynolds is an ethnohistorian/ethnographer. Her research interests include Southwestern arts and crafts production; historic village economies among Southwestern peoples; and the ethnohistory of peoples in the Mesilla and El Paso Valleys.
Scott Rushforth: Dr. Rushforth is a cultural anthropologist and linguistic anthropologist who studies American Indian language, culture, and society. He is especially interested in Athapaskan languages and cultures.
Lois Stanford: Dr. Stanford is a cultural anthropologist who focuses on economic anthropology, development, Latin America, and Mexico.
Ed Staski: Dr. Edward Staski is Professor of Anthropology and Director of the University Museum. His current research includes continuing archaeological investigations along El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro, one of the earliest long-distance trails established by Europeans in North America. As University Museum Director, Dr. Staski's major projects include raising grant and other monies to increase support for research and teaching activities at the Museum, various building improvements, bringing the Museum into compliance with NAGPRA, and better organizing and protecting Museum collections.
Wenda Trevathan: Dr. Trevathan is a biological anthropologist concerned with childbirth, medical anthropology, nutritional anthropology, human sexuality, and human evolution.
William Walker: Dr. Walker is an archaeologist who studies southwestern archaeology and ritual in prehistory.

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