Archaeology
Newly opened exhibit at the University of Colorado Museum celebrates ceramic artist’s donation and the legacy of her family and community.
CU Boulder archaeologist Scott Ortman and colleagues around the world explore relationships between housing size and inequality in PNAS Special Feature.
In his upcoming book, ‘Hoof Beats: How Horses Shaped Human History,’ William Taylor writes that today’s world has been molded by humans’ relationship to horses.
Team co-led by CU Boulder classics researcher unearths the upper portion of a huge, ancient pharaonic statue whose lower half was discovered in 1930; Ramessess II was immortalized in Percy Bysshe Shelly’s ‘Ozymandias.'
CU Boulder archaeologist Sarah Kurnick addresses some common myths about archaeology at the 50th anniversary of the discovery of China’s terracotta warriors.
Assistant Professor William Taylor’s new study offers a telling glimpse into the lives of humans and horses in South America.
CU Museum of Natural History launches pilot for science-education tools using American Sign Language
A recently published paper co-authored by CU Boulder’s Fernando Villanea offers new insights into what happened to the populations of Central Mexico a millennium ago.
Dimitri Nakassis, classics professor and former ‘genius grant’ winner, lands support from National Endowment for the Humanities to complete paradigm-shifting study of ancient Greece.
Marine concrete from the Roman empire has proven to stand the test of time—and offers insights into ways to combat rising sea levels now.