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Christina Torres-Rouff
(PhD, UC Santa Barbara, 2003)
Associate Professor of Anthropology: 2009-
First Year at Colorado College: 2003
Office: Barnes 402
Phone Extension: 6826
E-mail: ctorresrouff
at coloradocollege.edu
Biological anthropology, bioarcheology, paleopathology, cultural
modifications of the body, ethnicity; Andean South America, Mesopotamia.
Christina Torres-Rouff is a
bioarchaeologist with research centered on human skeletal
remains from complex societies. There are two main components
to her work, both of which revolve around how populations
reacted to social and environmental change. The first examines
the way that the body was used as social symbol and a marker
of identity that was influenced and modified by the world
around it. The second views the same forces and how they affected
individual well-being (i.e. health). These foci interrelate
to create a more thorough understanding of ancient peoples
and how they interacted with their neighbors and their space.
Christina is currently in the midst of two projects that address
these research questions concerning health and the interactions
between members of a society and state level structures. The
first project is a multi-year investigation of over twelve
hundred individuals excavated in northern Chile where small
groups of pre-Columbian agro-pastoralists interacted with
the Tiwanaku state and the subsequent Inca Empire. The second
focuses on approximately five hundred individuals from the
site of Kish, a Mesopotamian city-state with influence and
interactions that extended far beyond the Fertile Crescent.
Visit Christina's personal
website here
Courses:
AN101:
Biological Anthropology
AN201: Human Evolution
AN202: Human Biological
Variation
AN207: Prehistory of the
Andes
AN301: Human Osteology
AN303: Bioarchaeology
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