About the Centre
About the Centre and what we do
Research which takes a collaborative, fieldwork-based approach to evolutionary anthropology.
The Centre was founded in 2004 and is the only formally recognised research centre in the Faculty of Science. Focusing on biological anthropology in a science rather than a social science milieu engenders a strong interdisciplinary and hypothesis-testing approach to our research, which has an emphasis on fieldwork.
Recent highlights
Researchers from our centre have:
- pioneered use of AI to monitor animal populations and identify fossil tracks
- supported reconciliation through recovery of war missing
- uncovered indication of complex cooking by Neanderthals
- led worldwide orangutan conservation efforts
- documented discovery of Australopithecus sediba
- helped to unravel the mystery of where dogs underwent domestication
Notable collaborations
Some of our current collaborations include:
- Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
- Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Program
- Institut Congolais pour la Conservation de la Nature (DRC)
- Historic England
- National Crime Agency
- University of Cambridge
- Natural History Museum
- Museum of Archaeology and Ethnography, University of Sao Paulo
- University of Witwatersrand
- University of Cape Town
- Arizona State University
- University of Kyoto
- University of Calgary
- Stony Brook University
- Stanford University
For further information about whom we work with, see the area of expertise you are interested in.