10/05/2023
Hi! Dr. Anthropology has recently gotten so many photos and questions from people who have found what they believe are fossils or dinosaur eggs or bones—there are so many fossils in the world! However, it is very difficult to be able to figure out what the fossil might be without seeing it in person. And you need someone who knows a lot about your kind of fossil to really identify it. So, your best bet would be to look for a local archaeology group, historical museum, or science museum with a "bring your fossil" day to try to help you figure out what kind of a fossil you have. Also very important is to document where you found the fossil—without that information, there will not be an opportunity to date the fossil because it is the surrounding dirt and materials that would be able to date your fossil. And, many rocks look like they may have a "face" or other interesting looking configuration, but they are just a rock!
Occasionally, someone does find something incredible! But if you do—and you really think it is something significant—leave it in place, contact your local university, museum staff, or archaeology group and let them know what you found. A man in Portugal found a giant dinosaur in his backyard.
And good luck doing the research to find out about your fossil!
Portuguese Man Accidentally Finds 82-Foot-Long Dinosaur in His Backyard
During rennovations, the owner of the property in central Portugal noticed the presence of several fragments of fossilized bones in his yard.
03/01/2023
It's on! March Mammal Madness! See the library guide to download the brackets and start playing!
LibGuides: March Mammal Madness: How to Play
The official location for March Mammal Madness tournament information and resources! If you're learning, you're winning!
07/19/2022
What is it like to be a student abroad on a research project? Follow along with HOMER project student blog to find out!
Arma Veirana 2022 Season: Post 1
T- 5 days until we're off! Welcome to the first blog post from the Arma Veirana 2022 Summer season! Our group consists of Dr. Jamie Hodgkin...
03/17/2022
Institute of Human Origins
Your philanthropic support fuels discovery and innovation in the science of human origins.
03/09/2022
Next week is ASU's Sun Devil Giving Day—a special day of philanthropy! Please consider giving a donation of any size on Thursday, March 17, to benefit the Institute of Human Origins' graduate students—either to a general fund to help students cover research needs or to one of IHO's scholarship funds. Look for a posting next Thursday for the links to donate! And Thank YOU!
01/18/2022
Buy tickets to A Night of Discovery at Orpheum Theater in Flagstaff on February 18, 2022
Lowell Observatory and Orpheum Theater present A Night of Discovery, a celebration to commemorate the anniversary of Clyde Tombaugh’s discovery of the icy world Pluto on February 18, 1930. Mingle with
10/18/2021
Launch of NASA's Lucy Mission to Jupiter's Trojan Asteroids
Set a reminder: Our Lucy mission is scheduled to launch on Sat., Oct. 16 at 5:34 a.m. EDT (9:34 UTC) to ancient asteroids called Trojans.The Trojan asteroids...
10/13/2021
It's Lucy Mission week! Lucy is at the Prelaunch press briefing that starts in 10 minutes! Check it out on NASA TV on Youtube.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21X5lGlDOfg