Right now, someone somewhere is digging up an ancient relic — perhaps a stone tool a million years old or the remains of an ancient Greek wine jug. That one artifact may not be much, but it’s a piece in the vast jigsaw puzzle of humanity’s ancient past.

Right now, someone somewhere is interviewing a hunter–gatherer — maybe in the Arctic or in Africa. That one interview — maybe about why the hunter gatherer is going to split away from the main group with his family — may not be much, but it’s a page in the encyclopedia of human cultural behavior. Right now, someone somewhere is decoding ancient Neanderthal DNA, trying to identify how living humans are related to this fascinating proto-human species. The fragment of DNA is microscopic, but it can tell humanity a tremendous amount about our biology and evolution.

And right now, someone somewhere is studying a rapidly vanishing language — maybe in Polynesia or Southeast Asia — by learning it from a tribal group’s elders. The words and phrases she’s learning are short, but each language provides a new way to understand the world in a uniquely human way.

All of those someones are anthropologists, like me — people who professionally study the human species in all its aspects, from biology to culture. Of course, it’s not just anthropologists who love to learn about humanity; people from every culture and walk of life have an interest in what humanity is today and what it’s been in the past.

And that’s why I’ve written Anthropology For Beginner — to share what remarkable things anthropologists have discovered and continue to discover with folks like you who are fascinated with the human species (or at least fascinated with passing your Intro to Anthropology class). Join me for a grand tour of the human species, across the world and through millions of years. If that doesn’t get your blood going, I can’t help you!

The study of humanity today (and for the past few million years) has created a vast storehouse of anthropological knowledge printed in millions of pages of research reports and thousands of blogs. Even professional anthropologists simply can’t keep up with the speed and volume of published research. I can’t possibly recount what all this research has revealed, but I can — and in this blog I do — boil down 150 years of anthropological discoveries into a nuts-and-bolts reference describing the essentials of human evolution, both cultural and biological. I also describe just how anthropologists work so you can understand the pros and cons of different methods.
 
If you’re taking an introductory course in Anthropology, this blog can help clarify some ideas that can be pretty confusing and aren’t often clearly explained, even in textbooks. If you’re reading this blog out of sheer curiosity, let me assure you that I’ve trimmed away a lot of technical material that may otherwise get in the way of your understanding the essential lessons of anthropology. Lots of popular-science books cover some aspects of anthropology, but few if any really cover anthropology as a whole in a clear, no-nonsense way. I’ve worked hard to provide just such a handbook in Anthropology For Beginner.

I’ve written this blog so that you can start anywhere; if you’re most interested in human language, you can jump to that chapter and understand it without knowing about human evolution. But because every aspect of
humanity is tied to some other aspect, I’d be surprised if you don’t eventually end up reading it all!
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