This page highlights websites dedicated to anthropological societies and research organizations. There are sections for archaeology, biological anthropology, and social and cultural anthropology.
The aim of this resource is to make available unpublished fieldwork reports in an easily retrievable fashion. There are currently 12625 reports available and this number is increasing steadily.
Explore the DAACS Website to learn more about enslaved Africans and their descendants, living in the Chesapeake, Carolinas, and Caribbean during the Colonial and Antebellum Periods. Analyze and compare artifacts, deposits, and architectural plans from different sites at unprecedented levels of detail.
University of Michigan's online database of animal natural history, distribution, classification, and conservation biology. Data on many species including text, pictures of living animals, photographs and movies of specimens, and/or recordings of sounds.
Detailed information on fossil hominin specimens as well as extant hominoid specimens. Available information includes skeletal elements present for a particular specimen as well as measurements.
Its purpose is to provide global, collection-based occurrence and taxonomic data for organisms of all geological ages, as well data services to allow easy access to data for independent development of analytical tools, visualization software, and applications of all types.
Emerged in the mid-1980s as a section of the American Anthropological Association (AAA). Its creators imagined it as a forum for discussing and debating all aspects of anthropology connected with the key concept of culture