Welcome to Explorations and biological anthropology!
Edited by Beth Shook, Lara Braff, Katie Nelson, and Kelsie Aguilera.
Mission Statement: To provide a high-quality introductory biological anthropology textbook that is readable, engaging, and accessible to all students. With chapters written by experienced instructors and subject area specialists, this textbook addresses the question of what it means to be human by exploring the origins, evolution, and diversification of primates, especially that of our species, Homo sapiens.
Anthropology is the study of humanity, in all its biological and cultural aspects, past and present. It is a four-field discipline comprised of biological anthropology, cultural anthropology, archaeology, and linguistic anthropology. The focus of this book is biological anthropology, which explores who we are from biological, evolutionary, and adaptive perspectives.
We lay the foundation for this inquiry in the first four chapters by introducing the discipline of anthropology, evolutionary theory, molecular biology and genetics, and the forces of evolution.
What's New in the 2nd Edition?
- Two new chapters;
- More concise chapters (8,000 to 10,000 words, not including call out boxes);
- Updated chapters with new discoveries and events;
- Diversity, equity and inclusion principles applied to the text and images;
- Enhanced accessibility standards reviewed by the ASCCC-OERI;
- Instructor guide detailing how to adapt the book to better fit your course.
- Student reviewed content.
An electronic version of this textbook is available free of charge at the Society for Anthropology in Community Colleges' webpage here: www.explorations.americananthro.org