Ariel Marie Gruenthal-Rankin is a/an Lecturer in the California State University department at California State University
Humboldt State University - Anthropology
Research Associate
I conduct research into human skeletal biology and work with students to plan and execute research in biological anthropology. Current research has focuses on stable isotopic analysis of diet and migration in medieval Prussia.
Lecturer
Courses taught as sole instructor (2012-present):
ANTH 105: Archaeology and World Prehistory (3 semesters)
ANTH 303: Human Biology and Evolution (3 semesters)
ANTH 306: World Regions: Egypt (2 semesters)
ANTH 332: Forensic Anthropology (2 semesters)
ANTH 338: Biological Anthropology Lab (2 semesters)
ANTH 339: Zooarchaeology
ANTH 339: Advanced BioAnth Methods
ANTH 485: Special Topics: Forensic Taphonomy
Instructor of Record
Ariel worked at Binghamton University as a Instructor of Record
Graduate Teaching Assistant
I run discussion sections on anthropological topics such as linguistics and archaeology and world prehistory.
Lecturer
Teaching introductory courses in biological anthropology
Bachelor of Arts (B.A.)
Anthropology
Research Associate
I conduct research into human skeletal biology and work with students to plan and execute research in biological anthropology. Current research has focuses on stable isotopic analysis of diet and migration in medieval Prussia.
Lecturer
Courses taught as sole instructor (2012-present):
ANTH 105: Archaeology and World Prehistory (3 semesters)
ANTH 303: Human Biology and Evolution (3 semesters)
ANTH 306: World Regions: Egypt (2 semesters)
ANTH 332: Forensic Anthropology (2 semesters)
ANTH 338: Biological Anthropology Lab (2 semesters)
ANTH 339: Zooarchaeology
ANTH 339: Advanced BioAnth Methods
ANTH 485: Special Topics: Forensic Taphonomy
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)
Physical and Biological Anthropology
Instructor of Record
Graduate Teaching Assistant
I run discussion sections on anthropological topics such as linguistics and archaeology and world prehistory.
Master of Science (M.Sc.)
Forensic Anthropology
Thesis: Differential Pattern of Decomposition in Charred vs. Un-Charred Remains