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RICHARD PAINE

Associate Professor

Anthropology

  • Associate Professor
    Anthropology

BIO

I am a bioarchaeologist/paleodemographer interested in relationships between people and their environments across time. I study both how humans have impacted their environments and the return effects for people, especially as they are expressed through ancient disease patterns. For many years, I have been exploring the impact of cycles of epidemic disease on human demography and life history in the Holocene (e.g Paine 2000; Bentley et al. 2002; Paine and Boldsen 2002, 2006; Paine and Storey 2005, 2006, in press). This effort has two goals: first, to examine the specific question of epidemic disease impact on Holocene demography and life histories, and second, to use this specific problem to elucidate and address general problems in the field of paleodemography. I have also used demographic studies based on ancient settlement patterns to explore the ecological impact of population growth and land use on the Classic Maya collapse at Copan, Honduras.

INSTITUTIONAL APPOINTMENTS

  • Associate Professor
    Anthropology1 Jul 2001 - present

ACADEMIC POSITIONS

  • Visiting Assistant Professor
    University of Utah, Anthropology1 Jul 1995 - 14 Sep 1996
  • Assistant Professor
    University of Utah, Anthropology15 Sep 1996 - 30 Jun 2001

DEGREES

  • BA, Anthropology
    McGill University1982
  • PhD, Anthropology and Demography
    Pennsylvania State University1992

LANGUAGES

  • Spanish; Castilian