Assistant Professor, Anthropology; Assistant Curator, Asian Archaeology, UMMAA
avenmil@umich.edu
Office Information:
Suite 3010 School of Education Bldg (Room 3040)
610 E. University Avenue
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1259
phone: 734-764-0484
Anthropology;
Archaeology
Education/Degree:
Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh
MA, New Mexico State University
BA, State University of New York at Buffalo
About
Research Interests: Ancient diet and mobility, pastoral lifeways and social complexity, rise of urban economies, dairying and domestication; Central Asia, Inner Asia, Siberia.
As a researcher, I apply biomolecular techniques to investigate how shifts in food production intersect with the emergence of complex societies. As part of a multi-species anthropological approach, I explore the mechanisms fueling urbanization including residential mobility, settlement provisioning, and the adoption of domesticates such as millet and livestock. Although focused on Central and Inner Asia, my work has global implications as it integrates science and anthropology to intercede in narratives that consider pastoralists inherently nomadic and lacking urbanization. Through novel isotopic and proteomic methods, my work provides nuanced answers to questions o domestication and urbanization in the past. I have an active laboratory program that combines archaeology and chemistry to study ancient cuisines and human mobility. My current fieldwork focuses on a proto-urban site in central Kazakhstan and salvaging a looted Mongol era cemetery in northern Mongolia.
Affiliations:
- University of Michigan Museum of Anthropological Archaeology
- University of Michigan Department of Anthropology
- Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History