Research Laboratories

  • Archaeological Ceramics and Materials Science (ACMS) Lab (Coordinator: Eschbach)
    Researchers and students in the ACMS Laboratory analyze ceramics by drawing on both traditional archaeological methods and interdisciplinary approaches from materials science. Archaeologists study ceramics in order to date sites and understand past social networks and boundaries, migration, economic exchange, labor relations, technological change, food preparation, commensality, and much more. The lab is equipped with stereo microscopes, a petrographic microscope with camera, a portable ​X-ray fluorescence spectrometer (pXRF), processing equipment (saw, ball mill, hydraulic press, and fume hood), and an electric kiln. Although much of the focus in the ACMS lab is on ceramic analysis, the use of lab resources for the analysis of other archaeological materials is encouraged. 
  • Court Archaeological Research Facility: (Collections Manager: Jacob Weakley)
    The Court Archaeological Research Facility serves as the primary repository for NAGPRA collections held by the University of Cincinnati. Research related to these collections is restricted to collections documentation explicitly oriented toward NAGPRA compliance and repatriation, and that which is driven by tribal partners. The facility also has a smart classroom and laboratory space with a fume hood, microscopes, and basic laboratory equipment. 
  • Ethnography Lab (Coordinator: Stephanie Sadre-Orafai)
  • Grogan Lab (Coordinator: Grogan) 
  • Research in the Grogan Lab focuses on the intersection between genomic variation and fitness across environmental variation in wild, ring-tailed lemurs and Ugandan hunter-gatherers.
  • Human Osteology Lab (Coordinator: Crowley)
  • Mediterranean Ecosystem Dynamics and Archaeology Lab (Coordinator: Allen)
    The MEDArch Laboratory provides space and resources (microscopes, comparative material, fume hood, reference books and databases) for research in landscape archaeology, ethnoecology, and archaeobotany. Although the research emphasis is on the Balkans, Mediterranean and Near East, the comparative collection includes plant materials from the Eastern Woodlands and American Southwest, and students may also work on research projects in these areas.
  • Molecular Computational and Human-Variation Analysis Lab (Coordinator: Norton)
    Students and researchers in MoCHA use genetic and genomic data to answer key questions about human evolution. In particular, research focuses on identifying genetic loci that have been targeted by natural selection in our recent evolutionary past. These studies often use a combination of wet-lab and computational techniques to investigate the complex history of adaptation in the human species. Thus far key projects have focused on identifying loci associated with normal variation in human skin pigmentation and exploring the role of natural selection in shaping malaria resistance in various tropical regions.
  • Quaternary Paleoecology Laboratory (Coordinator: Crowley)
    The Quaternary Paleoecology Laboratory is set up for processing biological remains from plants and animals for stable isotope analysis and radiocarbon dating. Lab equipment includes a microbalance, dental drill, boom mounted trinocular microscope attached to a computer work station, and a freeze drier equipped with a standard drying chamber as well as a centrivap concentrator.