Brigham Young University. Department of Archaeology and Anthropology
Administrative History
The Department of Archaeology and Anthropology (1965-1980) was an administrative unit at Brigham Young University.
The Department of Archaeology and Anthropology was created in 1965 when the Department of Sociology and Anthropology split and the anthropology program merged with the Department of Archaeology. The department taught students the fundamentals of anthropology, focusing on living human societies and their particularities, and archaeology, concentrated on understanding previous civilizations based on their material artifacts. Department chairs were Ross T. Christensen (1965-1968), Merlin G. Myers (1968-1979), and John L. Sorenson (1979-1980). In 1980 it was renamed to the Department of Anthropology.
Citation:
BYU Organizational History Project, via WWW, March 30, 2018 (Brigham Young University. Dept. of Anthropology and Archaeology; created in 1965 when the Department of Sociology and Anthropology split and the anthropology program merged with the Department of Archaeology; In 1980 renamed the Department of Anthropology; Ross T. Christensen (1965-1968), Merlin G. Myers (1968-1979), and John L. Sorenson (1979-1980); The department had as goal to teach students the fundamentals of anthropology and archaeology, anthropology focusing on living human societies and their particularities, while archaeology concentrated on understanding previous civilizations based on their material artifacts)Found in 1 Collection or Record:
Department of Anthropology and Archaeology administrative records, 1941-1978
Contains Brigham Young University wide administrative memos, records of financial acquisition and maintenance, department faculty, student records, administrative records pertaining to department courses and other administrative records for Brigham Young University's Department of Anthropology and Archaeology. Materials dated 1941-1978.