Jon Hageman
Jon
B.
Hageman
Professor; Coordinator, University Honors Program
Anthropology
College of Arts and Sciences
(773) 442-6045
Expertise
Archaeology
Courses Taught
LLAS 101 - Introduction to Latino and Latin American Studies
FYE 109d - Aliens, Curses, and the chicago Cemetery
ANTH 212 - Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
ANTH 200 - Writing in Anthropology
ANTH 213 - Introduction to Archaeology
ANTH 250 - Latin American Archaeology
ANTH 252 - North American Archaeology
ANTH 290 - Graduating Anthropology
ANTH 337a - Anthropology of Death
ANTH 355 - History of Anthropology
ANTH 374 - The Maya
ANTH 380 - Archaeological Field School
ZHON 193 - Honors Introduction to the Social Sciences
Research Interests
Method and theory; settlement and landscape; complex societies; social organization; Mesoamerica.
Education

Ph.D., Anthropology, Southern Illinois University, 2004

M.A., Anthropology, University of Texas at Austin, 1992

B.A., History, Trinity University, 1989

Selected Publications

Hill, Erica, and Jon B. Hageman (editors). 2016. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.  

Hageman, Jon B. and Erica Hill. 2016. . In The Archaeology of Ancestors: Death, Memory, and Veneration, edited by E. Hill and J.B. Hageman, pp. 1-41. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.

Hill, Erica and Jon B. Hageman. 2016. . In The Archaeology of Ancestors: Death, Memory, and Veneration, edited by E. Hill and J.B. Hageman, pp. 42-80. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.

Hageman, Jon B.  2016. . In The Archaeology of Ancestors: Death, Memory, and Veneration, edited by E. Hill and J.B. Hageman, pp. 213-248. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.

Duncan, William N. and Jon B. Hageman. 2015.  In Archaeology and Bioarchaeology of Population Movement among the Prehispanic Maya, edited by A. Cucina, pp. 133-142. Springer, New York.

Goldstein, David J. and Jon B. Hageman. 2014.  In Plants and People: Choices and Diversity Through Time, edited by Alexandre Chevalier, Elena Marinova, and Leonor Peña, pp. 444-48. EARTH Sustainable Agriculture Reference Series, Volume 1. European Science Foundation, Brussels. 

Goldstein, David J., and Jon B. Hageman. 2010.  In Food and Feasting in Mesoamerican Civilization: Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Roles of Consumables and Ritual Performance, pp. 421-440, edited by John E. Staller and Michael Carrasco. Springer, New York.  

Hageman, Jon B., and David J. Goldstein. 2009.  Journal of Archaeological Science 36:2841-2852.  

Sullivan, Lauren A., Jon B. Hageman, Brett A. Houk, Paul J. Hughbanks, and Fred Valdez, Jr. 2008. Structure Abandonment and Landscape Transformation: Examples from the Three Rivers Region. , edited by Travis Stanton and Aline Magnoni, pp. 91-112. University Press of Colorado, Boulder. 

Houk, Brett A., and Jon B. Hageman. 2007. Lost and Found: (Re)-Placing Say Ka in the La Milpa Suburban Settlement Pattern.  Mexicon 29:152-156. 

Hageman, Jon B. 2004.  Ancient Mesoamerica 15:63-74. 

William R. Fowler and Jon B. Hageman. 2004. . Ancient Mesoamerica 15:61-62. 

Hageman, Jon B., and Jon C. Lohse. 2003.  In Heterarchy, Political Economy, and the Ancient Maya, edited by V.L. Scarborough, F. Valdez, Jr., and N.P. Dunning, pp. 109-121. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.

Beach, Timothy, Sheryl Luzzader-Beach, Nicholas Dunning, Jon Hageman, and Jon Lohse. 2003.  The Geographical Review 92 (3):372-397.  

Hageman, Jon B. and David A. Bennett. 2000.  In Practical Applications of GIS for Archaeologists: A Predictive Modeling Toolkit, edited by K. Wescott and R.J. Brandon, pp. 113-127. Taylor and Francis, London. 

Room B 141
91Porn
5500 North St. Louis Avenue
Chicago, IL 60625
United States

(773) 442-6045
Office Hours
Fall 2022 Virtual Office Hours
Tuesday and Thursday: 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
Main Campus
Curriculum Vitae
Siobhan Cooke
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B.
Cooke
Anthropology
College of Arts and Sciences
(773) 442-5688
Courses Taught
ANTH 109 - FYE: Skeletons in Chicago Closets
ANTH 215 - Human Origins: Introduction to Biological Anthropology
ANTH 327 - Dental Anthropology
ANTH 329 - Evolution of the Human Diet
ANTH 339 - Paleoanthropology: Fossil Record of Human Evolution
ANTH 355 - WIP: History of Anthropology
ANTH 356 - Human Variation
WGS 317 - Science and the Gendered Body
Research Interests
My research focuses on the paleobiology and biogeography of the extinct South American primates with a special emphasis on the Caribbean region. I am particularly interested in understanding how the modern primate radiation developed in the diverse environments of the new world from the Miocene to the present. Due to the vagaries of the fossil record, teeth are often the only evidence of a mammalian species recovered in the field, but these fossils can provide a valuable window into the paleobiology and phylogenetic relationships of the extinct animal. To analyze how a dentition is uniquely adapted to an animal's dietary profile, I use high-resolution laser scanning to create virtual models of teeth, on which data are collected. Using three-dimensional models, I can analyze how teeth fit together to process food, can study how wear patterns differ across primates of different dietary guilds, and can explore the relationship between an animal's phylogenetic history and functional morphology. Conducting these analyses on the dentition of extant primates of known dietary profile also allows for the possibility of dietary reconstruction in extinct forms through analogy. In addition to my laboratory-based analyses of primate teeth, I also conduct paleontological fieldwork in the Dominican Republic and in Colombia. I am currently accepting undergraduate research students who are interested in conducting projects related to dentition and feeding, three-dimensional modeling, and Caribbean and South American paleontology.
Education

Ph.D. Physical Anthropology, Graduate Center, City University of New York, 2011

M. Phil. Physical Anthropology, Graduate Center, City University of New York, 2007

B.A. Anthropology and Music, Barnard College, Columbia University, 2002

Selected Publications

Allen, K.L., Cooke, S.B., Gonzales, L.A., Kay, R.F. 2015. Dietary Inference from Upper and Lower Molar Morphology in Platyrrhine Primates. PLoS ONE 10 (3): e0118732. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0118732

Cooke, S.B., Terhune, C.E. 2015. Form, function, and geometric morphometrics. The Anatomical Record 298: 5-28.

Terhune, C.E., Cooke, S.B., Otárolo-Castillo, E. 2015. Form and function in the platyrrhine skull: A three-dimensional analysis of dental and TMJ morphology. The Anatomical Record 298: 29-47.

Winchester, J.M., Boyer, D.M., St. Clair, E.M., Gosselin-Ildari, A., Cooke, S.B., Ledogar, J. 2014. Dental topography of platyrrhines and prosimians: convergences and contrasts. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 153: 29-44.

Rosenberger A.L., Klukkert, Z. Cooke, S.B., Rímoli, R. Rethinking Antillothrix: The mandible and its implications. 2013. American Journal of Primatology 75: 825-836.

Velazco, P.M., O’Neill, H., Gunnell, G.F., Cooke, S.B., Rosenberger, A.L., Rímoli, R., Simmons, N.B. 2013. Quaternary bat diversity in the Dominican Republic. American Museum Novitates 3779: 1-20.

Cooke, S.B. 2011. Paleodiet of extinct platyrrhines with emphasis on the Caribbean forms: three-dimensional geometric morphometrics of mandibular second molars. 2011. The Anatomical Record 294: 2073-2091.

Rosenberger, A.L., Halenar, L.B., Cooke, S.B. 2011. The making of platyrrhine semi-folivores: models for the evolution of folivory in primates. The Anatomical Record 294: 2112-2130.

Cooke, S.B., Rosenberger, A.L., Turvey, S. 2011. An extinct monkey from Haiti and the origins of the Greater Antillean primates. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108: 2699-2704.

Rosenberger, A.L., Cooke, S.B., Rímoli, R., Ni, X., Cardosa, L. 2011. First skull of Antillothrix bernensis, an extinct relict platyrrhine from the Dominican Republic. Proceedings of the Royal Academy of Sciences, B 278(1702): 67-74.

Rosenberger, A.L., Tejedor, M., Cooke, S.B., Pekar, S. 2009. Platyrrhine ecophylogenetics in space and time. In: Garber, P., Estrada, A., Bicca-Marques, J.C., Heymann, E.W., Strier, K.B.,  (Eds.) South American primates: comparative perspectives in the study of behavior, ecology and conservation. Springer, New York, pp. 85-122.

BBH 140
5500 N. St. Louis Ave.
Chicago, IL 60625
United States

(773) 442-5688
Office Hours
Fall 2015 T/TH: 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. W: 11:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Main Campus
Curriculum Vitae
Explore what it means to be human. Through distinct perspectives, anthropology is the study of human beings from past to present both near and far.

What is Anthropology?

Anthropology is the study of what it means to be human in all its biological and cultural diversity, and as it changes over time.  Anthropologists address this complex subject from multiple perspectives:

  • Biological anthropologists investigate the development and evolution of human beings and their relatives by studying the fossil record, genetics, and primate ecology and behavior.
  • Archaeologists study the cultural life of peoples and societies of the past by examining the material remains they left behind, including buildings, stone artifacts, pottery, and organic materials.
  • Cultural anthropologists explore the diversity of practices and perspectives through which contemporary people live their lives and experience the world.

Taken together, these complementary approaches make up the discipline of anthropology and provide a holistic portrait of the human experience.

Studying Anthropology at Northeastern

Northeastern's Anthropology Department focuses on developing students who are well-versed in the methods, theories, and findings of the three subfields: biological anthropology, archaeology and cultural anthropology.

Through their coursework, students learn about the full arc of the human story, from the beginnings of human life until today, and from all corners of the globe to right here in Chicago. Along the way, students who major or minor in anthropology gain a valuable set of intellectual and practical skills that serve them well in a broad range of post-graduation career and educational endeavors.

Anthropology Major (B.A.)

Anthropology Minor

Interested in Exploring?

If you have any questions about our program, please stop by our office on the main campus (BBH 134A) or email Anthropology Coordinator Dr. Lesa Davis, lcdavis@neiu.edu.