Assistant Professor, Anthropology; Assistant Curator, Museum of Anthropological Archaeology
[email protected]
Office Information:
Museum of Anthropology
1109 Geddes/4013 Ruthven
Ann Arbor MI 48109-1079
3010 School of Education
phone: 734.763.9864
African Studies Center;
ASC Faculty
Education/Degree:
D.Phil., University of Oxford
About
Brian Stewart’s research focuses on the archaeology of prehistoric hunter-gatherers in Africa, especially southern Africa. He is particularly interested in the evolution of the profound adaptive flexibility that is the hallmark of our species. Southern Africa is a great place to explore this because it has yielded some of the world’s earliest evidence for behavioral complexity on par with recent and extant human foragers. His current project, Adaptations to Marginal Environments in the Middle Stone Age (Project AMEMSA), investigates and compares human adaptive responses to two challenging landscapes in southern Africa: the Lesotho Highlands and the Namaqualand coastal desert. In both research areas, he is conducting rockshelter excavations and open-air landscape archaeological and geomorphological surveys. The aim is to resolve when, why, and how humans learned to cope with challenging environments over the past ~300,000 years. By reconstructing the foraging strategies involved in learning to exploit such habitats within Africa, he hopes to better understand how our species was eventually able to colonize and rapidly adapt to the full range of global ecosystems.