About

My name is Ethan Fulwood and I am an undergraduate in anthropology and ecology at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. This blog is my attempt to share my own evolving understanding of the fascinating cluster of disciplines that is anthropology and its related fields. And, it is an exercise in education for me, both in the material I try to cover and in learning the process of communicating it effectively. So, reader, consider yourself a patron of American higher education.

My own interests tend most strongly to primatology, paleoanthropology, and primate evolution. But this blog addresses issues from across anthropology and ventures into my other various interests, from vertebrate paleontology to science fiction, as blog-worthy topics present themselves.


Comments

  1. Quote

    Dear Mr. Fulwood:
    It is likely that you have read Henry Harpending’s The 10,000 Year Explosion. Harpending greatly enjoyed my book called Apes or Angels? Darwin, Dover, Human Nature, and Race. I suspect that you would also enjoy my book and your readers might benefit from discussing it.
    Check the website and let me know if you want a copy. It is anathema to liberals but contains enough evidence and good arguments to raise hackels widely.
    Best wishes,
    Cornelius Troost

  2. Quote

    Mr. Ethan Fulwood,

    I found your website not too long ago and wanted to tell you that I really enjoy your blog. Loved the posts about the adapoid. I have never seen such a weird looking creature. That was a great post!

    My name is Jeffrey and I’m with ASPEX, a leading producer of Scanning Electron Microscopes (SEM) and Microanalysis software. We work directly with the investigation of fossils and other anthropology fields.

    I wanted to contact you about something unique that my company is doing right now, since I thought some of your readers might be interested in seeing some specimen of their choosing up close…real close…under a powerful microscope.

    We’re offering you and your readers a free SEM scan of any sample you’d like to send us. You can send us a piece of clothing, a fossil, or even a dead insect…anything you would like to see a picture of under a powerful microscope. It’s pretty cool. You can either ask readers to send in their own samples or you can run a poll on your site and ask your readers to vote on something for you to send in…or both!

    Once we receive the samples, we’ll notify senders of their results via email. You can view other reports we’ve done here:
    http://www.aspexcorp.com/resources/send_sample.html

    We would love it if you can share this with your readers in a blog posting and link to us. We can talk about details if you’re interested. Also don’t hesitate to pass this along to friends or colleagues who would find this useful.

    Thanks and I look forward to hearing from you.

    Jeffrey

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