Labs
The department of Anthropology have a wide range of facilities available to postgraduate students. Please see below for a short discription of each lab.
Physical Activity Lab
Directed by Dr Tessa Pollard
This holds equipment for monitoring physical activity in people going about their everyday lives, including accelerometers and GPS devices. Sedentary lifestyles pose one of the key threats to health in many populations and our research focuses on understanding how and why activity levels differ across different groups. Current research uses mixed quantitative and qualitative methods and focuses on activity in migrant populations in the UK and in hunter-gatherers in Africa.
Durham Ecology and Endocrinology Laboratory (DEEL)
Directed by Professor Gillian Bentley
This lab was set up in 2009 to measure biological markers in human samples in relation to health/disease, population well being, human behaviour and/or environment. We do this using human saliva, blood, or urine samples. Hormones of particular interest to us include (cortisol, testosterone, progesterone, oestradiol, and DHEAS). We also assess levels of immunity markers (C-reactive protein) in saliva. Our purpose built facility includes fridge and freezer storage and is fully equipped to process samples and perform enzyme linked immuno-absorbent (ELISA) assays. Students from all degree-levels (undergraduate and postgraduate) have been working on various projects in the lab. Find out more about Durham Ecology and Endocrinology Laboratory.
Sleep Lab
Directed by Professor Helen Ball
This lab is home to a team of researchers who investigate the behaviour and physiology of infant, child and adult sleep, night-time parenting, infant feeding, and other infant and child health issues. Using biocultural and evolutionary perspectives we investigate sleep issues in the lab, hospital, community and home environments. The sleep lab houses integrated state of the art video and physiology monitoring equipment and was refurbished and upgraded in 2010. We enthusiastically involve students of all levels in our projects, from undergraduates to PhD, and over the past 10 years have provided research opportunities for over 80 volunteers, interns, and research associates. Find out more about the research-life of the Parent-Infant Sleep Lab.
Bilsborough Laboratory
This is a teaching laboratory in Biological Anthropology and houses one of the best collections of fossil hominin cast material in the country, comprising an extensive collection of hominin casts as well as human and non-human primate skeletal material, with an emphasis on skulls (approximately 70 non-human primate examples and 25 human skulls, some with associated postcrania). This material may be suitable for research purposes depending on the project. Linear measurements as well as 3D data capture is possible under supervision, and digital callipers, scanning equipment and digitizers can also be made available. Students are encouraged to talk to Dr Kris Fire Kovarovic and Dr Una Strand Vidarsdottir as early as possible to explore the possibility of developing a palaeoanthropological or morphometric project linked to these collections.
Modern DNA Laboratory
This is housed in a newly refurbished and purpose built facility consisting of several clean rooms. The labs contain centrifuges, PCR machines, extraction hoods, and several refrigerators and freezers allowing up to four people to work simultaneously. Shared with Archaeology, the laboratory focuses on the analysis of non-human DNA.
Bioinformatics Laboratory
This is one of the best shape analysis laboratories in the country, providing data collecting and analytical facilities for all aspects of morphometric research. Equipment includes 3D digitisers, scanners and microscopes, as well as the computers needed for 2D data acquisition and analysis of both 2D and 3D data. The laboratory also houses the analytical facilities for the DNA laboratory.
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