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Deborah Blom

Deborah E. Blom

Primary Field
Biological Anthropology
https://www.uvm.edu/cas/anthropology
Associate Professor, University of Vermont, Department of Anthropology
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    PostedThursday, August 11, 2022 at 7:28 PM
    With Fulbright Awards, Faculty Seek New Knowledge Around the World - UVM archeologist and professor of anthropology Deborah Blom is an active researcher at Tiwanaku, undertaking laboratory work and excavations in collaboration with Bolivian scholars, leaders, and other local stakeholders over the past 25 years. Through a Fulbright US Scholars award, Blom will return to Tiwanaku three times over the next three years, starting with a trip this fall.
    With Fulbright Awards, Faculty Seek New Knowledge Around the World - UVM archeologist and professor of anthropology Deborah Blom is an active researcher at Tiwanaku, undertaking laboratory work and excavations in collaboration with Bolivian scholars, leaders, and other local stakeholders over the past 25 years. Through a Fulbright US Scholars award, Blom will return to Tiwanaku three times over the next three years, starting with a trip this fall.
Knowledge / Expertise
Interest/Specialty Areas Bioarchaeology, identity, social complexity, childhood
Biography

After spending her childhood in Mattoon, Illinois, Deborah Blom began her college career in biomedical engineering at Northwestern University. However, discovering anthropology later in college, she ultimately received her B.S. in Anthropology from the University of Houston and her M.A. and Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of Chicago. She joined the Anthropology faculty at the University of Vermont in 1998.

Blom has undertaken field work in Mesoamerica, Andean South America, and the U.S. She specializes in archaeology and biological anthropology and is interested in the study of human skeletal remains in archaeological contexts. While residing in the state of Vermont, Blom has also been active in reporting on human burials from Native and European American cemeteries that have been disturbed through construction or slated for repatriation. Building on her interests, Blom has taught several courses at UVM and elsewhere, including Introduction to Prehistoric Archaeology, Archaeological Theory, Laboratory Methods in Biological Anthropology, Introduction to Physical Anthropology, Origins and Evolution of Human Culture, Peoples of South America, Funerary Archaeology and Bioarchaeology, Advanced Human Evolution, Nonhuman Primate Social Behavior, Life, Death, and the Human Body, and Human Osteology.

Currently, Blom focuses her research in South American Andean regions of Peru and Bolivia, addressing question of health and nutrition, diversity, identity, colonization, and migration within ancient Tiwanaku society, as well as earlier and later developments. Her research has been funded by The H. John Heinz III Fund, Vanderbilt University's Discovery Grant Program, the University of Vermont's Committee on Research and Scholarship and College of Arts and Sciences Deans Fund, the Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, the Tinker Foundation, and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. These pursuits have led to publications and conference papers on human sacrifice, mortuary ritual, population movement, health and diet, social complexity, trade, and human body modification as a means of expressing identity.

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Geographic Areas of Expertise International
Western Hemisphere
Bolivia
Peru
Organizations