Anne Pike-Tay
Professor of Anthropology
- B.S., College of Mount Saint Vincent
- M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., New York University
Anne Pike-Tay began teaching in the Anthropology Department at Vassar College in 1990 after earning her Ph.D. [1989], M.Phil. [1986], M.A. [1984] from the Anthropology Department at New York University. She is also a faculty member in Vassar's interdepartmental programs in American Culture and Environmental Studies, where she is a founding member of the steering committee.
Anne is a paleoanthropologist specializing in zooarchaeological analyses and seasonality studies of fauna (animal bones) from Middle and Upper Paleolithic (Neanderthal & "CroMagnon," Ice Age) and more recent prehistoric sites (Neolithic and Bronze Age) in Europe, as well as Middle Paleolithic-aged sites in Tasmania. She has authored, co-authored and edited four books and numerous articles in American, Australian, British, French, German and Spanish archaeological monographs and journals.
Students in Anne's classes at Vassar study human evolution and prehistory, archaeozoology, the anthropology of art, and the behavior and ecology of non-human primates. Anne's archaeological research has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, and the Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia of Spain. Vassar student participation in Anne's research has been supported by National Science Foundation REU grants and by Vassar College's URSI funds. Results of this work is presented at professional paleoanthropology and archaeology meetings, public lectures, and in publications.