| Vincent H. Stefan
Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, Lehman College
and the Graduate School, City University of New York;
Faculty, New York Consortium in Evolutionary Primatology;
PhD, Anthropology, University of New Mexico, 2000. vincent.stefan@lehman.cuny.edu
Fields of Study Human osteology and skeletal biology;
forensic anthropology; paleoanthropology; quantitative methods;
Rapa Nui (Easter Island) skeletal biology; Polynesian skeletal
biology.
Current Research Interests My basic interest is in
documentation and analysis of contemporary and prehistoric human
skeletal variation. This interest in biological anthropology has
led me to study fossil, prehistoric, and contemporary human remains,
and to apply this knowledge of human variation in the analysis
of prehistoric human remains, as well as to cases of medicolegal
significance (forensic cases). I have used my knowledge of human
variation and population genetics to evaluate the origins and
evolutionary prehistory of the Rapanui (Easter Islanders). Current
projects include the continued analysis of the prehistoric Rapa
Nui, Marquesans, and other Polynesian populations, incorporating
both biological and ethnographic data. I have ongoing involvement
in forensic anthropology, in the areas of research and as a consultant
to the Nassau, Suffolk and Westchester County Medical Examiner
offices, the UN International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and the Centre for International
Forensic Assistance, Dept. of Forensic Medicine and Science, Glasgow,
Scotland. In 2005 I earned the distinction of being certified
as a Diplomate of the American Board of Forensic Anthropology
(DABFA). Selected Publications
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