1After 1926, under the guidance of Fay-Cooper Cole, excavations at nearby Illinois sites became a regular feature of the University of Chicago graduate curriculum (Stocking, 1979). One of the students who received field training and was placed in charge of excavations was Wilton Marion Krogman (Haviland, 1994). Krogman (Ph.D. 1929) recalled his experiences in Fulton County, Illinois, with clarity and clearly enjoyed sharing accounts with the new generation of bioarchaeologists during annual meetings of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists even after his retirement in 1983.
2Angel was the 19th of Hooton’s 28 Ph.D. students (Giles, 1997).
3In 1967, Saul had presented this approach in papers given at the annual meetings of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists and the American Anthropological Association (Saul, 1972:80). Saul and Saul (1989) indicate that Frank Saul first coined the term in 1961.
4Given that “anthropology” denotes physical anthropology in France, l’anthropologie de terrain could also be glossed as “field physical anthropology.”
5However, see Malvido et al. (1997), Scarre (2004), Tiesler Blos (2004), and Pereira (1999).