Curtis Runnels

Professor

Affiliations

Archaeology Program, Department of Classical Studies 

Areas of Expertise

Prehistoric archaeology; early hominin dispersals; lithic technology; history of archaeology

View Professor Runnels’ CV – January 2023

About 

Professor Curtis Runnels has conducted research since 1973 primarily in Greece and neighboring regions on the Palaeolithic, the origins of agriculture, trade, and warfare, and the emergence of complex societies. Since 2008 he has participated in a program of combined geomorphological, geochronological, and archaeological research on the Greek island of Crete where Palaeolithic sites have been discovered dating from 40,000 years ago to more than 130,000 years ago. As Crete is an oceanic island cut off from the mainland for more than 5.3 million years, the presence of Palaeolithic artifacts on the island is evidence that early hominins were crossing the Aegean Sea in boats from as early as the Middle Pleistocene. This evidence for prehistoric seafaring suggests the possibility that other hominin dispersals in the Pleistocene, both in the Mediterranean and elsewhere in the world, also involved seafaring. Since 2015, Runnels has carried out research on possibly early archaeological sites in Wyoming and California, where lithic artifacts are found in desert pavements in arid environments. The lithic artifacts may be Pleistocene in age and a program of combined research similar to that on Crete is aimed at determining when and how they were incorporated into the desert pavements. It is thought that they predate the Clovis culture.

Selected Publications

  • Thomas P. Leppard and Curtis Runnels, 2017, “Maritime Hominin dispersals in the Pleistocene: advancing the debate,” Antiquity 91: 510-519. doi:10.15184/aqy.2017.16
  • Howitt-Marshall, D. and C. Runnels, 2016, “Middle Pleistocene sea-crossings in the eastern Mediterranean?” Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 42: 140-153. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2016.04.005
  • Curtis Runnels, 2014, “Early Palaeolithic on the Greek Islands?” Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 27: 211-230.

Courses

  • CAS AR 701 Intellectual History of Archaeology
  • CAS AR 202 Archaeological Mysteries: Pseudoscience and Fallacy in the Human Past
  • CAS AR 206 Ancient Technology: Evolution of Technology and Culture
  • CAS AR 305 Palaeolithic Archaeology