
Martha Tappen
· Associate ProfessorUniversity of Minnesota · Anthropology
Active 1987–2024
About
Martha Tappen is an Associate Professor in Biological Anthropology at the University of Minnesota's Department of Anthropology. Her research focuses on human evolution and adaptations, with particular interest in out of Africa migrations, paleoenvironments, stone age archaeology, zooarchaeology, and taphonomy. She contributes to understanding human biological and cultural evolution through her work in these areas, advancing knowledge of our species' origins and adaptations.
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Geography
- Archaeology
- Geology
- Ecology
- Optics
- Biology
- Physics
- Paleontology
Selected publications
Journal of Human Evolution · 2024-02-01 · 5 citations
articleJournal of Human Evolution · 2022-03-31 · 11 citations
articlearXiv (Cornell University) · 2022-05-20 · 4 citations
preprintOpen accessDistinguishing agents of bone modification at paleoanthropological sites is at the root of much of the research directed at understanding early hominin exploitation of large animal resources and the effects those subsistence behaviors had on early hominin evolution. However, current methods, particularly in the area of fracture pattern analysis as a signal of marrow exploitation, have failed to overcome equifinality. Furthermore, researchers debate the replicability and validity of current and emerging methods for analyzing bone modifications. Here we present a new approach to fracture pattern analysis aimed at distinguishing bone fragments resulting from hominin bone breakage and those produced by carnivores. This new method uses 3D models of fragmentary bone to extract a much richer dataset that is more transparent and replicable than feature sets previously used in fracture pattern analysis. Supervised machine learning algorithms are properly used to classify bone fragments according to agent of breakage with average mean accuracy of 77% across tests.
Life and death at Dmanisi, Georgia: Taphonomic signals from the fossil mammals
Journal of Human Evolution · 2022-09-15 · 24 citations
article1st authorCorrespondingJournal of Human Evolution · 2022-09-15 · 6 citations
articleOpen accessArchaeological and Anthropological Sciences · 2021 · 21 citations
- Computer Science
- Computer Science
- Optics
Archaeology and formation processes in the M6 Block at Dmanisi, Georgia
2020-01-01 · 1 citations
articleJournal of Human Evolution · 2020 · 23 citations
- Geography
- Paleontology
- Geology
arXiv (Cornell University) · 2020-11-10 · 1 citations
preprintOpen accessThe contact goniometer is a commonly used tool in lithic and zooarchaeological analysis, despite suffering from a number of shortcomings due to the physical interaction between the measuring implement, the object being measured, and the individual taking the measurements. However, lacking a simple and efficient alternative, researchers in a variety of fields continue to use the contact goniometer to this day. In this paper, we present a new goniometric method that we call the virtual goniometer, which takes angle measurements virtually on a 3D model of an object. The virtual goniometer allows for rapid data collection, and for the measurement of many angles that cannot be physically accessed by a manual goniometer. We compare the intra-observer variability of the manual and virtual goniometers, and find that the virtual goniometer is far more consistent and reliable. Furthermore, the virtual goniometer allows for precise replication of angle measurements, even among multiple users, which is important for reproducibility of goniometric-based research. The virtual goniometer is available as a plug-in in the open source mesh processing packages Meshlab and Blender, making it easily accessible to researchers exploring the potential for goniometry to improve archaeological methods and address anthropological questions.
Differentiable Geometric Invariants for Bone Fragment Refitting
2019-01-01
article
Recent grants
Analysis of the Vertebrate Taphonomy at Dmanisi, Georgia, and Its Bearing on Out of Africa I
NSF · $110k · 2010–2014
Frequent coauthors
- 21 shared
David Lordkipanidze
Georgian National Museum
- 20 shared
Reed Coil
Nazarbayev University
- 19 shared
Reid Ferring
University of North Texas
- 17 shared
Katrina Yezzi-Woodley
- 15 shared
Peter J. Olver
- 15 shared
Jeff Calder
University of Minnesota
- 11 shared
Maia Bukhsianidze
- 11 shared
Jordi Agustı́
Universidad Rovira i Virgili
Awards & honors
- McKnight Land-Grant Professorship, University of Minnesota (…
- Fulbright Senior Scholar (2003)
- L.S.B. Leakey Foundation (2002)
- National Science Foundation: "Stratigraphy, Archaeology, Tap…
- NSF: Analysis of the Vertebrate Taphonomy at Dmanisi, Georgi…
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