ANIMAL SCIENCE-GENERAL / 65 ANS 6910--Supervised Research (1-5; max: 5) S/U. ANS 6932-Topics in Animal Science (1-3; max: 9) New devel- opments in animal nutrition and livestock feeding, animal genet- ics, animal physiology, and livestock management. ANS 6933-Graduate Seminar in Animal Science (1; max: 8) ANS 6940-Supervised Teaching (1-5; max: 5) S/U. ANS 6971-Research for Master's Thesis (1-15) S/U. ANS 7979-Advanced Research (1-9) Research for doctoral students before admission to candidacy. Designed for students with a master's degree in the field of study or for students who have been accepted for a doctoral program. Not open to students who have been admitted to candidacy. S/U. ANS 7980-Research for Doctoral Dissertation (1-15) S/U. ANIMAL SCIENCE-GENERAL College of Agriculture The Departments of Animal, Poultry, and Dairy Science have combined their curricula into an animal science curriculum. ASG 5221 is a cross-departmental course taught by the faculty of the three departments. ASG 5221-Animal Production in the Tropics (3) Prereq: ANS 4242C, 4264C, DAS 3211, or permission of the instructor. Man- agementand environment factors which affectanimal production in the tropics. ANTHROPOLOGY College of Liberal Arts and Sciences GRADUATE FACULTY 1992-93 Chairperson: G. J. Armelagos. Graduate Coordinator: G. F. Murray. Graduate Research Professor: M. Harris. Profes- sors: G. J. Armelagos; H. R. Bernard; A. F. Burns; R. Cohen; K. Deagan; M. C. Dougherty; P. L. Doughty; B. M. du Toit; J. D. Early;t E. M. Eddy (Emeritus); S. Feierman; C. F. Gladwin; B. T. Grindal;* M. J. Hardman-de-Bautista; M. Y. Iscan;+ P. J. Magnarella; W. R. Maples; M. L. Margolis; J. T. Milanich;M. Moseley; A. R. Oliver-Smith;J. A. Paredes;* B. A. Purdy (Emeritus); H. I. Safa; A. M. Stearman; 0. von Mering; G. Weiss;t E. S. Wing. Associate Professors: S. A. Brandt; A. Hansen; T. Ho;* W. F. Keegan; W. J. Kennedy;t L. S. Lieberman; W. H. Marquardt; G. F. Murray; M. E. Pohl;* P. R. Schmidt; M. Schmink; A. Spring. These members of the faculty of Florida State University (*) and Florida Atlantic University (f) are also members of the graduate faculty of the University of Florida and participate in the doctoral degree program in the University of Florida Department of Anthropology. The Department of Anthropology offers graduate work leading to the Master of Arts (thesis or nonthesis option) and Doctor of Philosophy degrees. Graduate training is offered in applied anthropology, social and cultural anthropology, archeology, anthropological linguistics, and physical/bio- logical anthropology. There is a general option and an interdisciplinary one. The general option allows students to concentrate at the M.A. level on the integration of the four subfields of anthropology and to specialize at the Ph.D. level. The interdisciplinary alternative allows students to 1) concen- trate on one or two subfields of anthropology along with one or more areas outside of anthropology and 2) begin early specialization and integration of a subfield of anthro- pology and an outside field. More information about these two options is found in the Department publication on graduate programs and policies that may be obtained by writing directly to the Department. The Department of Anthropology generally requires a minimum score of 1100 on the Graduate Record Examina- tion and a 3.2 overall grade point average based on a 4.0 system. Candidates for the M.A. are required to take ANT 6038 and 6917. No more than six hours of ANT 6971 will be counted toward the minimum requirements for the M.A. with thesis. Knowledge of a foreign language may be required by the student's supervisory committee. Other requirements forthe program are listed in this Catalogunder the Requirements for Master's Degrees. Students enrolled in the M.A. program who wish to continue their studies for a Ph.D. must apply to the Depart- ment for certification. Minimum requirements will nor- mally include 1) a minimum grade point average of 3.5 in all graduate anthropology courses and a minimum of 3.2 in other courses, 2) a grade of pass on either the Integrative Basic Knowledge Examination or the comprehensive ex- amination, and 3) a thesis, report, or paper judged to be of excellent quality by the student's supervisory committee. In most cases, candidates for the Ph.D. must achieve compe- tency in a language other than English. Entering students who already have earned a master's degree may apply for direct admission to the doctoral program. Study for the Ph.D. degree in anthropology at the Univer- sity of Florida by qualified master's degree recipients at Florida Atlantic University and Florida State University is facilitated by a cooperative arrangement i n which appropri- ate facu ty members of these universities are members of the graduate faculty of the University of Florida. There are two deadlines for receiving completed applica- tions for admission into the graduate program. November 1 (for spring semester admissions) and March 11 (for fall and summer semester admissions). ANT 5115-Archeological Theory (3) Prereq: one course in archeology; and/or anthropology or permission of the instructor. Survey of the theoretical and methodological tenets of anthropo- logical archeology; critical review of archeological theories, past and present; relation of archeology to anthropology. Not open to students who have taken ANT 4110. ANT 5126L-Field Sessions in Archeology (6) Prereq: 6 hours of anthropology or permission of instructor._Excavation of archeol- ogical sites, recording data, laboratory handling and analysis of specimens, and study of theoretical principles which underlie field methods and artifact analysis. Not open to students who have taken ANT 4124 or equivalent. ANT 5127-Laboratory Training in Archeology (3) Prereq: an introductory level archeology course. Processing of data recov- ered in field excavations; cleaning, identification, cataloging, classification, drawing, analysis, responsibilities of data reporting. Not open to students who have taken ANT 4123 or equivalent. ANT 5154-North American Archeology (3) The existing arche- ological materials relating to prehistoric North American cultures.' The origins of the North American Indian. Historic Indian and colonial materials. Not open to students who have taken ANT 3153. ANT 5156-Southeastern United States Archeology (3) Survey of archeological materials relating to aboriginal occupation of the Southeastern United States from the Paleo-lndian period to the