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Open Educational Resources (OER)

Anthropology & Archaeology


Book Collections & Textbooks 

Repositories & Research

  • Open Anthro: includes 15 open access titles with various Creative Commons licenses. 
  • National Anthropological Archives: collections include fieldnotes, journals, manuscripts, correspondence, photographs, maps, artwork, and sound recordings created by Smithsonian and non-Smithsonian anthropologists, Native peoples, and other scholars, scientists, and researchers.
  • Open Library of Humanities Special Collections: Peer-reviewed open journals across the humanities disciplines: classics, theology and philosophy, to modern literatures, film and media studies, anthropology, political theory and sociology. Special Collections are focused on a particular topic or theme.
  • OCRE (Online Coins of the Roman Empire): OCRE is a joint project of the American Numismatic Society and the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World at New York University, and a tool designed to help in the identification, cataloging, and research of the varied coinage of the Roman Empire. "The project records every published type of Roman Imperial Coinage from Augustus in 31 BC, until the death of Zeno in AD 491." Contains downloadable catalog entries, incorporating over 43,000 types of coins. [Open Database License, free to share and modify].
  • Smarthistory: An art history resource and collaboration of more than five hundred art historians, curators, archaeologists, and artists; official provider of art history for khanacademy.org; supports the ethical and open sharing of cultural knowledge. All resources are published under a Creative Commons non-commercial license. [CC BY-NC-SA]

Courseware & Open Learning 

  • MIT Anthropology OpenCourseWare: MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) is a web-based publication of virtually all MIT course content. Resources include videos, lectures notes, audio lectures. [CC BY-NC-SA]
  • University of Oxford: Living in the Stone Age (short films): “In this series of 11 short films Experimental Archaeologists, Oxford University Lecturers and Bushcraft specialists demonstrate a range of Stone Age crafts, skills and technologies as well as art and music. Each 5 minute film can be used in the classroom to focus on a particular technology.” [CC BY-NC-SA]

Videos