Jim Moore (Assoc. Prof., Anthropology Dept, UCSD)

Research interests: Generally, the relationships among demography and ecology in the evolution of complex sociality. How are age and 'altruism' related? Rainfall and coalition formation? Things like that. One application of such an approach is to the study of early hominid behavioral ecology, and a lot of my current work relates to that. At right, I'm collecting hair from a chimpanzee nest in Ugalla, Tanzania (the hair yields DNA for population genetic work, and the location of nests can tell us about ape use of savanna habitats).
Email: jjmoore@ucsd.edu

Publications Things I've worked on... (includes complete text of some papers)
BioAnthro at UCSD Some general information on biological anthropology.
CoursesA variety of handouts and other teaching- related materials. STUDENTS: this is the place for handouts on research papers, who cares about fossil names, and other nifty things.
African Ape Study SitesThis is an archive of information on field sites where gorillas, chimpanzees and bonobos have been studied. It is intended for use by researchers interested in comparative socioecology, and contains data, maps, photographs, site bibliographies and the like. For material on ape conservation, see Great apes in the wild (WWF) and the Bushmeat Crisis Task Force.
Southern California Primate Research ForumThis is a twice-annual conference (meetings generally in April and November) that alternates among various colleges, universities and zoos in SoCal. Link to see past and future programs, register, etc.
La Jolla Friends of the SealsIf you can't go all the way to "the field" to observe charismatic megavertebrates and study both their behavior and how people relate to nature, just visit La Jolla's Children's Pool!
California Wolf CenterYou don't have to go much farther away to visit the California Wolf Center (formerly the Julian Wolf Preserve, formerly the Julian Center for Science & Education--OK, there's an identity thing...). The CWC participates in the breeding program for the highly endangered Mexican wolf, and is always looking for volunteers. It's fun!
CONTACTReady to go [conceptually] a lot farther away to apply your anthropology? CONTACT is an annual conference of anthropologists, science fiction writers and space scientists.
Shifting BaselinesTo understand the difference between where you are and where you go, in time as well as space, you need to understand your baseline for comparison. Visit this site. It illustrates an important concept that applies to ALL habitat, wildlife, environmental health and globalization issues. And for developing policy from that baseline, see The Precautionary Principle Project. Visit this site too!!!
SAVE FORESTSOne way to stop baselines from shifting out of sight is to support sustainable forestry. Maybe you don't use much wood (until you buy a house), but imagine if you convince your school, or business, or city to adopt such a policy. The Forest Stewardship Council [FSC] approves guidelines for labeling wood products; "FSC certified" is what you want to buy (they certify both temperate and tropical forests, it is a global organization). Forest Certification Resource Center gives an overview of the different individual groups that are authorized to issue FSC certificates. The matter is complicated because forestry interests have created their own "Sustainable Forestry Initiative" [SFI] 'certification', which covers more forest than FSC (in North America anyhow) but is, according to environmental groups, bogus greenwashing. See Don't Buy SFI for more on that, and visit Rainforest Action Network for much more information, many links, and searchable archives.
SAVE PRIMATESAnd here I am talking about individuals. Nonhuman primates are difficult pets when young, nearly impossible as adults. Biomedical researchers generally use only young chimpanzees, as older ones can be dangerous. The result is hundreds of "retired" animals who need care. We owe them that much. Here are several excellent facilities which can use your help: Save the Chimps, Chimp Haven, and Gorilla Haven.
Other EnvironmentalWant to just go shopping, or grab a bite to eat? Green Consumer Union can help guide you. And check out the Environmental Studies homepage; the "related links" is a valuable door to more relevant organizations than I knew existed.
Picture worth 6,000,000,000 words (and counting)
Experimental Biological Anthropology at UCLAOK, don't leave your keyboard, but nevertheless participate in anthropology. Go here to fill out the latest research surveys by Dan Fessler, a graduate of UCSD now doing interesting things over at UCLA. NOTE: This is a portal to a whole BUNCH of surveys, which keep changing as projects end/start. So check it out!
Hatten -- alas, is no more [dead link]Forget about anthropology for a while. Or is this anthro? My vote for best site on the web... And if you enjoy it, turns out there is perhaps a genre being born on the web; if you liked Hatten, try Hyakugojyuuichi! BUMMER - this one too is dead (thanks, Richard Bribiescas, for this addition!), and Yatta (might like some background on Yatta also....) Thanks to Heather York for this rather batty contribution. For humor in a different genre, try Creation Science Fair 2001, a VERY elaborate spoof describing projects like "Women were designed for homemaking" and "Using prayer to microevolve latent antibiotic resistance in bacteria".
Bersin's blueprint, business models, and SearsA true story of refrigerator-buying that may be relevant to K-12 educational policy.

From "To Washoe" by Henrietta Quattrocchi
(CVAS Newsletter 12(8) September 2000)

Her face is prognathic while mine is flat
I have a bigger chin
She has a bigger grin
Make what you will of that.


"Beware, all too often we say what we hear others say. We think what we are told that we think. We see what we are permitted to see. Worse, we see what we are told that we see. Repetition and pride are the keys to this. To hear and to see even an obvious lie again and again and again, maybe to say it almost by reflex, and then to defend it because we have said it, and at last to embrace it because we've defended it."
                                                                    Octavia Butler (my emphasis)


Who am I?
	Associate Professor
	Anthropology Dept.
	University of California, San Diego
	La Jolla, CA  92093			 (858) 534-5572;  jjmoore@ucsd.edu

Where am I?

Social Science Building (SSB) room 276. (campus maps)

Where did I come from?

	AB  Human Biology 				1975	Stanford University
	MS  Biology					1975	Stanford University
	PhD Biological Anthropology			1985	Harvard University

		Thesis: Demography and Sociality in Primates (1985)


From "Illuminatus" by Robert Shea
and Robert Anton Wilson, 1975)
"Correctly formulated, the Law [of Fives] is: All phenomena are directly or indirectly related to the number five, and this relationship can always be demonstrated, given enough ingenuity on the part of the demonstrator." The evil grin flashed. "That's the very model of what a true scientific law must always be: a statement about how the human mind relates to the cosmos. We can never make a statement about the cosmos itself--but only about how our senses (or our instruments) detect it, and about how our codes and languages symbolize it. That's the key to the Einstein-Heisenberg revolution in physics, and to the Buddha's revolution in psychology much earlier."

"But," Joe protested, "everything fits the Law. The harder I looked, the more things there were that fit."

"Exactly," said Hagbard. "Think about that."


YOU

will be one of the first

374,932 VISITORS TO THIS SITE

as soon as 374,932 people visit