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Anthropology is the study of human societies, examining cultural, behavioral, and biological diversity across time and geography. This broad scope has led to three key specializations: cultural anthropology, archaeology, and biological anthropology. Cultural anthropology focuses on contemporary human societies and behaviors. Archaeology investigates historical cultural changes by analyzing artifacts from past civilizations. Biological anthropology explores human evolutionary biology, ranging from primate studies to fossil evidence of early mammals. The Anthropology major provides foundational training across all three disciplines while permitting specialization. Graduates follow diverse career trajectories—some advance to top-tier graduate programs in anthropology, while others enter fields like medicine or environmental conservation. The undergraduate curriculum offers a comprehensive introduction to anthropological theories, methodologies, and connections to other disciplines in social sciences, humanities, and natural sciences. Students gain exposure to all three subfields and may study them in various cultural contexts.