KRISTINA KILLGROVE, PHD, RPA Curriculum Vitae

University of West Florida Office: Building 13, Room 129 Department of Anthropology Phone: 850-474-3287 11000 University Parkway Email: [email protected] Pensacola, FL 32514 Website: http://www.killgrove.org

EDUCATION

2010 PhD, Anthropology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 2005 MA, Classical , University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 2002 MA, Anthropology, East Carolina University 1999 BA, Latin and Classical Archaeology, University of Virginia ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS

2012-present University of West Florida, Assistant Professor of Biological Anthropology Courses taught: Ancient Plagues and Peoples, , Evolutionary Theory in Biological Anthropology, Forensic Anthropology, Forensics in the Media, Human Origins, Human (+Lab), Intro to Anthropology, Intro to Biological Anthropology (+Lab), Presenting Anthropology 2011 Vanderbilt University, Lecturer 2003-2011 UNC Chapel Hill, Adjunct Assistant Professor (2011); Graduate Teaching Fellow (2006-09); Teaching Assistant (2003-05) 2008 SUNY Cortland, Adjunct Instructor 2002-2003 Durham Technical Community College, Adjunct Instructor 2000-2002 East Carolina University, Research Assistant 1996-1997 University of Virginia, Saturday Enrichment Program (Grades K-5), Teaching Assistant CURRENT RESEARCH PROJECTS

2016-present Principal Investigator, Oplontis Skeletal Project (Stage: Fieldwork) 2013-present Isotope Specialist, Medieval Population and Space: Interdisciplinary Research into the Origin of Berlin’s First Population (Stage: Writing and publication) 2011-present Principal Investigator, Roman DNA Project (Stage: Data analysis) 2010-present Bioarchaeologist, Gabii Project (Stage: Writing and publication) RESEARCH FUNDING

2017 National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend ($6,000) 2017 Rust Family Foundation Archaeological Grants Program ($3,750) 2017 Research Stimulus Program ($2,000) and Center for Research and Economic Opportunity Miscellaneous Research Grant, UWF ($1,200) 2015-2017 Florida Research Fellowship Award, UWF ($20,000) 2014 Faculty Scholarly and Creative Activities Award, UWF ($1,796) 2013 Faculty Scholarly and Creative Activities Award, UWF ($1,994) 2011 Funding raised for Roman DNA Project through RocketHub ($12,331) 2008-2009 Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research Dissertation Fieldwork Grant ($6,720) 2006-2008 National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement Grant (BCS-0622452) ($11,940) 2008 Smith Graduate Research Grant, UNC Chapel Hill ($750) 2007 Timothy P. Mooney Fellowship, Research Labs of Archaeology, UNC Chapel Hill ($1,200) 2006 Pre-Dissertation Travel Award, Center for Global Initiatives, UNC Chapel Hill ($1,905)

HONORS, AWARDS, AND FELLOWSHIPS

2017 Excellence in Public Education Award, Society for American Anthropology 2016 New Directions Award in Public Anthropology, General Anthropology Division of the American Anthropological Association ($1,000) 2016-present Lecturer, Archaeological Institute of America National Lecture Program 2011 Manning Outstanding Dissertation Award in Anthropology, UNC Chapel Hill 2009-2010 P.E.O. Scholar Award Fellowship ($15,000) 2000-2002 Graduate Scholar Fellowship, East Carolina University ($20,000) 2001 Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society (inducted) 1995-1999 Echols Scholar, University of Virginia PUBLICATIONS

MONOGRAPHS In prep Killgrove, K. These Old Roman Bones: What Bioarchaeology Tells Us about Life in the Roman Empire. Popular science book under contract with Johns Hopkins University Press. Projected length: 45,000 words plus bibliography. Completion of manuscript anticipated by December 2017. In prep Galassi, F. and K. Killgrove. Disease & Demise: The Lives and Deaths of Classical Historical Figures. Popular science book under contract with Pen & Sword Books. Projected length: 80,000 words plus bibliography. Completion of manuscript anticipated by December 2018. ARTICLES AND CHAPTERS In prep Killgrove, K. Osteology of the Imperial tombs at Gabii (Areas A and B). Manuscript in preparation for edited volume, Gabii – Archaeological Report Vol. II, L. Banducci, ed. University of Michigan Press (submission expected in May 2018). In prep Killgrove, K. Osteology of the Archaic tombs at Gabii. Manuscript in preparation for edited volume, Elite Infant Burial Practices and Urbanization Processes at Gabii, Italy: The Area D Tombs and Their Contents, M. Mogetta, ed. Edition Topoi (submission expected in November 2017). In prep Galassi, F.M., F. Fini, E. Armocida, R. Ballestriero, F. Rühli, and K. Killgrove. Piero della Francesca (c. 1416/1417-1492): a Renaissance neuropathological enigma. Neurological Sciences (submission expected in September 2017).

Killgrove 2 In prep Galassi, F.M., K. Killgrove, M. Habicht, S. Mathews, M. Haeusler. (In prep). Endocrinology’s maieutic delivery of Western philosophy? Reassessing the case of Socrates (470/469 – 399 BC). (Submission expected in September 2017). In prep Galassi, F.M., M.E. Habicht, S. De Carolis, S. Mathews, K. Killgrove, M. Haeusler. (In prep). The gladiator’s tears: epiphora in . (Submission expected in August 2017). In prep Killgrove, K. and A. Acosta. Dietary pathologies and isotope diversity in Imperial Rome (1st-3rd centuries AD). Manuscript in preparation for edited volume, Ancient Foodways: Integrative Approaches to Understanding Subsistence and Society in the Past, D. Hutchinson and M. Scarry, eds. University Press of Florida (submission expected in October 2017). Under Review Robbins Schug, G., K. Killgrove, A. Atkin, and K. Barron. Ethics of 3D scanning and printing human skeletal remains. Manuscript submitted for edited volume, Archaeological Informatics Ethics in Practice, J.J. Wells, ed. Springer. In press Killgrove, K. Using skeletal remains as a proxy for Roman lifestyles: the potential and problems with osteological reconstructions of health, diet, and stature in Imperial Rome. In: Diet and Nutrition in the Roman World, C. Holleran and P. Erdkamp, eds. Routledge (forthcoming February 2018). Accepted Killgrove, K. Bioarchaeology and the media: anthropology scicomm in a post-truth landscape. In: Bioarchaeologists Speak Out: Deep Time Perspectives on Contemporary Issues, J. Buikstra, ed. Springer. Early View Killgrove, K. and R. Tykot. Diet and collapse: a stable isotope study of Imperial-era Gabii (1st-3rd c AD). Journal of : Reports special issue on Roman diets. 2017 Melisch, C.M., I. Garlisch, B. Jungklaus, K. Killgrove, M. Nagy, N. Powers, J. Rothe, B. Teßmann, M. Tichomirowa, K. White. 2017. Auf der Suche nach den ersten Berlinern. Das internationale Forschungsproject "Medieval Space and Population." Mitteilungen der Berliner Gesellschaft für Anthropologie, Ethnologie und Urgeschichte, Bd. 37, 51-64. 2017 Melisch, C., I. Garlisch, J. Rothe, M. Tichomirowa, K. Killgrove, and N. Powers. Medieval space and population: Internationale Forscher auf der Suche nach den ersten Berlinern. In: Archäologie in Berlin und Brandenburg 2015, Landesdenkmalamt Berlin, pp. 102-108. 2017 Killgrove, K. Imperialism and physiological stress in Rome and its environs (1st-3rd centuries AD). In: Colonized Bodies, Worlds Transformed: Toward a Global Bioarchaeology of Contact and Colonialism, H. Klaus and M. Murphy, eds., Ch. 9, pp. 247-277. University Press of Florida. 2016 Killgrove, K. and J. Montgomery. All roads lead to Rome: Exploring human migration to the Eternal City through biochemistry of skeletons from two Imperial-era cemeteries (1st-3rd c AD). PLOS One 10.1371/journal.pone.0147585. 2015 Meyers Emery, K. and K. Killgrove. Bones, bodies, and blogs: Outreach and engagement in bioarchaeology. Internet Archaeology 39. DOI: 10.11141/ia.39.5. 2014 Killgrove, K. Bioarchaeology in the Roman Empire. In Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology, C. Smith, ed., Springer, pp. 876-882. DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4419-0465-2.

Killgrove 3 2013 Killgrove, K. Bioarchaeology. In Oxford Bibliographies Online – Anthropology, J.L. Jackson, Jr., ed. Oxford University Press. DOI: 10.1093/OBO/9780199766567-0121. 2013 Killgrove, K. Biohistory of the Roman Republic: the potential of isotope analysis of human skeletal remains. Post-Classical Archaeologies 3: 41-62. 2013 Killgrove, K. and R.H. Tykot. Food for Rome: a stable isotope investigation of diet in the Imperial period (1st-3rd centuries AD). Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 32(1): 28-38. DOI: 10.1016/j.jaa.2012.08.002. 2010 Killgrove, K. Identifying immigrants to Imperial Rome using strontium isotope analysis. In Roman Diasporas: Archaeological Approaches to Mobility and Diversity in the Roman Empire, H. Eckardt, ed. Journal of Roman Archaeology supplement 78, Chapter 9, pp. 157-174. 2010 Montgomery, J., J. Evans, S. Chenery, K. Killgrove, and V. Pashley. “Gleaming, white and deadly”: lead exposure and geographic origins in the Roman period. In Roman Diasporas: Archaeological Approaches to Mobility and Diversity in the Roman Empire, H. Eckardt, ed. Journal of Roman Archaeology supplement 78, Chapter 11, pp. 199-226. 2010 Killgrove, K. Response to C. Bruun’s “Water, oxygen isotopes and immigration to Ostia-Portus.” Journal of Roman Archaeology 23: 133-136. 2009 Killgrove, K. Rethinking taxonomies: skeletal variation on the North Carolina coastal plain. Southeastern Archaeology 28(1): 87-100. 2008 Musco, S., P. Catalano, A. Caspio, W. Pantano, and K. Killgrove. Le complexe archéologique de Casal Bertone. Les Dossiers d’Archéologie 330 (Nov/Dec): 32-39. TECHNICAL REPORTS 2015 Killgrove, K. Osteological Report on the Area D Skeletons from Gabii. Report to Nicola Terrenato, Department of Classical Studies, University of Michigan, 8 pp. 2012 Killgrove, K. Osteological Report on the Gabii “Lead Family.” Report to Nicola Terrenato, Department of Classical Studies, University of Michigan, 5 pp. 2011 Killgrove, K. Gabii Osteological Report, 2009-2010. Report to Nicola Terrenato, Department of Classical Studies, University of Michigan, 23 pp. 2008 Killgrove, K. Biodistance at the Broad Reach (31CR218) site. Report to Dale L. Hutchinson, Department of Anthropology, UNC Chapel Hill, 10 pp. 2007 Killgrove, K. Casal Bertone relazione. Report to Paola Catalano, Anthropology Division, Soprintendenza Speciale per i Beni Archeologici di Roma (Italy), 7 pp. 2000 Killgrove, K. and C.S. Larsen. Human skeletal remains from Mission San Marcos, New Mexico. Report to David Hurst Thomas, Department of Anthropology, American Museum of Natural History, New York, 24 pp. BOOK REVIEWS 2017 Killgrove, K. Review of Academics Going Public: How to Write and Speak Beyond Academe, by M. Gasman. Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement 21(2):291-221. 2017 Killgrove, K. Review of The Bioarchaeology of Classical Kamarina: Life and Death in Greek Sicily, by C.L. Sulosky Weaver. American Journal of Archaeology 121(3). DOI: 10.3764/ajaonline1213.Killgrove.

Killgrove 4 2015 Killgrove, K. Review of The Body in History: Europe from the Palaeolithic to the Future, edited by J. Robb and O.J.T. Harris. American Anthropologist 117(4):866. 2013 Killgrove, K. Review of Breathing New Life into the Evidence of Death: Contemporary Approaches to Bioarchaeology, edited by A. Baadsgaard, A.T. Boutin, and J.E. Buikstra. 47(2): 143-4. 2012 Killgrove, K. Review of Violence, Ritual and the Wari Empire: A Social Bioarchaeology of Imperialism in the Ancient Andes, by T. Tung. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 149(4): 640-1. DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.22172. 2011 Killgrove, K. Review of Living Through the Dead: Burial and Commemoration in the Classical World, edited by M. Carroll and J. Rempel. Bryn Mawr Classical Review. 2010 Killgrove, K. Review of Iron Age and Roman Burials in Champagne, edited by I.M. Stead, J.-L. Flouest, and V. Rigby. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 20(6): e1-2. DOI: 10.1002/oa.1160. 2009 Killgrove, K. Review of Archaeology and Landscape in Central Italy, edited by G. Lock and A. Faustoferri. Journal of the Society for the Anthropology of Europe 9(2): 20-1. DOI: 10.1111/j.1556-5823.2010.00011.x. 2008 Killgrove, K. Review of Biocultural Histories in La Florida: a Bioarchaeological Perspective, by C.M. Stojanowski. Southeastern Archaeology 27(1): 152-3. 2007 Killgrove, K. Review of Two Historic Cemeteries in Crawford County, Arkansas, by R.C. Mainfort and J.M. Davidson. Southeastern Archaeology 26(2): 343-4. 2007 Killgrove, K. Review of Hunting for Hides, by H. Lapham. Historical Archaeology, 41(2): 204-5. TEXTBOOK CONTENT 2015 Killgrove, K. Human Osteology Laboratory Workbook. Lulu Press, 60pp. 2013 Killgrove, K. Chapter quizzes and interactive questions for Our Origins, 3rd Ed., by C.S. Larsen. Online content for StudySpace and SmartWork. W.W. Norton. 2012 Killgrove, K. Chapter quizzes, outlines, and concept questions for Essentials of Physical Anthropology: Discovering Our Origins, 2nd Ed., by C.S. Larsen. Online content for StudySpace. W.W. Norton. 2011 Killgrove, K. Chapter quizzes, summaries, outlines, and learning objectives for How Humans Evolved, 6th Ed., by R. Boyd and J. Silk. Online content for StudySpace. W.W. Norton. 2010 Killgrove, K. Chapter quizzes and learning objectives for Our Origins, 2nd Ed., by C.S. Larsen. Online content for StudySpace. W.W. Norton. 2009 Killgrove, K. Chapter quizzes and metacontent for Essentials of Physical Anthropology: Discovering Our Origins by C.S. Larsen. Online content for StudySpace. W.W. Norton. 2009 Killgrove, K. Chapter quizzes, summaries, and outlines for How Humans Evolved, 5th Ed., by R. Boyd and J. Silk. Online content for StudySpace. W.W. Norton. 2008 Killgrove, K. Chapter quizzes for Our Origins: Discovering Physical Anthropology by C.S. Larsen. Online content for StudySpace. W.W. Norton.

Killgrove 5 ANTHOLOGIES & NEWSLETTERS 2017 Killgrove, K. Funding needs in classical bioarchaeology. Society for Classical Studies Newsletter, June. 2014 Killgrove, K. Teaching public engagement in anthropology. In: Blogging Archaeology, D. Rocks-Macqueen and C. Webster, eds., Landward Research Ltd., pp. 36-43. 2014 Killgrove, K. Lead poisoning in Rome: the skeletal evidence. In: The Open Laboratory 2013 Anthology: The Best of Science Writing on the Web, S. Huler, ed. Creatavist. 2014 Meyers Emery, K. and K. Killgrove. Blogging bioarchaeology. Society for Archaeological Sciences Bulletin, 37(1): 23-5. THESES 2010 Killgrove, K. Migration and Mobility in Imperial Rome. Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina. 2005 Killgrove, K. Bioarchaeology in the Roman World. M.A. Thesis, Department of , University of North Carolina. 2002 Killgrove, K. Defining Relationships between Native American Groups: a Biodistance Study of the North Carolina Coastal Plain. M.A. Thesis, Department of Anthropology, East Carolina University. 1999 Killgrove, K. 44OR249 - South Yard of Montpelier – “The Greasy Black Stain.” B.A. Thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Virginia. WORKING PAPERS 2017 Killgrove, K., F. Böni, F. Galassi. A possible case of mycetoma in ancient Rome (Italy, 2nd-3rd centuries AD). SocArXiv Preprints. DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/48X9S. 2016 Wilkin, S., M. Newton, G. Kinison, M. Zechini, A. Hudson, A. Acosta, M. Voas, K. Killgrove. Florida bioarchaeology: past, present, and future. SocArXiv Preprints. DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/34M5E.

SCHOLARLY/PUBLIC INTELLECTUAL OUTREACH

Writing mentalfloss.com (February 2016-present). 15 posts to date. Forbes.com/sites/kristinakillgrove (May 2015-present). 215 posts; 5.6 million page views, 3.9 million visitors to date. • Cited by: S. Sheridan (2017), Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 162(S63):110-152. P. Geller (2017), The Bioarchaeology of Socio-Sexual Lives, p. 12. D. Mennear (2017), Highlighting the Importance of the Past: Public Engagement and Bioarchaeology of Care Research, pp. 343-364. A. Maldondo (2016), Advances in Archaeological Practice 4(4):556-561. S. Jones (2016), American Anthropologist 118(2):301-16. A. Tekle (2016), Savannah Law Review 3(1):137-60. R. Underwood (2016), Savannah Law Review 3(1):161-84. J. Raff (2015), Human Biology 87(2):132-3. Science Uncovered (2013-2014). Anthropology and Archaeology Expert/Author for the “Ask a Scientist” column. Focus Publishing, UK. Featured in all issues (1-11).

Killgrove 6 PoweredByOsteons.org (2007-present). 913 posts; 2,800 page views/week on average. • Cited by: S. Sheridan (2017), Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 162(S63):110- 152. P. Geller (2017), The Bioarchaeology of Socio-Sexual Lives, p. 11. A. Maldondo (2016), Advances in Archaeological Practice 4(4):556-561. B. Means (2015), Advances in Archaeological Practice 3(3):235-248. J. Mitchell (2015), Ain’thology, Ch. 12, 298-322. H. Williams and A. Atkin (2015), Internet Archaeology 40. C. Stojanowski & W. Duncan (2015), American Journal of Human Biology 27(1):55. K. MacKinnon (2014), American Anthropologist 116(2):359. D. Martin et al. (2013), Bioarchaeology, p. 249. M. de Koning (2013), Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 19(2): 394. G. Laden (2013), Becoming Human: How Evolution Made Us, p. 32. K. Lewton (2012), American Anthropologist 114(2): 200. J. Antrosio (2012), Anthropology I. G. Rakita (2011), SAS Bulletin 34(4): 28. Teaching Instructor, “Twitter for Scientists” at #SciFund University (online, Fall 2016) Profiles Twitter – @DrKillgrove (6,314 followers); G+ (21,244 followers); PbO on Facebook (12,904 followers) Interviews Expert opinion on bioarchaeological topics solicited by: LiveScience (11), Discovery News/Seeker (8), ScienceLine (2), Science Magazine (1), CNN (2), NPR (1), Scholastic Classroom Magazine (1), MIT Technology Review (1), Gizmodo (1), and NBC News (1). Expert opinion on academic affairs solicited by: Chronicle of Higher Education (2).

CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS (* = STUDENT AUTHOR)

2018 Killgrove, K. Tracking migration through bones and teeth. Paper to be presented at the Institute for European and Mediterranean Archaeology Invited Scholars Conference in Buffalo, NY. 2017 Zechini*, M., J. Holmstrom*, K. Patterson*, and K. Killgrove. What’s inside that bone? Using x-ray and 3D scanning technology to recreate internal aspects of pathological bone. Poster presentation at the 44th annual North American meeting of the Association in New Orleans, Louisiana. 2017 Acosta*, A., K. Killgrove, B. Turner, and B. Schaefer*. In cibum veritas: Palaeodietary analysis of skeletons from 5th century BC, Italy. Poster presentation at the 86th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists in New Orleans, Louisiana. 2017 Zechini*, M., K. Killgrove, J. Holmstrom*, B. Schaefer*, and B. Turner. Bread and Porridge in Early Berlin: A Palaeodietary Analysis of the Medieval Cemetery at Petriplatz, Germany. Poster presentation at the 86th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists in New Orleans, Louisiana. 2017 Killgrove, K., and A. Acosta*. Dietary pathologies and isotope diversity in Imperial Rome (1st-3rd centuries AD). Paper presentation at Ancient Foodways: Integrative Approaches to Understanding Subsistence and Society in the Past, sponsored by the Department of Anthropology at UNC Chapel Hill. 2016 Killgrove, K. and K. Meyers Emery. Bring out yer dead: Engaging the public in bioarchaeology. Abstract accepted for Executive Session “Bioarchaeologists Speak Out: Challenging the Pundits with Evidence and New Discoveries from the Past,”

Killgrove 7 organized by Jane Buikstra and Debra Martin. Paper presentation at the 115th annual American Anthropological Association conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 2016 Holmstrom*, J., M. Zechini*, and K. Killgrove. Personalizing Petriplatz: isotopic analysis of a Medieval Berlin population. Paper presentation at the Midwest Medieval History Conference in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, Oct 21-22. 2016 Tung, T., E. Nelson, K. Killgrove, and J. Velez Vazquez*. Osteochondritis dissecans, osteoarthritis, and enthesopathies: physical activity and microtraumas among a post- Wari population from the Peruvian Andes. Poster presentation at the 85th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists in Atlanta, Georgia. 2016 Zechini*, M., M. Voas*, J. Holmstrom*, and K. Killgrove. Digitizing “Roger”: Creating a Recommended Osteology Guide for eReaders [ROGeR]. Poster presentation at the 85th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists in Atlanta, Georgia. 2016 Crane-Kramer, G., and K. Killgrove. Paleopathology of feasts and famines: foregrounding the interaction between humans and their environment. Podium session organized for the 43rd Annual North American Meeting of the Paleopathology Association in Atlanta, Georgia. 2016 Killgrove, K. Bioarchaeology, outreach, and the media. Seminar presentation in workshop “Using the media to your advantage in palaeopathology,” organized by Piers Mitchell at the 43rd Annual North American Meeting of the Paleopathology Association in Atlanta, Georgia. 2015 Melisch, C., P. Rauxloh, N. Powers, I. Garlisch, J. Rothe, K. Killgrove, and M. Tichomirova. Who were the first Berliners and where did they come from? Paper to be presented at the 20th Annual Conference on Cultural Heritage and New Technologies in Vienna, Austria. 2015 Killgrove, K. and M.E. Zechini*. Giving 3D scanning a porpoise: Digitizing the zooarchaeological type collection at the University of West Florida. Poster presentation at the 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology in San Francisco, California. 2015 Killgrove, K. and A.N. Acosta*. Twerking, limericks, and 3D printing: Shaking up human osteology assignments. Poster presentation at the 84th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists in St. Louis, Missouri. 2014 Killgrove, K. and S.E. Bond. Communities of foreigners in Roman cemeteries (1st- 3rd c AD). Paper presented at the 79th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology in Austin, Texas. 2014 Bond, S.E. and K. Killgrove. Mapping ethnicity and community in Imperial-era Roman cemeteries. Paper presented at the 115th annual meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America in Chicago, Illinois. 2012 Killgrove, K. Embodying the Empire: Reading bones to understand Roman health. Paper presented at the conference Crossing Boundaries: Ancient History Explores Its Future, sponsored by Columbia and Cambridge Universities, in Cambridge, England. 2012 Killgrove, K. Heterogeneity of health in Imperial Rome: Case studies from Gabii, Casal Bertone, and Castellaccio Europarco. Paper presented at the conference Nutrition and Wellness in the Roman World: The Evidence from Human Bones, sponsored by the American Academy at Rome.

Killgrove 8 2012 Killgrove, K. Biohistory of the Roman Republic: a pilot study. Poster presented at the Archaeological Sciences of the Americas Symposium in Nashville, Tennessee. 2012 Killgrove, K. Etched in bone: Uncovering information about immigrants to Rome. Paper presented at the conference Moving Romans: Urbanisation, Migration, and Labour in the Roman Principate, sponsored by the University of Leiden Institute of History, in Leiden, Netherlands. 2012 Killgrove, K. Palaeopathology and urban decline at Imperial Gabii (Italy). Poster presented at the 81st Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists in Portland, Oregon. 2012 Killgrove, K. Differential diagnosis of an unusual lower leg pathology in an Imperial Roman. Poster presented at the 39th Annual Meeting of the Paleopathology Association in Portland, Oregon. 2011 Killgrove, K., R.H. Tykot, and J. Montgomery. Foreign women in Imperial Rome: the isotopic evidence. Paper presented at the 17th Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists in Oslo, Norway. 2011 Killgrove, K. Unsanitary urbanism? Rethinking pathology in Imperial Rome. Paper presented at the 38th Annual Meeting of the Paleopathology Association in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 2011 Killgrove, K., J. Montgomery, and R.H. Tykot. Dietary differences between immigrants and locals in Imperial Rome. Poster presented at the 80th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 2010 Killgrove, K. All roads lead to Rome: an Old World perspective on human circulation. Paper presented at the 109th Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association in New Orleans, Louisiana. 2010 Montgomery, J., J. Evans, S. Chenery, K. Killgrove, and Vanessa Pashley. “Gleaming, white and deadly”: the use of lead to track human exposure and geographic origins in the Roman period in Britain. Presented at the 4th International Symposium on Biomolecular Archaeology in Copenhagen, Denmark. 2010 Killgrove, K. Demography, diet, and disease: implications of immigration to Imperial Rome. Paper presented at the conference Sex, Death, and Bones: Paleodemography and Gender Differentials in the Mediterranean World at the American School of Classical Studies in Athens, Greece, sponsored by the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research. 2009 Killgrove, K. What makes one Roman? Paper presented at the 74th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology in Atlanta, Georgia. 2009 Killgrove, K. Rome if you want to: immigrants in the Empire. Poster presented at the 78th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists in Chicago, Illinois. 2008 Killgrove, K. Slums or suburbs? Health status of a population from Imperial Rome. Paper presented at the 77th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists in Columbus, Ohio. 2008 Killgrove, K. Transnationalism and polyethnic communities: identifying immigrants in Imperial Rome. Paper presented at the Critical Roman Archaeology Conference at the Stanford Archaeology Center in Stanford, California.

Killgrove 9 2008 Killgrove, K. Bodies of work: understanding the Roman lower class. Paper presented at the 109th Annual Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America in Chicago, Illinois. 2008 Perry, M.A. and K. Killgrove. Embodiment and remembrance in a mortuary context. Colloquium organized at the 109th Annual Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America in Chicago, Illinois. 2006 Killgrove, K. Classical bioarchaeology. Workshop chaired at the 107th Annual Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America in Montreal, Canada. 2004 Killgrove, K. The face of Agamemnon: Middle Helladic graves at Mycenae. Paper presented at the 7th Annual UNC - Duke Graduate Colloquium in Classics in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. 2002 Killgrove, K. Defining relationships between Native American groups: a biodistance study of the North Carolina coastal plain. Poster presented at the 71st Annual meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists in Buffalo, New York.

INVITED PUBLIC TALKS

2018 Talk title to be determined. Guest speaker, 2018 Richard Frucht Memorial Lecture Series. University of Alberta, Edmonton (12-16 March), sponsored by the Association of Graduate Anthropology Students. 2017 Bodies and bones of Imperial Rome. To be presented at Duquesne University, Pittsburgh PA (16 November), sponsored by the Classics Department. 2016 Diet and health in Imperial Rome: The view from skeletons and isotopes. Presented at University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI (28 October), sponsored by the Kelsey Museum, Department of Classics, and Interdepartmental Program in Classical Art and Archaeology. 2016 Anthropology, outreach, and the media: best practices for writing for the general public. Workshop presented at Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI (28 October), sponsored by the Department of Anthropology. 2016 Rome if you want to: How skeletons reveal immigrants in the Empire. Presented at Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI (27 October), sponsored by the Central Michigan chapter of the Archaeological Institute of America. 2016 Diet and health in Imperial Rome: The view from skeletons and isotopes. Presented at San Diego State University, San Diego, CA (5 May), sponsored by the Department of Anthropology, SDSU. 2015 The curious case of the lead burrito: Adventures in Roman bioarchaeology. Presented as part of Pecha Kucha Night Pensacola, Vol. III (17 October) sponsored by the Florida Public Archaeology Network. 2015 Civic corpses: a bioarchaeological analysis of Imperial Gabii (Italy). Presented at Columbia University, New York NY (12 March), sponsored by the Society of Fellows. 2015 Living and dying at Gabii: A bioarchaeological look at the Roman suburbs (10th c BC to 3rd c AD). Presented at the Northwest Florida Public Library, Pensacola FL (10 February), sponsored by the Pensacola Archaeological Society.

Killgrove 10 2014 Bodies and bones of Imperial Rome. Presented at Ohio University, Athens OH (1 October), sponsored by the Anthropology, Classics, and World Religions Departments. 2014 Diet and health in Imperial Rome: The view from skeletons and isotopes. Presented at Trinity University, San Antonio TX (12 May), sponsored by the Southwest Texas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America. 2014 In search of the founders of Berlin. Presented at the Florida Public Archaeology Network’s Beyond Our Backyard series, Pensacola FL (13 March). 2013 Glasses optional: Demonstrating the new wave of 3D archaeology. Presented with Ramie Gougeon and Colin Bean at the Archaeology Café series, Pensacola FL (19 September), sponsored by the Florida Public Archaeology Network and PBS NOVA. 2013 Food and foreigners in Rome and beyond. Presented at the Florida Public Archaeology Network’s Beyond Our Backyard series, Pensacola FL (28 March). Presented at the University of South Alabama, Mobile AL (7 March), sponsored by the Gulf Coast Society of the Archaeological Institute of America. 2012 Invitation to an ancient dinner: Fish sauce, dormice, leaded wine, and other Roman refreshments. Presented at the Archaeology Café series, Pensacola FL (17 September), sponsored by the Florida Public Archaeology Network and PBS NOVA. 2012 Approaching Roman history through science and skeletons. Presented at Washington & Lee University, Lexington VA (7 May 2012), sponsored by the Department of History. 2011 Scientia plebsque romana: redefining our understanding of the Imperial population. Presented at Vanderbilt University, Nashville TN (9 December 2011), sponsored by the Department of Classical Studies. 2011 Synthesizing skeletons and science in the heart of the Roman Empire. Presented at Middle Tennessee State University, Murfreesboro TN (9 November 2011), sponsored by the Department of Sociology & Anthropology. 2011 Rome if you want to: how skeletons reveal immigrants in the Empire. Presented at Davidson College, Davidson NC (26 January 2011), sponsored by the Departments of Anthropology, Chemistry, and Classics, the Central Carolinas chapter of the Archaeological Institute of America, and the McGaw Lecture Fund. 2010 Who’s who in Rome? Finding and understanding migrants in Imperial Rome. Presented at Duke University, Durham NC (14 September), sponsored by the Department of Classical Studies and the NC chapter of the Archaeological Institute of America.

STUDENT ADVISING

M.A. Advisor and Committee Chair • Completed: o Allison Hawley (2013-15). Thesis: “Where the children lie: a demographic and spatial analysis of two Santa Rosa County Cemeteries” o Mariana Zechini (2014-17). Thesis: “Beneath Berlin: Interpreting dietary responses to the Black Death in Medieval Berlin through stable isotope analysis.” o Andrea Acosta (2014-17). Thesis: “Origins of Archaic period Gabii: A biochemical study of skeletons from the 6th to 5th centuries BC, Italy.”

Killgrove 11 • In Progress: Maddeline Voas (2015-; Biological); Evan Springer (2015-; Cultural); Jane Holmstrom (2015-; Biological); Kathryn Patterson (2015-; Biological) • Research Grant Funding and Awards to Students: o National Geographic Emerging Explorers Grant -- $3,961 to Mariana Zechini (2017) o Outstanding Graduate Student in Anthropology – Andrea Acosta (2016); Mariana Zechini (2017) o UWF Graduate Student Research Grant -- $350 to Andrea Acosta (2015); $800 to Mariana Zechini (2015) o UWF Graduate Student Association Research Award -- $250 to Mariana Zechini (2015)

M.A. Committee Member UWF – Colin Bean (2013-14; Archaeology); Amanda Lawson Cullen (2012-14; Cultural); Christina Estep Ebenal (2013-14; Cultural); Shevan Wilkin (2013-16; Biological); Andy Hudson (2015-17; Biological) Other Institutions – Lara Frame (East Carolina University; 2009-10; Biological) Ph.D. Committee Member Other Institutions – Ashley Maxwell (University of South Florida; 2015-; Anthropology); Elizabeth Wakefield (University of South Carolina; 2016-; Anthropology)

PAST PROJECTS AND ROLES

2008 8th Palaeopathology Short Course, Bradford, England 2007 Archeologia Funeraria e Antropologia di Campo (Seminar), Rome, Italy 2005 Dental Anthropology Workshop, Instituto Portugues de Arqueologia, Lisbon, Portugal 2004 Cecina Valley Project, Field Archaeologist, Tuscany, Italy 2003 Azoria Project, Field Archaeologist/Trench Supervisor, Crete, Greece 2001-2002 ECU Depts of Anthropology and Pathology, Forensic Assistant, Greenville NC 1999-2002 Managing Uncertainty in Cancer Studies, Social Research Assistant, UNC-CH 1998-1999 Montpelier, Archaeology Lab Assistant, Orange VA 1996 Monticello Archaeology Field School, Charlottesville VA PRESS COVERAGE OF PAST RESEARCH (SELECTED)

8 Aug 2017 “Scavi di Oplontis, un feto e due donne incinte tra le vittime dell’eruzione del Vesuvio,” by Antonio Ferrara for La Repubblica 26 Jun 2017 “UWF researcher to study ancient skeletons near Pompeii,” by Sandra Averhart for WUWF 10 Feb 2016 “First migrants to Rome ID’d by their teeth,” by Stephanie Pappas for LiveScience/Yahoo News 10 Feb 2016 “Imperial Rome migrants ID’d,” by Rossella Lorenzi for Discovery News 10 Feb 2016 “Who were Rome’s mystery immigrants?” by Richard Gray for Daily Mail (England) 10 Feb 2016 “Identificados por primera vez inmigrantes en la antigua Roma,” by Cristina Sáez for La Vanguardia (Spain)

Killgrove 12 11 Feb 2016 “Primi identikit dei migranti nella Roma imperiale,” ANSA (Italy) 20 Nov 2015 “UWF uses 3D technology to recreate history,” by Richard Conn for UWF’s Center for Research and Economic Opportunity 20 Jan 2015 “The 3D printed past,” by Ashley Richter for Popular Archaeology 15 Oct 2014 “3D printing of Medieval teeth creates new resource for researchers,” by Past Horizons 13 Oct 2014 “Archaeologists use 3D printed molars of ancient citizens to point toward ‘where Berlin began’” by Bridget Butler Millsaps for 3Dprint.com 29 June 2013 “Savage Minds Interview: Kristina Killgrove” by Ryan Anderson for Savage Minds 10 Mar 2013 “Most Romans ate feed” by Angelika Franz for Germany’s Der Spiegel 9 Mar 2013 “The ancient Roman diet,” interview with Canada’s Quirks & Quarks radio programme 1 Mar 2013 “Most ancient Romans ate like animals” by Stephanie Pappas for LiveScience 9 Nov 2012 “UWF faculty member to speak at conference in Italy” by Erin Kourkounis for Pensacola News Journal 11 Nov 2011 “Who were the 99% of ancient Rome?” by Ed Yong for CNN 11 Nov 2011 “An archaeologist wants the story of Rome’s 99%” by Alex Knapp for Forbes

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

Editorial Positions Paleopathology Association Newsletter Associate Editor, Annotated Social Media (2016-present)

Professional Society for American Archaeology Committees Chair, Media Relations Committee (2017-2020) Member, Program Committee (2017-2018) American Association of Physical Anthropologists Member, Ad-Hoc Working Group on New Media (2012-2013)

Advisory SAPIENS.org Boards Advisory Board Member (2017-2019)

Article reviewer International Journal of Osteoarchaeology (6), American Journal of Physical Anthropology (8), PLOS One (4), Journal of Archaeological Science (3), Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, International Journal of Paleopathology (5), Historical Archaeology (2), Lancet Infectious Diseases, Journal of Archaeological Science Reports (5), Journal of Open Archaeology Data, Journal of Field Archaeology, Etruscan Studies (2), Hesperia, Journal of Roman Archaeology, Tennessee Archaeology, Open Archaeology, World Archaeology

Monograph reviewer American School of Classical Studies at Athens Monographs, Ashgate Press, Cambridge University Press, Elsevier, Equinox Press, Left Coast Press, Princeton University Press, Rowman & Littlefield, Springer Press, University of Toronto Press

Killgrove 13 Grant reviewer NSF Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant (Archaeology Program), NSF Senior Research Grant (Archaeology Program) (2), Collaborative Research Incentive Grant (CUNY), Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (Canada), Canada Research Chairs Program, National Geographic Society (Committee for Research and Exploration; Emerging Explorers Program), Swiss National Science Foundation, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Research Growth Initiative Program; Graduate Women in Science National Fellowship Committee

Extramural Guest Appalachian State University; University of Wyoming; Sonoma State Lecturer in Courses University; University of Georgia; Michigan State University; Carleton University (Canada); University of Alberta (Canada); B.T. Washington High (Pensacola FL); Centennial High (Roswell GA); Center for Hellenic Studies, Princeton University

Societies Gulf Coast Society of the Archaeological Institute of America Founder and President (2012-present) Pensacola Archaeological Society Webmaster (2013-present)

University Service Present - Anthropology Department Graduate Admissions Committee (2013-); Division of Anthropology and Archaeology Webmaster (2013-); Division of Anthropology and Archaeology Social Media Coordinator (2013-); College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities Academic Standards Committee Member (2014-); University Web Advisory Committee (2016-)

Past - BioAnthropology Search Committee Chair (2017); UWF Office of Undergraduate Research Explorers Program (2016-2017); UWF Academic Misconduct Policy Committee Member (2015-2016); UWF Office of Undergraduate Research Project Award Review Committee (2014-2016); Work-Life Effectiveness Task Force Committee Member (2014-2015).

MEMBERSHIP IN PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS

American Association of Physical Anthropologists Paleopathology Association American Association for the Advancement of Science Pensacola Archaeological Society Archaeological Institute of America Register of Professional Archaeologists Society for Classical Studies Society for American Archaeology

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