Natalie Munro, Ph.D.

Professor of Anthropology

  • Storrs CT UNITED STATES

Professor Munro focuses on the origin of feasting and animal domestication, and the transition from foraging to farming in human evolution

Contact

Biography

My research applies zooarchaeological techniques to issues surrounding the transition to agriculture in Southwest Asia. In particular I use prey ecological models to understand human impacts on wild animal populations and their implications for the beginning of animal domestication, human demography and economic change.

Areas of Expertise

Farming
Evolution

Media Appearances

How Cat Sacrifices in Ancient Egypt Turned Them into Pets

Colombia One  

2026-01-19

One study offered a bold idea: the mass killing of cats during religious ceremonies may have helped make cats friendlier toward people. Greger Larson, a biologist at the University of Oxford, described this as “the murder pathway of domestication.”

Other experts, like Natalie Munro from the University of Connecticut, said the idea makes sense but needs more proof.

View More

A 12,000-Year-Old Bird Call, Made of Bird Bones

New York Times  print

2023-08-28

Natalie Munro, an anthropologist at the University of Connecticut, has an alternative hypothesis. “While we’re speculating, maybe the true purpose of the instruments was to communicate with a different animal altogether,” she said. Eynan-Mallaha was also home to a Natufian woman found buried with her hand resting on a puppy. The burial dates to 12,000 years ago and figures frequently in narratives of early dog domestication. “Maybe these bones and their high-pitched sounds were more akin to dog whistles,” Dr. Munro said. “They could have been used to communicate with early dogs or their wolf cousins.”

View More

When Did Humans Start Settling Down?

Smithsonian Magazine  print

2023-07-01

Several diggers under the direction of Natalie Munro, an archaeologist from the University of Connecticut, were busy in the adjacent cemetery, brushing off an adult cranium and treading carefully around the skeleton of a 3-year-old. One team member set up a geolocation tripod that precisely locates every artifact on a grid. A PhD student looked for gazelle bones. The pace picked up as the sun rose, the same atmosphere of industry you might have sensed if you had come when the villagers were here 12 millennia ago.

View More

Show All +

Articles

A forager–herder trade-off, from broad-spectrum hunting to sheep management at Aşıklı Höyük, Turkey

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Mary C Stiner, Hijlke Buitenhuis, Güneş Duru, Steven L Kuhn, Susan M Mentzer, Natalie D Munro, Nadja Pöllath, Jay Quade, Georgia Tsartsidou, Mihriban Özbaşaran

2014

Aşıklı Höyük is the earliest known preceramic Neolithic mound site in Central Anatolia. The oldest Levels, 4 and 5, spanning 8,200 to approximately 9,000 cal B.C., associate with round-house architecture and arguably represent the birth of the Pre-Pottery Neolithic in the region. Results from upper Level 4, reported here, indicate a broad meat diet that consisted of diverse wild ungulate and small animal species...

View more

On the evolution of diet and landscape during the Upper Paleolithic through Mesolithic at Franchthi Cave (Peloponnese, Greece)

Journal of Human Evolution

Mary C Stiner, Natalie D Munro

2011

Franchthi Cave in southern Greece preserves one of the most remarkable records of socioeconomic change of the Late Pleistocene through early Holocene. Located on the southern end of the Argolid Peninsula, the area around the site was greatly affected by climate variation and marine transgression. This study examines the complex interplay of site formation processes (material deposition rates), climate-driven landscape change, and human hunting systems during the Upper Paleolithic through Mesolithic at Franchthi Cave based on the H1B faunal series...

View more