Tina Warinner, Professor in Anthropology wins Federation of European Microbiological Societies Article Award
The Department of Anthropology would like to share that Tina Warinner, John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Social Sciences, has been named a winner of the 2022 Federation of European Microbiological Societies (FEMS) Article Awards.
Awardees are selected annually by the Editors-in-Chief and Editorial Boards of each journal and also receive special attention from FEMS and their not-for-profit publisher Oxford University Press devoted to further promoting the awarded authors’ research. Tina Warinner has been recognized for her excellence in FEMS Microbes.
Learn more about the FEMS Article Awards here.
Read The Harvard Gazette coverage here.
About The Author
Christina (Tina) Warinner is an Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Sally Starling Seaver Associate Professor at the Radcliffe Institute. She is also a group leader in the Department of Archaeogenetics at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History and affiliated with the faculty of biological sciences at the Friedrich Schiller University in Jena, Germany.
Warinner specializes in biomolecular archaeology, with an emphasis on reconstructing the prehistory of human foods and the evolution of the microbiome. She is known for her pioneering work in ancient DNA and proteins research, which has contributed significant insights into prehistoric human health, the ancestral human microbiome, the origins of dairying, and past human population history.