Anne Sherfield is a archaeology graduate student interested in domestic networks/organization and geospatial analyses of urban structure in Latin America. Currently, Anne is investigating patterns of social and spatial inequality at Teotihuacan, Mexico by simulating movement pathways from residential structures to the great compound and the plazas of the sun, moon, and the feathered serpent pyramids.
Anne has done field work on the Mauka Llaqta Architectural Survey, the Ungará Archaeological Project, and the PIA Las Huacas in Peru. She has also worked for the El Mogote and El Palenque Archaeological Project in Mexico. Currently, she is working for the Teotihuacan Research Lab at ASU and central Mexico.
Additionally, Anne has worked in many local and national museums. She worked at the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology and the Museum of Anthropological Archaeology in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Additionally, Anne was a lab intern in the North American Archaeology Lab at the American Museum of Natural History. Currently, she is working with the Arizona Museum of Natural History in Mesa, AZ to better visitor engagement with their Mesoamerica and South America Gallery.