I Chose ISU: Kyra Stull – forensic anthropologist finds she can make a difference
August 28, 2015
Written by Scarlett Osborn, CPI intern, ISU Office of Marketing and Communications
POCATELLO 鈥 World-renowned forensic anthropologist Kyra Stull, a new assistant professor at 色花堂app, is already making a powerful impact in the Department of Anthropology.
Prior to Stull鈥檚 arrival during the 2014-15 academic year, she said there was a lack of biological anthropology in the department.
鈥淭his gave me the opportunity to make a difference and build a curriculum, that doesn鈥檛 happen to much first-year faculty members,鈥 Stull said. 鈥淭he decision to come here was actually a bit of a surprise to me, but the department was in a perfect situation for me to come.鈥
鈥淚 saw an opportunity where I could make an impact, which is important to me. I鈥檝e had a great time teaching so far, connecting with the students and getting them excited and interested in a topic you love is really rewarding,鈥 she said.
When Stull began school in Knoxville, Tennessee, she always thought she was going to be a forensic pathologist 鈥 she dreamed she would work on autopsies and become a doctor. Her family teased her about going into this field because, 鈥淚 talk so much I was finally going to a crowd that I wouldn鈥檛 have to compete to speak,鈥 joked Stull.
As a freshman, Stull received the opportunity to volunteer at the first outdoor decomposition facility, which is colloquially known as the 鈥渂ody farm.鈥 Until recently, the body farm was one of the only facilities like this in the world. After a semester into her volunteer work she decided that her interest was in the bones and skeletal system. Stull鈥檚 research is now centered on age and sex estimation standards for children.
鈥淢y dissertation was on long bones,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 expanding that to other age indicators in the skeleton.鈥

Stull also participates in community service projects. Stull used her expertise to help investigate a 36-year-old cold case that was recently reopened. ISU was contacted by the Clark County Sheriff鈥檚 Office to help look into a cold case that began in 1979 when a human torso was discovered in Civil Defense caves north of Dubois near the Montana border. In 1991, the arms and legs were discovered, but the head and identity of the victim remain missing. By participating in this case it allowed Stull to make connections with the Boise Medical Examiner鈥檚 Office. Stull wishes to start up workshops for law enforcements and some students in the area.
鈥淭hese workshops could range from to two- five day intensive workshops, focusing mainly on anthropological laboratory methods and archaeological excavation techniques,鈥 she said.

鈥淥ne of the most genetically mixed populations in the world, they have a complex colonization history, so a lot of my research is on cranial size and shape sexed-based differences,鈥 she said.
This past summer Stull traveled to South Africa to teach a workshop. She worked on developing a software program from her dissertation research.
This software program allows researchers to enter all of the measurements Stull collected, and with a push of a button it will compute the statistics.
鈥淚 provided that to the community for the first time, it鈥檚 called Kids- Stats, it makes me very happy,鈥 Stull said.
ISU has been a good fit for Stull.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been really an amazing community coming here,鈥 she said, 鈥渘ormally academia can feel fairly isolating, but the academic community at ISU has been phenomenal and very welcoming.鈥
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