Archaeology · Florida

Archaeology colleges in Florida

Archaeology program coverage in Florida is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

Archaeology is the study of past human societies through the material remains they left behind, suited to students who like excavation, fieldwork, and reconstructing how people once lived.

We're still verifying Archaeology programs in Florida. Try a broader search at /results?q=Archaeology or browse all colleges in Florida.

What you'll study in a Archaeology program

  • Excavation and field survey methods
  • Stratigraphy and site recording
  • Radiocarbon and other dating techniques
  • Lithic, ceramic, and faunal analysis
  • Human osteology and bioarchaeology
  • Geographic information systems for mapping sites
  • Artifact conservation and museum curation
  • Archaeological theory and cultural change
  • Ethics, repatriation, and cultural heritage law

Where a Archaeology degree can lead

  • Archaeologist
  • Cultural Resource Manager
  • Field Archaeologist
  • Museum Researcher
  • Historic Preservation Specialist
  • Laboratory Analyst

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 anthropologists and archeologists median $64,910).

Archaeology examines how people lived in the past by recovering and interpreting the material traces of their lives, including artifacts, building remains, food residues, and human skeletal material. Students learn excavation and survey techniques, how to record a site layer by layer, and how to date what they find using methods such as radiocarbon analysis and stratigraphy. Coursework blends archaeological theory with hands-on practice, covering the analysis of pottery, stone tools, and bone, the study of how cultures changed over long spans of time, and the ethics of excavating and caring for human remains and cultural property. Unlike history, which works mainly from written records, archaeology reconstructs the past from objects and sites, and unlike physical anthropology alone, it centers on the material world that people made and used.

Many professional archaeology roles in the United States expect a graduate degree, since the discipline is often taught as a bachelor's foundation followed by master's-level training in field methods, laboratory analysis, and a chosen region or period of focus. Programs commonly require a supervised field school where students excavate a real site, along with laboratory work cataloging and conserving finds and a capstone or thesis tied to original research. Some positions, especially in cultural resource management and historic preservation, follow federal and state standards that should be verified, and graduates work in settings such as consulting firms, museums, government agencies, universities, and parks, where they survey land ahead of construction and protect heritage sites.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of anthropologists and archeologists, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $64,910 and projects employment to grow about 3.7% from 2024 to 2034; a master's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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