Skip to main content

Resources

The Material History Lab is a dynamic research space that supports the analysis, curation, and viewing of an extensive West African material culture collection. The lab stewards archaeological and ethnographic artifacts and objects from 400 BC to the present. The core collection of materials in the Material History Lab came from southwest Nigeria, where Professor Akin Ogundiran has worked for almost 35 years. These objects, including earthenware, clay tobacco pipes, clay lamps, glass and stone beads, lithic materials, wooden artifacts, cowries, animal bones, and metal objects, cover 2,500 years of history of the Yoruba-speaking people, one of Africa’s largest and most prominent civilizations. These materials are on loan from the communities where the research was conducted and from various institutions that approved the research, including the National Commission for Museums and Monuments and the Nigerian National Park Service.

Material History Lab Collections Database

http://Lab%20artifacts%20displayed%20on%20a%20table

Lab Equipment

The lab currently has the following equipment for different types of analyses:

Portable X-Ray Fluorescence (pXRF)

AmScope ME508 Series Compact Trinocular, Ci Polarized Light Microscope

Laser-Aided Profiler

Photography Station

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is "material history"?

Material history is the temporal study of objects’ formal, physical, performative, functional, contextual, symbolic, and compositional properties to understand different aspects of human experience.

Where is the Material History Lab located?

L40 Harris Hall, 

1881 Sheridan Road
Evanston, IL 60208

Can I use Material History Lab resources or collections for my research?

Anyone interested in using the Material History Lab’s resources and collections for teaching, research, K-12 education, or public outreach should contact ogundiran@northwestern.edu. We encourage collaboration that makes use of diverse expertise.

How can I schedule a visit to the lab?

The Material History Lab provides students with the opportunity to work closely with material history scholars and develop hands-on skills in various approaches to studying objects as sources and subjects of historical inquiry.

Learn More

The Material History Lab provides digital and physical platforms for the public to interact with objects in ways that elevate the understanding of the past and the present. We offer programs that share the results of our work with members of the public in the US and globally.

Learn More

The Material History Lab is a place for collaboration and exchange of ideas on material life and implications for understanding the deep-time human experience. Team members are encouraged to think creatively and uninhibited across disciplines when asking questions and seeking answers.

Learn More