Archaeologist Dictionary.com ar⋅chae⋅ol⋅o⋅gy/ˌɑrkiˈɒlədʒi/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [ahr-kee-ol-uh-jee] Show IPA Use Archaeologist in a Sentence
-noun 1. the scientific study of historic or prehistoric peoples and their cultures by analysis of their artifacts, inscriptions, monuments, and other such remains, esp. those that have been excavated. 2. Rare. ancient history; the study of antiquity.
There is no such specific term for the study of human remains. Forensics do not only cover the examination of human remains (forensic pathology); there are many branches of forensics.
Forensic science is the study of human remains.
archaeologist
Archeology, anthropology, history
Possibly an anthropologist.
Paleontologists study prehistoric life forms. They use fossil remains to determine several aspects of various organisms who lived in ancient times.
The the scientific discipline that studies the function of the human body is physiology.
A biologist studies all life forms.
a Marine Biologist studies plant life and also studies underwater animals and life.
A person who studies the remains of human life is called an archaeologist.
analist
Possibly an anthropologist.
A scientist who studies the material remains of past human life.
Archaeologist
An archaeologist studies the material remains that human presence leaves behind. A zooarchaeologist studies the actual human remains. paleoanthropology
Archaeology, or archeology, is the study of human activity in the past, primarily a lack of public interest, and opposition to the excavation of human remains.
Studies human variation and evolution over the times. Studies human and animal remains, remains of the food they had eaten, shelters, tools to figure out what were going on in their time.
scientists
Anatomy
A paleoanthropologist studies extinct human and primate ancestors by examination of fossil remains.
Anthropologists