@Not any, actually, even though I graduated from a pretty good school. Though I didn’t exactly hit the pavement with much enthusiasm or focus. The feeling I got, and at the time, was that Anthropology was somewhat of an incestuous field. That to make a living at it I would have to go to grad school, get a Ph.D. and teach people who would get degrees in Anthropology who would go on to get Ph.Ds in Anthropology and go on to teach people who would get degrees in Anthropology and go on to, well, you get the picture. I never did end up working in my field. I didn’t want to be an academic at the time though in retrospect I thing would have enjoyed it more and been better at it than I thought I would. But you will really have to talk to people more up to date on career prospects in the field than I am. I think there may be more opportunities than there used to be. I think most states, if not all states have laws now that certain sites have to be studied and excavated, places where major road work, etc. is to be done before the work can begin. I think this has probably opened up more opportunities, at least for archeologists. As for cultural anthropology, that, as far as I know, is still more of an academic field, though who knows. I think industry and corporations sometimes use anthropologists in some of the same ways they use sociologists. I wish I could tell you more. Like I said, my degree is fairly old and dusty, though I still like to think I still have at a least a bit of an anthropologist’s brain and thought process, even after all these years. Anyway, I wish I could be more help.