Charlie Prine

Dr. Charlie Prine is an Anthropology curator at the New York Museum of Natural History.

Originally hired on a temporary grant as a conservation expert responsible for restoring objects for the Superstition Exhibition, Prine later became a regular curator in the museum's Anthropology department. His specialty is Etruscan archaeology, and his life's research was a study of Etruscan liver divination.

Prine discovered the first bodies in what would come to be known as the Museum Beast Murders.When Margo Green returned to the museum as the editor of Museology, Prine was one of the first voices in the anthropology department to speak up in disagreement with her first editorial piece. The dissent was purely professional, however, as when Margo was thought to have been killed, Prine was present at her funeral, and after she was found to be alive, he was among those who signed a copy of her first published copy of Museology as a gift during her convalescence.