Culture, people, nature: an introduction to general anthropologyProfessor Harris - the leading theorist in cultural materialism - bases this comprehensive work on the perspective of thematic and theoretical coherence, giving the book depth and continuity. Speaking directly to students, helpful chapter introductions and end-of-chapter summaries focus on key points before and after reading each chapter. This seventh edition includes meticulous updating of research and scholarship, especially in the very active field of physical anthropology and archaeology. A new feature - "America Now Updates" - turns an anthropological eye on the contemporary U.S., emphasizing the comparative aspects of anthropology and making the discipline relevant to students. |
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Page 34
THE ANTHROPOIDEAN SUPERFAMILIES The suborder Anthropoidea is made
up of three superfamilies: (1) the Ceboidea, or New World monkeys; (2) the
Cercopithecoi- dea, or Old World monkeys; and (3) the Hominoidea, which
include all ...
THE ANTHROPOIDEAN SUPERFAMILIES The suborder Anthropoidea is made
up of three superfamilies: (1) the Ceboidea, or New World monkeys; (2) the
Cercopithecoi- dea, or Old World monkeys; and (3) the Hominoidea, which
include all ...
Page 214
In the New World these extinctions involved considerably more species than in
the Old World. Thirty-one genera died out, including mastodons, mammoths, big-
horn bison, camels, tapirs, horses, pigs, several kinds of goats and sheep, musk ...
In the New World these extinctions involved considerably more species than in
the Old World. Thirty-one genera died out, including mastodons, mammoths, big-
horn bison, camels, tapirs, horses, pigs, several kinds of goats and sheep, musk ...
Page 237
SUMMARY Homo sapiens was the first hominid in the New World. The precise
date of the ... This shift to broad-spectrum modes of production coincided, as in
the Old World Mesolithic, with extinctions of megafauna. It is likely that both ...
SUMMARY Homo sapiens was the first hominid in the New World. The precise
date of the ... This shift to broad-spectrum modes of production coincided, as in
the Old World Mesolithic, with extinctions of megafauna. It is likely that both ...
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Contents
Why Study Anthropology? | 5 |
Organic Evolution | 9 |
The Inheritance of Genes | 11 |
Copyright | |
78 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Acheulian adaptive Africa agriculture alleles ancestors animals anthropologists apes archaic H australopithecines band and village behavior bones cattle chapter chiefdoms chimpanzees chromosomes common complex creationists culture descent domestic groups earliest economy emic emic and etic enculturation energy erectus etic Europe evidence evolution example exchange female FIGURE flake fossil genes genetic habilis habitat hominids Hominoidea Homo sapiens human hunter-gatherers hunters hunting increase infant known Kung Kung San labor land languages living maize male mammals marriage matrifocal matrilineal meat ment Mesoamerica Mesolithic Middle Paleolithic modern modes of production monkeys morphemes mother myr ago natural Neolithic nuclear family occur Old World organization patterns peasants percent phonemes plants political pongids population primates racial rear reproduction result ritual sapiens sapiens sexual skin social societies species stone structure theory tion trade traditions ture Upper Paleolithic warfare women