Culture, People, Nature: An Introduction to General Anthropology |
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Page 98
... traits that always made it possible to identify everyone's racial origin . While the number of such traits was assumed to be indefinitely large , the traditional raciologists insisted that some or all of a certain set of traits provided ...
... traits that always made it possible to identify everyone's racial origin . While the number of such traits was assumed to be indefinitely large , the traditional raciologists insisted that some or all of a certain set of traits provided ...
Page 110
... traits as their defining characteristics and does not expect these traits to correlate very well with each other nor expects too many other traits to conform to the same distribution . Especially prominent in the definition of the con ...
... traits as their defining characteristics and does not expect these traits to correlate very well with each other nor expects too many other traits to conform to the same distribution . Especially prominent in the definition of the con ...
Page 153
... traits . In the nineteenth century many anthropologists glibly spoke of survivals , traits that at one time were functional but that with the alteration brought on by cultural evolution had lost their utility . After considerable ...
... traits . In the nineteenth century many anthropologists glibly spoke of survivals , traits that at one time were functional but that with the alteration brought on by cultural evolution had lost their utility . After considerable ...
Contents
Biological Evolution | 7 |
FIGURES 11 Anthropologists at Work 289 | 8 |
Population Genetics | 13 |
Copyright | |
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Acheulian achieved adaptive Africa agriculture American Indian ancestors anthropologists australopithecines basic behavior biological bone Bushmen calories cave chimpanzees China chromosomes complex cultural evolution cultural systems descent domesticants domesticated ecological economic ecosystem enculturation energy English etic Europe European evolutionary example exchange extinct female Figure flake food-producers forest fossil function genes genetic grain grammatical groups habilines habitat Hence hominid Hominoidea Homo erectus Homo sapiens human language hunters hunting and gathering increase individuals industrial irrigation labor land linguistic living Lower Paleolithic maize males Mesoamerica Mesolithic Middle East Middle Eastern Middle Paleolithic modern morphemes natural Neolithic occur Old World Olduvai patterns peasants percent phonemes pigs plants and animals political pongids population density potlatch preindustrial primates production racial redistribution relationship reproduction rules sexual skin social societies species structure Tehuacán Teotihuacán tion traits Tsembaga Upper Paleolithic village warfare wild women Yanomamö