Anthropology 1100 Exam 1
General anthropology
"four-field"- anthropology as a whole: culture, archaeological, biological and linguistic
Haplogroup
a biological lineage defined by specific cluster of genetic traits
Illness
a condition of poor health perceived or felt by an individual
Biological
a long period of infant dependency, year-round sexuality, and a complex brain
Gene
a place (locus) on a chromosome that determines a particular trait
Disease
a scientifically identified health threat caused by a bacterium, virus, fungus, parasite, or other pathogen
Hypothesis
a suggested but as yet unverified explanation
Allele
a variant of a particular gene
Food production
an economy based on plant cultivation and/or animal domestication
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)
an indigenous group's collective knowledge and its applications
Selection pressure
any feature of the environment, both physical and cultural, that results in natural selection and can cause individuals of different genetic types to survive to different average sets, to reproduce at different rates, or both
Hominins
are a tribe in the hominid family, made up of all human species that ever existed, but African apes are excluded
Fossils
are remains, traces, or impressions of ancient life forms
Uniformitarianism
belief that natural forces at work today also explain past events
Health Care Systems
beliefs, customs, specialists, and techniques aimed at ensuring health and diagnosing and curing illness
Diffusion
borrowing of traits between cultures
Development Anthropology
branch of applied anthropology that focuses on social issues in and the cultural dimension of, economic development
Bioculture
combining both biological and cultural perspectives and approaches to a given problem
Psychological
common ways in which humans think, feel, and process information
Medical Anthropology
comparative, biocultural study of disease, health problems and health care systems
Ethnology
comparative, cross-cultural studies of two or more societies using ethnographic data -study of sociocultural difference and similarities
Urban Anthropology
cross-cultural and ethnographic study of urbanization and life in cities
National Culture
cultural features shared by citizens of the same nation
International Culture
cultural traditions that extend beyond national boundaries
Excavation
digging through layers at a sight
Particularity
distinctive or unique culture trait, pattern or integration
Relative Dating
establishing a time frame in relation to other strata or materials
Absolute dating
establishing dates in numbers of ranges of numbers
Biochemical genetics
examines structure, function, and changes in DNA
Stratigraphy
examines ways in which earth sediments accumulate in layers known as strata
Acculturation
exchange of cultural features between groups in firsthand contact
Generality
exists in some but not all societies
Science
field of study that seeks reliable explanations, with reference to the material and physical world
Population genetics
field that studies genetics of breeding populations
Ethnography
fieldwork in a particular cultural setting; provides an account of that community, society, or culture
Classical archaeologists
focus on literate civilizations of the Old World, such as Greece, Rome, and Egypt
Heterozygous
having dissimilar alleles of a given gene
Scientific Medicine
health care system based on scientific knowledge and procedures
Subcultures
identifiable cultural patterns existing within a larger culture
Core values
integrates each culture and helps distinguish it form others
Underwater archaeologists
investigate submerged sites like ships
Public Anthropology
is an extension of anthropology's visibility and demonstration of public policy relevance
Paleoecology
looks at the ecosystems of the past
Crossdating
matching ring patterns among trees and assigning rings to specific calendar years
Anthropometry
measurement of human body parts and dimensions, including skeletal parts
Hominid
member of hominid family; any fossil or living human, chimp, or gorilla
Dendrochronology (three-ring dating)
method of absolute dating based on the study and comparison of patterns of tree-ring growth
Contract archaeologists
negotiate specific contracts for cultural resource management (CRM) studies
Symbols
no necessary or natural connection to the things they signify or for which they stand
Association
observed relationship between two or more variables
Curer
one who diagnoses and treats illness
Chromosome
paired lengths of DNA, composed of multiple genes
Enculturation
process by which a child learns his or her culture
Independent Invention
process by which humans innovate, creatively finding problems and solutions
Adaptation
process by which organisms cope with environmental forces and stresses
Microenculturation
process by which people learn particular roles within a limited social system
Anthropological Archaeology
reconstructs, describes and interprets human behavior through material remains
Increased Equity
reduced poverty and a more even distribution of wealth
Holistic science (Holism)
refers to the study of the whole of the human condition: past, present, and future; biology, society, language and culture
Human rights
rights based on justice and morality beyond and superior to particular countries, cultures and religions
Cultural rights
rights vested in religious and ethnic minorities and indigenous societies
Globalization
series of processes that work to make modern nations and people increasingly interlinked and mutually dependent
Theory
set of ideas formulated to explain something
Seriation
similar-looking artifacts should be the same age. Changes in artifact style can be used to create a relative chronology
Universal
something that exists in every culture
Linguistic Anthropology
studies language in its social and cultural context, across space and over time
Paleoanthropology
study of ancient humans and their immediate ancestors
Paleontology
study of ancient life through the fossil records
Bone Biology
study of bone as a biological tissue
Paleopathology
study of disease and injury in skeletons from sites
Bioarchaeologists
study of human skeletons to reconstruct physical traits, health status, and diet
Cultural Anthropology
study of human society and culture -describes, analyzes, interprets and explains social and cultural similarities and differences
Ecology
study of interrelations among living things in the environment
Taphonomy
study of processes affecting remains of dead animals
Systematic survey
study of settlement patterns over a large area
Anthropology and education
study of students in the context of their family, peers and enculturation
Anthropology
study of the human species and its immediate ancestors
Primatology
subfield of biological anthropology; primate studies
Ethnocentrism
tendency to view one's own culture as superior and to use own standards and values in judging outsiders
Adaptability
the capacity to become adapted
Natural Selection
the differential contribution of offspring to the next generation by individuals of different genetic types, but belonging to the same population
Behavior
the dynamics of adaptation
Law of Superposition
the layers that are lower down in a stratigraphic sequence must be older than the layers that are above them.
Adaptedness
the status of being adapted and the ability of an organism to survive and reproduce in a given environment
Palynology
the study of ancient diet, plant life, and climate using pollen samples
Biological Anthropology
the study of human biological variation in time and space
Sociolinguistics
the study of language in society
Underdifferentiation
the tendency to view so-called less-developed countries as being more alike than they really are
Cultural Relativism
to know another culture requires full understanding of its members' beliefs and motivations
Cultures
traditions and customs, transmitted through learning, that form and guide the beliefs and behavior of the people exposed to them
Evolution
transformation of species; descent with modification
Experimental archaeologists
try to replicate ancient techniques and processes under controlled conditions
Overinnovation
trying to achieve too much change
Remote Sensing
use of aerial photos and satellite images to locate sites on the ground
Historical archaeologists
use written records as guides and supplements; and work with remains more recent than the advent of writing
Colonial archaeologists
use written records to locate and excavate postcontact sites and to verify or question written accounts
Molecular Anthropology
uses genetic materials to date and estimate the evolutionary distance between species
Applied Anthropology
using anthropology is solve contemporary problems
Mendelian genetics
ways in which chromosomes transmit genes across generations
Forensic Anthropologists
work within a legal context to recover, analyze, and identify human remains