ANT101 Final Amy Young USM
***********Medical Anthropology works in: (5 parts)
1. The way culture intersects with health: how it impacts 2. What happens to make people sick and what they do to treat it: how to treat 3. Public health: what could be done to help improve 4. Medical pluralism- many therapeutic options: 5. Acceptability- how do cultural beliefs jive with medical practice
Applied Anthropologists are working mostly in: (4 parts) List Importance ****most important
1. Tribal and ethnic organizations** 2. Governments*** 3. Non-Governments**** 4. Corporations*
Urban Anthropology works in: (2 parts)
1. Urban vs. Rural Dynamic 2. People are moving to the cities Urban poverty and homelessness
International Development Anthropology works in (3 parts)
1. What do the little guys think 2.**** VICOS project: Peru's hacienda system, Cornell rented hacienda and made the leaders teach reading, math and crop techniques. Increased productions by 5x 3. Patrons and Peons (lords and sifts)
Define Myths: 3 parts
1. a people's traditional stories 2. provide a pedagogical model for the people 3. Pedagogical mans having to do with teaching and learning
Late Epipaleolithic (Natufian)
13-11,600 cal BP, return to high mobility (i.e. TBAS 209, Jordan-one structure indicative of lifestyle; Huwaynit in the Black Dessert of Jordan one structre with terrace wall)-hunt, collect wild plants, little art/personal ornamentation, use microliths in composite tools (arrows/sickles).
Boscombe Boy
14-15 year old boy buried with necklace of beads from the Baltic sea; Bronze age burial at 1500 BC; the boy grew up near the Mediterranean sea; maybe a visitor to a famous place, Stonehenge? = It suggests that ppl throughout the Europe knew about the stonehenge; All bronze age people came from other places and buried here.
Grandmother Hypothesis
A hypothesis stating that menopause in older women is an adaptive trait because it contributes to the survival of grandchildren by eliminating the possibility of childbirth and allowing older women to further their genetic interests by nurturing their grandchildren.
Law
A kind of social control characterized by authority, intension of universal application, obligatio, and sanction.
Bilateral Descent
A kinship system in which individuals trace their kinship equally through both parents.
Cognatic Descent
A kinship system in which individuals trace their kinship relationships through both females and males.
Patrilineal Descent
A kinship system in which individuals trace their primary kinship relationships through their fathers.
Matrilineal Descent
A kinship system in which individuals trace their primary kinship relationships through their mothers.
lingua franca
A language mutually understood and commonly used in trade by people who have different native languages.
Rights of Intensification
A ritual that takes place during a crisis in the life of the group and serves to bund individuals together. i.e. funeral ceremonies, planting/harvesting ceremonies.
Mezhirich site
A site of mammoth bone dwelling at Russian plain; 18,000-14,000 bp, cold weather base camp, dwellings with large exterior storage pits, hearts, exterior piles of mammoth bones; lithics and mammoth ivory artifacts..etc also found.
Band
A small foraging group with flexible composition that migrates seasonally.
Role
A social position in a group, with its associated and reciprocal rights (privileges) and duties obligations).
offspring
A son or a daughter
Levallois technology
A specialized way of preparing a core to remove a flake, point, or blade of allegedly specific shape; appears during late Acheulian but is main technology of Middle Paleolithic and Middle stone age industries.
What is a burdash considered?
A third gender
causewayed camp
A type of Neolithic enclosure, built in Britain about 3800-3000 BC, consisting of one or more ditch and bank circuits broken by causeways. Most had settlement or ceremonial functions.
Lineage
A unilineal group larger than an extended family whose members can actually trace how they are related.
Stonehenge site
A visible monument in the landscape containing sarcens (large stones) and blue stones (small stones) in England; Idea: solar calendar? Lunar calendar? Burial grounds? Ritual gathering place? When peope die, they move the dead people to bluestone henge. The cremated body goes to the stonehenge, where people are buried
Agriculture: "_____ place is in the home"
A women's
Global Economy
A worldwide integrated system of buying and selling goods, materials, labor, and services in the global market.
Ethnography
A written description of the way of life of some human group.
Clan
A-kin group based on rules of residence and descent
First family
A. afensis, 13 individuals, 4 infants died together --> indicates social groupings, individual variation
moiety
An association that divides a society in half.
Tribe
An autonomous political unity that encompasses a number of distinct, geographically dispersed communities that are held together by sodalities.
Silbury Hill site
An example that explains that : Territories are much larger in size = suggests that there is a change in how people are organized; need more people to construct during Late Neolithic period. ;As territories grow in size, more people, need small handful of leaders to lead the large population; 18 million man hours to build.
Clans
An extended uni-lineal kinship group. Members claim common descent from a remote ancestor, usually legendary or mythological.
ethnicity
An imagined community large groups of people within a states borders, members share a common history and territory
Vision Quest
An individual practice in which a person attempts to enlist the aid of supernatural powers by intentionally seeking a deem or vision.
Ritual
An organized and stereotyped symbolic behavior intended to influence supernatural powers.
Science
An organized way of using evidence to learn about the natural world
etic
An outsider's understanding of another culture
Forensic Anthropology
Analysis of human skeletal remains resulting from unexplained deaths (often criminal activity)
Isotopic Analysis
Analysis such as dietary analysis can inform us about societal structure or settlement patterns
Human Variation
Anatomical and physiological differences among human population, researched primarily b biological anthropologists.
Ethnic Boundary Marker
Any cultural trait that serves to distinguish members of one ethnic group from members of other ethnic groups.
Incest
Any type of sexual contact between closely related people
What is anthropology?
Anything to do with the conditions of humans.
Why is Ardipithecus ramidus interesting?
Ape like dentition Bipedal, but with an opposable big toe Did not knuckle walk
Evolutionary Medicine
Applying evolutionary principles to understanding contemporary health challenges
Historic Archaeology
Archeology that supplements historical research through excavating sites and studying material remains.
Features
Artifacts that humans made that cannot be removed from site. Ex: building
applied anthropology
As a profession it is explicitly concerned with making anthropological knowledge useful. Applied or practicing anthropologists may be involved in one or more phases of a project: assembling relevant knowledge, developing plans and policies, assessing the likely social and environmental impacts, implementation, and evaluating the project and its effect
1. The universe can be understood 2. Things are as they appear
Assumptions of Science
Likely made the footprints at Laetoli
Australopithecus afarensis
Which of the following was the first definite hominid:
Austrolaithecenes
Types of peaceful resolution
Avoidance: people simply avoid each other until emotions settle down. Community action: societies tend to resolve conflict with community involvement. Communities can also administer punishment for certain crimes. Negotiation or mediation Ritual reconciliation-apology Oaths and Ordeals: Oath-the act of calling a deity to bear witness to the truth of what one says. Ordeal- a means used to determine guilt or innocence by submitting the accused to dangerous or painful tests believed to be under supernatural control. Adjudication, courts, and codified law
Background: • many techniques or "styles" of cave art; use of natural features of the cave walls • they drew what they saw in wild animals (genetic work in horses has shown that prehistoric wild horses came in three color types, so that spotted horses are not imaginary animals) • elements of cave art: most common animal • horse (small smiling horse), bison, woolly mammoth, aurochs, ibex, deer • elements of cave art: least common animals • bear, panther, "penguin" (Great Auk), rhino, owl, humans (some had Venus figurine-like qualities), scribbles of faces, • elements of cave art: "signs" and other things • patterns, abstracts, scribbles, dots, hands ("mutilated" hands: but possibly just that there was no paint on a certain area of the hand) Why Upper Paleolithic art occured: •art for the sake of art (Lartet and Christy 1864) •hunting magic/initiation rituals (Breuil 1901) • male and female pairings (Leroi-Gourhan 1964) • horses, deer, ibex, carnivores = male symbols • narrow signs = male symbols • bison, aurochs = female symbols • wide signs = female symbols • aggregation rituals (social identity) (Conkey 1980) • entoptic phenomena (Lewis-Williams 1988) see: entoptic phenomena • information recall device (Mithen 1990)
Background: • many techniques or "styles" of cave art; use of natural features of the cave walls • they drew what they saw in wild animals (genetic work in horses has shown that prehistoric wild horses came in three color types, so that spotted horses are not imaginary animals) • elements of cave art: most common animal • horse (small smiling horse), bison, woolly mammoth, aurochs, ibex, deer • elements of cave art: least common animals • bear, panther, "penguin" (Great Auk), rhino, owl, humans (some had Venus figurine-like qualities), scribbles of faces, • elements of cave art: "signs" and other things • patterns, abstracts, scribbles, dots, hands ("mutilated" hands: but possibly just that there was no paint on a certain area of the hand) Why Upper Paleolithic art occured: •art for the sake of art (Lartet and Christy 1864) •hunting magic/initiation rituals (Breuil 1901) • male and female pairings (Leroi-Gourhan 1964) • horses, deer, ibex, carnivores = male symbols • narrow signs = male symbols • bison, aurochs = female symbols • wide signs = female symbols • aggregation rituals (social identity) (Conkey 1980) • entoptic phenomena (Lewis-Williams 1988) see: entoptic phenomena • information recall device (Mithen 1990)
Regulatory adjustments
Behavioral, social, and cultural adjustments (clothing)
Out of Africa 2
Behaviorally Modern humans (Homo Sapiens) leaving Africa 70,000-60,000 years ago during wetter climate through Bab el-mandeb strait
animism
Belief in spirit beings animated by natural world
Define: Religion
Belief in supernatural powers and involves the use of rituals and the rituals are designed to influence those powers. Ex. (prayer)
Polygenists
Believe that all humans were descended from a number of pairs of humans
Monogenists
Believe that all humans were descended from an original pair of humans
What is an example of a culture in which the gender dichotomy is not accepted and men can behave as women?
Berdache or "two spirit" of the Cheyenne
Homo heidelbergensis
Between H. erectus and H. sapiens. Saw an increase in brain size and change in cranial width with less robusticity. Use of Levallois tools, lived in caves and hunted.
Define Sex
Biological: Etic
Which came first bipedalism or the expansion of the brain of hominids and when did these take place?
Bipedalism - first evidence 1mya - australophithecus
Eurasian Acheulian
Boxgrove, U.K. 500,000 yo, hand axe debris, hard and soft hammering, bones with cut marks wood spear - 400,000 ya use of fire, big game hunting - France, use of shelter - France
Putrefaction
Break-down of tissues by digestive fluids
brittle versus tough rachis
Brittle=Wild (seed is easily dispersed by nature) vs. Touch=Domesticated (takes a threshing by people to release seeds); change occurs from one to two mutations.
Define Spiritual Sanctions
Burdash/Hishra: Can be blessed: penalty for not following religious rule.
Functions of Music
Call game, lure enemies, attract women, religious ceremonies, identifier, songs w/ text= social functions. Songs express values, ideas, and worldviews of culture.
American Homo sapiens
Came to America via the Bering Land Bridge
Krapina site
Cannibalism?; Lots of Neanderal bones were broken up; issue of whether regarding cutmarks as cannibalism or defleshing for secondary burial; Russell compared Neandertal bones with 1. Butchery marks on fauna 2. Cutmarks on modern humans defleshed using stone tools for secondary burials, and concluded that straiations on Neandertals don't match animal butchery but do match deflshing on moderns.
Ossification
Cartilage replaced by bony tissue
Hohle Fels site
Caves in Germany found: earliest figurines date to ca 35 kya cal BP, the majority of Venus figures found at site are Gravettian in age, earliest musical instruments (22 cm long flute, hollow vulture wing bone, fragments of ivory flutes) 35 kya cal BP
Clinal variation
Changes in morphology that vary with geographic space
Evolution
Changes in the genetic makeup of a population over generations.
Younger Dryas
Climate-colder/drier, vegetation zones (Mediterranean forest, parkland, steppe) in the Levant shrank. Shaman burial-elderly woman with a multitude of animal bones and one human foot (not her own): 50 tortoise shells, wild boar leg, aurochs tail, golden eagle's wing, two martenskulls, gazelle horn, and leopard pelvis.
Margaret Mead
Coming of age in Samoa.
States that women's tasks tend to those most well-matched with childcare
Compatibility Theory
Biological determinism
Concept that various aspects of behaviors are governed by biological factors
Where do we find foragers today?
Continue in areas not suited to agriculture, undeveloped countries
Multinational Corporations
Corporations that produce and market goods and services globally.
neolocal
Couple establishes an independent residence
Ambilocal
Couple lives with either the bride's or the groom's family
matrilocal
Couple lives with the bride's family
patrilocal
Couple lives with the groom's family
Courts of Mediation
Court systems in which the sanctions imposed are designed more to restore harmonious relations between parties than to punish.
Global Knowledge
Cultural knowledge that is widely disseminated by means of a written language.
kinship
Culturally defined relationships based on descent, marriage, and agreement
sororate
Custom by which a widower married the sister of his deceased wife.
Osteoarthritis
Degenerative pathology caused by workload stress on joints
Neanderthal Symbolism and Culture
Deliberately buried dead. Lived in open sites and caves and used open fire. Large-game hunters.
Striking political change in recent history
Democracy has been spreading rapidly in the past few decades. In 1992, about half of the world's countries had some form of democratic society and freedoms. Scholars can't really explain why this is happening but many think it is due to the spread of ideas through technology such as the internet, television, and social media.
bilateral descent
Descent system in which kinship is traced through both parents
Unilineal Descent
Descent through one "line"; includes both patrilineal and matrilineal descent.
Patrilineal
Descent traced though male line
matrilineal
Descent traced through female line
1.Inference 2. Explanation
Diachronic Studies
Development
Differentiation of cells into tissues
mammoth steppe
During Ice ages, Europe (From Spain to Canada) was considered as the mammoth steppe, a unique tundra-grassland with sparse arboreal vegetation/low grass, thickly covered by grass, herbs, and shrubs; animal biomass and plant productivity nearly equal to African savanna today even during coldest periods of last glacial; species that today have widely different ecological requirements;
Narikotome II/ Turkana Boy
E. Africa (Lake Turkana) "Strapping youth" 90% complete, 12 year old male, 5'3" (adult estimate 6'), heavily muscled, modern pelvis, body proportions, reduced sexual dimorphism 1.6 mya
Out of Africa 1 3⁄4
Early (archaic) modern humans- skeletally modern humans (Homo Sapiens); does not seem to have gone beyond Middle East
v Interpretations by some archaeologists of the Neolithic landscape in Great Britain (see slides at end of lecture 23_social interactions in NE and Europe). [Slide 52-54, 58, 60, mainly 62-65 Lecture 23]
Early Neolithic architecture: see: Stonehenge see: Hambeldon Hill Late Neolithic architecture: see: Silbury Hill The Neolithic landscape can also be described as consisting of the domains of the living and of the dead. Structures used for rituals for the living and for everyday life are built of timber, while structures such as the megahenges are built of stone and represent long-term memorials for ancestors. The dead are transferred from the domain of the living (Durrington Walls) along the River Avon to Bluestonehenge (where they are cremated), and then over the avenue to Stonehenge (where they are buried). see: Bluestonehenge see: Boscombe Boy
Foragers: What is the typical religion?
Earth force
social environment affects disasters
Earthquakes in the U.S. do not kill many people when they occur due to adequate construction. In other countries, thousands of people are killed when the same earthquake hits because of poor living conditions. A disaster can affect a region differently due to the social conditions of that society
Australopithecus boisei
East Africa 510-530 cc, hyper-robust form, originally called Zinjanthropus, 75-110 lbs, large supraorbital tori, large, broad face, somewhat larger than A. robustus 2.3 -2.1 mya
Australopithecus aethiopicus
East Africa co-existed, intermediate between A. afarensis & robust forms, primitive cranial traits: 410 cc, prognathic face, flaring zygomatic, large nuchal crests, large supraorbital tori and sagittal crest 2.7 - 2.5 mya
Homo rudolfensis
East Africa larger brain: 780 cc av (752-810 cc range), larger body, flatter face, no brow ridges or sagittal crest, broad, grinding teeth, weight: 110-135 lbs, 4'9" 2.4 - 1.6 mya
Early Homo
East Africa stone tools, very fragmentary fossils 2 - 1.5 mya, several Homo species -- Industry: spatial and temporal depth 2.5 mya
Capitalism
Economies organized by using market principles, including both national economies and the global economy.
States that because men and women are more suited to certain tasks they will be more likely to accomplish related tasks
Economy of Effort Theory
Indigenous Minorities
Ethnically distinct groups of foragers, horticulturalists, and pastoralists who occupy their historic homelands and who are politically subordinate to larger national governments.
Discovery of Homo erectus
Eugene Dubois, Indonesia, 1891 skull cap, femur --> 2 individuals Pithecanthropus erectus, "ape-man", was 50,000 years old, now dated to be 1.0 my - 800,000 years old
Archaic Homo sapiens
Europe, Asia, Africa Archaic humans: mix H. erectus traits, anatomically modern humans appeared 500,000 until 28,000 ya
Principle 1 :Evolutionary change most often occurs through small incremental steps Principle 2: Each incremental step builds on prior adaptations Principle 3: Behavioral change drives genetic change Principle 4: Complex features evolve only if they are adaptive. = These evolutionary principles suggest that : 1. Continuities with other species are to be expected (e.g. Common chimps, bonobos, gorilla language capabilities) 2. Behavioral adaptations that require minimal genetic changes will be favored.
Europe: Paleoenvironmental data and animal bone assemblages from Happisburgh show that 800,000 ya, England had a boreal forest setting, a novel environment which hominins were able to exploit. Common animals include red deer, southern mammoth, and extinct types of elk and horse. Tree cover included pine and spruce, both indicative of cool climates. Boxgrove, in England, dates to ca 500,000 years ago and has a few hominin remains attributed to Homo heidelbergensis. England is still joined to continental Europe by a land bridge (now the English Channel). For the first time in northern Europe, we find handaxes typical of Mode 2 industries. There are two main areas at Boxgrove with numerous sites dating to ca 500,000 ya. Animals found at Boxgrove include elephant, rhinoceros, giant deer, red deer, and horse. They were attracted to the wet grassland and shrub habitat and likely the abundance of these animals, in turn, attracted hominins who hunted them. Asia: see: Lapita culture Middle East: see: Out of Africa 1 3/4 see: Out of Africa 2 Australia: see: Lake Mungo (The Willandra freshwater lakes were present until about 22,000 ya) (Lake Mungo burials: about 40,000 ya) Early sites in Australia such as Carpenter's Gap (ca 42,000 bp) and Mandu Mandu (ca 32,000 bp) have evidence of personal ornamentation/symbolism. America: see: Beringia Strait (Genetic evidence documents several waves of migration, the oldest occurring after 20,000 ya.) see: Monte Verde (14,600 cal BP) see: Clovis culture (13,200-12,800 cal BP)
Horticulture: Name environmental constraints 2. If it's an environment that's safe to walk, ______can take the babies/kids
Example: Quinlan's field work, men did most of the gardening. Clay soil and mountains and tropical. The clay soil when whet is slippery, woman fall (miscarriage or if you are holding an infant and fall = not good) 2. Women
v Social consequences of agriculture (population growth and organization, trading networks, settlements etc). [Slide 21 to 46, Lecture 22: most of them are pictures so don't feel intimidated by the coverage]
Examples: see: desert "kite" site see: 'Ain Ghazal see: Jericho accumulation of material goods • building materials (e.g., stone, timber, massive mudbrick) • heavy objects such as ground stone tools • "knicknacks" social complexity in status of people • personal ornamentation and grave goods NW Coast dances and songs social complexity in rituals monumental architecture - Cliff Palace & Pueblo Bonito • temples or shrines see: Stonehenge see: Catal Hoyuk see: 'Ain Ghazal treatment of the dead ceremonial artifacts sacred places in the landscape social complexity in status of people • larger houses for "elites" • ownership of motifs and oral traditions by families
Negative Reciprocity
Exchange motivated by the desire to obtain products, in which the parties try to gain all the material goods they can (bartering).
States that men are more expendable then women
Expendability Theory
High Altitude Adaptions
Face hypoxia D: Increased heart and lung capacity A: RBC production, higher breathing rate R: Clothes, shelter, chewing coca leaves
True or False: Women seek out sex more often than men.
False
Culture Change: (True/False) Some cultures are static. (True/False) Societies are always changing even if you can't see it from the outside. __________-(new stuff)- from independent invention (True/False) Without a need there is no discovery.
False True Innovation True
kinship
Family in which ego is a parent
family of orientation
Family in which ego is born/grows up
matrilineage
Family line is traced through the mother's side
Famine as it relates to social conditions
Famine almost always has some social causes albeit from war, drought, over growing, and diseases. In the case of a famine, governments may provide relief in the form of food aid. In many instances, the aid in unequally distributed due to bias against certain groups. In socially stratified societies, the poor suffer particularly. A society most helps those it values the most.
Australopithecus garhi
Middle Awash, Ethiopia, East Africa small brain (450 cc), partial cranium, upper jaw, similar to A. afarensis, large teeth, not specialized, transition between A. afarensis and homo, with animal bones --> butchery marks, tool use?, flakes: these rock types are not natural to area so had to transported, marrow = higher caloric intake = increased socialization and brain size 2.5 mya
Europe
H. antecessor (not erectus) 1.2 mya, Spain based on: canine fossa, 1000 cc, double brow, came between H. ergaster & H. heldleborgensis H. heldleborgensis: last ancestor of Modern humans & Neanderthals
Diets
H. habilis - omnivore, Olduvai Gorge fossils, H. rudolfensis - vegetarian - Koobi Fora fossils could have changed due to drift, natural selection, mutation
Anatomically Modern Humans
Middle East Qafzehand Skul, Isreal = 92,000 ya Europe: by 35,000 - 45,000 best site: Mladec, CZ 9 skulls, 35,000 ya
Fertile Crescent
Middle East, origin area for food production
Homo sapiens sapiens
Modern - 200,000 ya - evolving to modern form trends: increased population density, artistic traditions, fishing, trapping technology, more areas inhabited traits: globular braincase - 1400 cc, vertical/vaulted forehead, reduced brow ridges, chin, face under skull, reduced body mass and thinner bones, narrow trunk, unique pelvic shape, reduced tooth size earliest sites: Omo, Ethiopia = 190,000 ya Border Cave, S. Africa = 115,000 - 90,000 ya
Cultural Fluorescence
Modern humans began to act "modernly" 40 kya. Modernly, however, tended to mean "European". But, behaviorally, modern humans are those that behave in complex fashions.
Partial replacement/Assimilation theory
Modern humans emerge from archaic humans in Africa and interbreed with those in Africa, Asia, and Europe including Neanderthals.
What happened with the initial shift from foraging to agriculture and when was this? Why would people have turned to agriculture?
Population pressure Climate change Resource depletion Nowhere left to go
Breeding isolates
Populations are isolated geographically and/or socially from breeding with other groups
Lagar Velho site
Portuguese fossil hominin dated 27 kya which is possibly a hybrid child (modern human and Neandertal)
1.gametic mortality 2.zygotic mortality 3.hybrid mortality 4.hybrid inviability
Post-Mating Isolation
Communal Practices
Religious practices in which the members of a group cooperate in the performance of rituals intended to benefit all.
Priests
Religious specialists, often full-time, who officiate at rituals.
Fieldwork
Research that involves observing and interviewing the members of a society, region, or community to describe their contemporary ay of life.
Acclamatory adjustments
Reversible physiological adjustments of an individual after the development period (muscle building, red blood count)
"hostile Pleistocene" theory
Richerson, no plant-rich intensifications BUT human population sophistication, last glacial climates hostile to agriculture-dry, regionally variable-subsistence intensification, low in CO2≠agriculture
Horticulture: A lot of the time: ______garden and_____take produce to the market
Men Women
What is one support of the Compatibility Theory?
Men cannot breast feed making women naturally specialized for caring for infants
Interviews
Methods of collecting information about a culture by systematic questioning; may be structured (questionnaires) or unstructured (open-ended questions).
Surveys
Methods used by fieldworkers to gather information from a lot of individuals or families very quickly; common survey instruments are censuses and form questionnaires.
consanguineal
"blood" relatives, relationship based on descent from a common ancestor
Modernization
"dirty word" . developing societies acquiring some of the cultural characteristics of Western industrial societies.
Incest taboo
prohibition of sexual contact between certain close relatives, usually parent and child and sibling relations at a minimum.
Postpartum Taboo
prohibits husband from having sex with wife after she's given birth and some cases when she's still brest feeding
ompared to modern humans, Homo erectus had:
prominent brow ridges
Count Buffon
proposed microevolution and Epigenesis over Preformation
The general functions and purposes of clothing around the world.
protection from the elements, modesty, supernatural protection, and communication of status, intentions, and other messages
Allen rule
protruding body parts are relatively shorter in cooler areas of a species range than warmer areas
The term for the kind of paralanguage that includes interaction distance and other culturally defined uses of space.
proxemics
Ruth Benedict
published "Patterns of Culture" in 1934. Theme=deviance should be understood as a conflict between an individual's personality and the norms of the culture to which the person belongs. It focused attention on the problem of interrelation between culture and personality. It essentially popularized the reality of cultural variation.
habitually walk on 4 legs
quadrupedal (gorillas and bonobos)
ilium
quadrupeds: elongated, parallel to spine bipeds: shorter, broader, laterally placed pelvic muscles, attachments ilium, glutus maximus, hip joint, hamstrings, knee glute - shortened in humans hamstring - longer
femoral articulation
quadrupeds: small angle, legs parallel hips to feet bipeds: larger angle, inward, knock-kneed knee-joint rearranged, valgus angle tibia, fibula - more perpendicular to foot
foramen magnum
quads: back of skull bipeds: under skull
Expansion of Hominin World
radiation over by 1.4 mya, only: genus Homo survival, species erectus survived dispersal began 1.8 mya - single species increases its range (H. erectus out of Africa)
stratified sample
random sample with divisions into categories such as age, gender, of socioeconomic level
A society with equal access to wealth and power, but unequal access to prestige is called
ranked
Polytheism
recognizing many gods, none of whom is believed to be superodinate
Your parents and neighbors pay taxes, your brother in-law drives a truck on public roads
redistribution
A dialect associated with a geographically isolated speech community. An example is the Texas in contrast to the Midwestern American dialect.
regional dialect
transnational migration
regular movement of a person between two or more countries resulting in a new cultural identity
consanguinity
related by blood
Sympatric Species
related species that are ecologically or behaviorally isolated
Allopatric Species
related species that are geographically isolated
Paleospecies
related species that are temporally isolated
According to the Law of Superposition, if two artifacts are found at an archaeological site, but one is in a stratum (layer) of soil located above the other, then that artifact was deposited more recently. This is an example of_______ dating
relative
Seriation and stratigraphy are forms of what kind of dating method?
relative
Serial Monogamy
remarrying more than one time
circular migration
repeated movement between two or more places, either within or between countries
naturalocality
resides with either mother or fathers side of the family
Sexual Permissiveness: Greater______on premarital sex occur in_______societies where inheritance and property rights belong to men.
restriction/sanction patriarchal
bipedalism morphology
restructuring: pelvis, lower limbs lower limbs - longer
earliest hominins
result of mosaic evolution, bipedal, fossils date between 6 and 2 mya, small cranial capacities, several species lived at same time, earliest traces in East Africa
Pastoralism: What kind of land to they dwell on?
rocky, infertile
Incest Taboo
rule forbidding incest
judgement sample
sample that is chosen based on the judgement of the ethnographer: Key informants
How do the Tepoztlan Indians of Mexico feel about premarital sex?
say it will bring disgrace and insanity
Tasks that involve processing and preparation of food resources for eating or storing
secondary subsistence activities
Define Horticulture, what kind of land?
sedentary small scale plant/animal domestication on hilly/sloped fertile land
You are in a zoo and see a primate. How will you decide if it is a monkey and not an ape?
see if it has a tail
Religion
set of attitudes, beliefs, and practices pertaining to supernatural power, whether that power rests in forces, gods, spirits, ghosts, or demons
What is the difference between sex and gender?
sex is defined by biology while gender is defined by culture and can be changed
Sexual Dimorphism: Men: have bigger_____dimorphism.
sexual
homosexuality
sexual attraction to the same sex
Marriage: What are the rules based off of?
sexual selection
Types of religious practitioners
shamans: usually a part time male specialist who has fairly high status in his community and is often involved in healing. Sorcerers and Witches: even in both sexes, sorcerers and witches have very low social and economic status. They are usually feared because people believe they know how to invoke the supernatural to cause illness, injury, and death. Mediums: mediums tend to be female. These are part time practitioners are asked to heal and divine while in possession trances, that is when they are thought to be possessed by spirits. Priests: generally full time male specialists who officiate at public events. They have high status and are thought to be able to relate to superior or high gods who are beyond the ordinary person's control.
How did the remains at Laetoli appear to be at one point structurally?
short, slow, with a brain like a chimpanzee
What are some physiological female tendencies?
shorter wider greater percentage of body fat
Are gender roles very different from culture to culture, or more similar?
similar
Dialect
similar/different language
Hunting
small and large game, not primary food (vegetable matter was), Zoukoudian, China - caves (550,000 - 300,000 ya)
Homo erectus derived traits
smaller, less prognathic face, less robust, higher skull, smaller jaw, smaller teeth than H. habilis, sagittal keeling (Asia), thick enamel, nuchal torus - larger in E. African, 970 cc ave: 750-1250 cc range, large, projecting nose
Bergmann rule
smaller-sized subpopulations of a species inhabit warmer parts of geographic range and larger-sized subpopulations the cooler areas
A dialect spoken by a speech community that is socially isolated from others. These kinds of dialects are mostly based on class, ethnicity, gender, age, or particular social situations. "Black English" in North America is an example.
social dialect
ascribed status
social position a person receives at birth or involuntarily later in life
achieved status
social status that comes through talents choices actions and accomplishments rather than ascription
ascribed status
social status that people have little or no choice about occupying
social structure
social structure of the gods mirrored the social structure of society. ranked society= ranked gods. not ranked society= no ranked gods
Ranked societies
societies that don't have any unequal access to economic or power but with social groups that have unequal access to status positions and prestige
Castes
societies to which membership and types of labor are ascribed at birth
Egalitarian societies
societies which all people of a given age-sex category have equal access to economic resources, power, and prestige.
Egalitarian societies are least likely to be found among
societies with intensive agriculture
study of use of languages in communication in everyday life
sociolinguistics
societies allow the institution of change
some societies welcome change because it will be beneficial to societies. In Taiwan, women were introduced to family planning methods to slow the birth rate. They wanted less kids so they welcomed the new changes and the birth rate quickly fell to a manageable level.
Achieved Political leadership
someone who goes out and wins the support of the people. It must be worked for and is not given. Example: "big men" in south america who have many wives, plenty of property, and take care of their family and friends
internally displaced person (IDP)
someone who is forced to leave his or her home or community but who remains in the same country
displaced person
someone who is forced to leave his or her home, community, or country
An artifact is
something made or changed by humans
revitalization movements
sometimes social stress gives rise to new religious movements. Seneca indians
Polyandry: First _______ inherits the land which makes the land go farther.
son
atlati
spear thrower, sometimes carved to represent animal figures
If two populations of primates were separated for a substantially long period of time by geographically, causing them over time, to begin developing characteristics that distinguished them from each other result in
spectiation
A term referring broadly to patterned verbal behavior used by humans.
speech
Wernike's
speech perception
Broca's
speech production development of Broca's area in endocranial casts
Trobriander & yams
spend lots of time/effort to raise yams for other people, normally their sisters and married daughters. Purpose- to enhance his own influence.
Roles of Shaman
spiritual leaders and traditional healers. Act as mediators between spirit & physical world.
Cultural anthropology
study of customary patterns in human behavior, thought, and feelings. Focuses on humans as culture-producing and culture reproducing creatures.
Descriptive linguistics
study of how language are constructed
Historical linguistics
study of how language change over time
Paleoanthropology
study of human evolution
Phonology
study of sound in language and how they are used
Paleo-anthropology
study of the origins and predecessors of the present human species
Ethnology
studying cultures from a comparative or historical point of view.
Race
subpopulation or variety of a species that differs somewhat in gene frequencies from other varieties of the species.
Nicolas Copernicus
sun centered galaxy
hominins
super family: hominoidea, family: hominidae - humans, extinct ancestors and great apes, extinct ancestors, subfamily: homininae - African great apes, humans, ponginae - orangs, tribe: hominini - humans and extinct ancestors
hominids
super family: hominoidea, group together because of morphology, family: hominidae - humans/extinct ancestors, pongidae - great apes, hylobatidae - lesser apes, humans and chimps should be grouped closest, chimps and gorillas too, orangs on their own
Religion: Getting in Touch
supernaturals
irrigation
supplying land with water through a network of canals
circumcision
surgical removal of the foreskin of the penis
The term for sounds or things which have meaning given to them by the users. The meaning can not be discovered by mere sensory examination of their forms. They are abstractions created by people.
symbols
The general term for a standardized set of rules that determine how words should be combined to make sense to speakers of a language. Grammar consists of these rules and morphology.
syntax
What are some physiological male tendencies?
taller heavier skeletons broader shoulders
Cultural pluralism
term used when smaller groups within a larger society maintain their unique cultural identities, and whose values and practices are accepted by the wider culture.
Tribe
territorial population in which there are kin/non kin groups with representatives in a number of local groups
Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
that each language provides particular grooves of linguistic expression that predispose speakers of that language to perceive the world in a certain way. "the picture of the universe shifts from tongue to tongue".
What are some supports of the Economy of Effort Theory?
that women are more able to do home chores men make musical instruments
right of return
the United Nations' guaranteed right of a refugee to return to his or her home country to live
In the egalitarian societies people may differ in prestige, but these differences are not related to
the economic status of one's parents
reciprocity
the exchange of goods and services, of approximately equal value, between two parties
FOXP2
the first gene relevant to the human ability to develop language; One from dad and one from mom (FOX p2) = if one of them is bad, then you get a language impairment; two functional copies of FOXP2 are required for acquisition of normal spoken language; Figuring out when human started to have human FOXP2. If you can figure out when that appears, you can figure out when the modern human language appeared in the past. Because you need FOXP2 to have a modern human language; a feature responsible for the symbolic expression
Law of superposition
the geologic principle that states that in horizontal layers of sedimentary rock, each layer is older than the layer above it and younger than the layer below it.
Cultural relativism
the idea that one must suspend judgment of other people's practices in order to understand them in their own cultural terms.
If a culture believes it is best for people to marry a cousin, but only 4% of people actually do so is an example of
the influence of indirect cultural constants
social capital
the intangible resources existing in social ties, trust, and cooperation
poverty
the lack of tangible and intangible assets that contribute to life and the quality of life
syntax
the manner in which minimum units of meaning are combined
comparative method
the methodological approach of comparing data
Neolithic
the new stone age. Presence of domesticated plants and animals
Fixity of species
the notion that species, once created, can never change
Social complexity
the number of groups and their interrelationships in a society
Archaeology is the study of
the past through material remains
Social structure
the people in a society considered as a system organized by a characteristic pattern of relationships
Lower Paleolithic
the period Oldowan and Acheulian stone tool tradition
cultural relativism
the perspective that a foreign culture should not be judged by the standards of a home culture and that a behavior or way of thinking must be examined in its cultural context
Atheism
the position that there are no deities. It can also mean the rejection of belief in the existence of deities. A broader meaning is simply the absence of belief that any deities exist. Atheism is distinguished from theism, which in its most general form is belief that at least one deity exists.
kinship system
the predominant form of kin relationships in a culture and the kinds of behavior involved
paleoanthropology
the study of human biological evolution
sociolinguistics
the study of linguistic behavior as determined by sociocultural factors
Anthropology
the study of mankind in all times and places
culture
the sum total of the knowledge, attitudes, and habitual behavior patterns shared and transmitted by members of a society
culturentism
the sum total of the knowledge, ideas, behaviors, and material creations that are learned, shared, and transmitted primarily through the symbolic system of language
descent
the system by which members of a society trace kinship over generations
Upper Paleolithic
the time period associated with the emergence of modern humans & spread around the world
unilineal descent
the tracing of descent through only one parent
bilineal descent
the tracing of kinship relationships through parentage
descent
the tracing of kinship relationships through parentage
dowry
the transfer of cash and goods from the bride's family to the newly marriage couple
An explanation (not just an association) supported by a reliable body of data
theory
James Hutton
theory that the earth was very old due to the slow pace of geological change dependant more on presently observable agents like water, wind and ice.
Uniformitarianism
theory that the earth's features are the result of longterm process that continue to operate in the present as they did in the past.
Which of the following is true about the distribution of variation among modern humans?
there is more variation within each "race" than between them
What part do women of the iriquois have in the political process?
they can nominate, elect, and impeach representatives can forbid males from going to war and negotiate peace (informal influence)
Tannen suggests that men and women may develop different speaking styles because
they grew up in different kinds of social groups and subcultures
Jebel Faya site
they had Levallois like Neandertals
How do the Etoro of New Guinea feel about homosexuality?
they prefer it over heterosexuality (forbidden 260 days/year)
Mosaic evolution
things change at different rates, continuous variation, things change very slowly
What kind of forager is most likely to live in a sedentary settlement with land ownership
those relying on both substances
Ethnocentrism (negative aspects)
too easy to take this idea as a charter for condemning other cultures as ingerior and to denigrate and exploit them for the benefit of ones own.
Cultural Innovations
tools, hunting, fire, shelter, birthing
Culture
tools: more sophisticated, specialization, Upper Paleolithic, more precisely made, blades: hard to make, carving - burins, gravers, bone - awls, needles, knives, harpoons, Atlatl - device for throwing spear, Solutrian tool type, more efficient
Genotype
total complement of inherited traits or genes of an organism
Neanderthal Morphology
traits shared with other archaic humans: sloping forehead, long, low skull, little or no chin, large brow ridge traits unique: 1520 cc (range 1200 - 1800 cc), long faces, large nasal region, occipital bun, broad front teeth, low forehead compared to modern: absent chin, double arched brow ridge, thicker skull bones, larger molars, stock build, broad rib cage, slightly bowed, long bones, well developed musculature, generally robust bones
Foragers: __________: still want to be foragers but can't. 3 reasons why?
transitional 1. they start to use domesticated plants 2. Still foraging for part or most of the year 3. Start to see gender roles
Clovis culture
we now know that Clovis culture was not the first paleoamericans; hunted big animals (due to evidence of kill.butchery sites), evidence of clovis spear points,
What separates us from our relatives
we walk upright
ideal behavior
what people believe they should do; not what people really do
real behavior
what people do realistically. There are always acceptions to the ideal
Levirate
when a widow marries her dead husband's brother
Sororate
when a wife dies and man marries his sister in-law
Ghost Marriage
when a woman marries a dead man
disaster
when large areas or large numbers of people are affected by an event
Fundamentalist Mormons
who practices Polygyny in the US?
humans have a ____ pelvis, while the great ape's pelvis is ____ and ____.
wide, long, narrow
Fraternal Polyandry
wife married to brothers
11,000 years old tools found at Natufian suggest they harvested ____ intensively
wild grains
Movie on Maasai Women: Who has primary responsibility for the safety of the family herd of cattle? Who has responsibility for building the house? Who has responsibility for milking the cows and collecting food?
wives
Polyandry: Define, What type of environment? Why?
woman with many husbands at the same time. Only works in really harsh environment. You don't want to split up land inheritance.
Horticulture: _____ do most of the cultivating cross-culturally
women
In traditional hunter-gatherer societies, ___ bring in more calories in the form of plants, while ___ bring in more valued calories in the form of meat.
women; men
Agriculture: The______requires a lot of upper body strength (Before tractors)
work
ethnography
written description of a culture based on data gathered from fieldwork
With the Iriquois, what kinship do they have in the family?
you are of the mother's family not the father's
How long did H. erectus last?
youngest fossils 200,000 ya (Africa) Indonesian site: 53,000 ya overlap w/ moderns
The number of languages in which speakers must memorize all possible sentences that can be created. In other words, simply learning the rules for creating sentences is not adequate to be able to speak and understand other people using these languages.
zero
Totemistic Rituals
Rituals during which members of a kinship group focus on their totem, a natural object with which they are associated.
Ancestral Rituals
Rituals performed to worship or pleas a kinships group's ancestors.
v Major results/points, and how they apply to ANTH 122 topics, for the following readings: Roebroeks 2005 Hodgson 2006 Diamond 1992 Munro & Grossman 2010 Golitko & Keeley 2007
Roebroeks 2005 - Life on the Costa del Cromer - Flint fragments from eastern England are earliest known evidence of human occupation of Britain. - 700,000 ya, UK was connected to Europe, and sediments laid down by the lowland rivers are found today along the coastline. As the sediments were deposited, remains of animals and plants became trapped in them. - Partiff et al. à Early humans were roaming the banks of the rivers during a warm interglacial period, earlier than thought before. - Findings were found near the village of Pakefield, Suffolk. - 32 pieces of worked flint à clear evidence for presence of humans at 700,000 years ago. - Small assemblage consists mostly of waste flakes produced during flint knapping. - Impossible to suggest technological advancement, but Roebroeks suggests butchering toold. - Implications: o Pakefield findings show that humans were not confined to the Mediterranean perimeter of Spain for a few hundreds of thousands of years before moving into the north. (Site 200,000 y older than previous evidence). o Pakefield artefacts do not testify to a colonization of the colder temperate environments of northern Europe, but more to a short-lived human expansion of range, in rhythm with climatic oscillations. - Because the Cromer Forest-bed is among most researched sites à what are the implications of other parts of the world? - "Careful with translating absence of evidence into evidence of absence." Derek Hodgson 2006 - ASC and Palaoart: an Alternative Neurovisual Explanation - A rebuttal of Lewis-William's notion that altered states of consciousness and shamanism can explain Paleolithic art. - Lewis-Williams suggests that individuals ten to hallucinate those things that have a particular cultural significance. Hodgson, however, refutes this, by showing that animals are not absent amonst urban populations undergoing hallucinatory experiences. o Must be another reason for the appearance and persistence of animals in such instances other than cultural affinities. - Lewis-Williams suggests that depicted animals were all about seeming to emerge from cave walls. à Not true, for nearly all depicted animals are sideways on. - Conclusion: Shamanism and ASC are unable to provide a coherent and consistent explanation of palaeoart. à Geometric are intimately connected with early visual brain's preferences relating to lower brain, and higher brain is primed to be sensitive to animal forms. Jared Diamond 1992- The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race - Recent discoveries show that the transition from food foraging to farming (Neolithic revolution) may have been the worst mistake. - People began domesticating plants and animals 10,000 years ago. - Progressivist view à Lives improved with the switch to farming. (Art) - Three sets of reasons wgtagriculture was bad for health: 1. Malnutrition (Hunter-gatherers much more diverse diet) 2. Starvation (Dependent on crop, what is it failed?) 3. Epidemic diseases (Crowding led to parasites and infectious diseases) 4. Deep class divisions - Agricultures allowed for art à modern hunter-gatherers have at least as much free time as do farmer. So do gorillas. - It's not that hunter-gatherers abandoned their life-style, but that those sensible enough not to abandon it were forced out of all areas except the ones farmers didn't want. Munro & Grossman 2010 - Early evidence for feasting at a burial cave in Israel - Paper emphasizes the mportance of local/cultural contributions to the agricultural transition. - Evidence for feasting is common in the early agricultural societies of the Neolithic, but evidence in pre-Neolithic contexts is more elusive. à cultural remains from Hilazon Tachtit provide best vevidence for feasting in pre-Neolithic context. - Hilazon Tachtit: small burial cave containing the remains of at least 28 individuals in the Lower Galilee region of Israel. The fill of structures contained large quantities of identifiable animal remains à aurochs (wild cattle) and toroise. - Community members coalesced at Hilazon Tachtit to engage in special rituals to commemorate the burial, and feasts were central elements of these events. - Feasts served important roles in the negotiation and solidification of social relationships, integration of communities. à These social changes mark significant changes in human social complexity. - Investigation of social factors by providing evidence for feasting for explaining how transition to agriculture began. - Aurochs remains exhibit clear signs of butchery and bone processing and are fragmented. - Results indicate that the cattle remains in structure B were fully exploited for both meat and fat before deposition. - Implemented breakage strategy allowed meat to be removed from the shell while preserving the carapace intact. - Hilazon Tachtit meets all of the criteria of feasts: 1. Special foods (unusually large amount of important animals) 2. Energy and time investment (aurochs were largest and most dangerous, hard to acquire) 3. Special context (bones in burial of shaman) - Identification of feasting in the Natufian record relates t the expansion toof public ritual as part of increases social complexity initially triggered by sedentization (going from nomadic lifestyle to one that stays in one place permanently) à provides support for social models for agricultural origins. - Natufian evidence suggests that increased social complexity enabled society to successfully adopt the major subsistence changes that agriculture entailed à yet, unique environmental and demographic circumstance were required. Golitko & Keeley 2007- Beating ploughshares back into swords - Purpose: review the evidence for warfare found at LBK archaeological sites, particularly burial trauma and the fortification sites. - Conclusion: (1) conflict was highly prevalent, particularly at later period western sites, and that (2) this conflict not only occurred between LBK communities, bt also between LBK farmers and indigenous hunter-gatherers. - Linearbandkeramik (LBK) people first attacked the hunter-gatherers they encountered and then entered a period of increasingly violent warfare against each other, culminating an intense struggle in the area of central and western Germany. - Most obvious evidence for conflict = presence of certain types of traumatic injury in burial populations. No healing à trauma was probable cause of death. - Talheim: pit containing LBK cultural material that contained a whole population of a small LBK village. - More violence present in the western LBK area. - Argued that LBK enclosures cannot represent defensive installations because ditches are too shallow, enclose too small an area, have limited evidence of internal settlement, or contain evidence of ritual activity. - Ethnographic evidence indicating that fortification is a response to violence. Where there was less violence (east), there were fewer fortifications. - Remains from Schletz-Asparn and Talheim indicate that enemies came from other LBK villages, and that LNK-style axes and adzes inflicted the crushing blows. o Archeological evidence and ethnographic analogy demonstrate that warfare was a frequent occurrence during the earliest LBK expansion. In later western contexts its frequency seems to have been comparable to that found amongst the most violent tribal types of society known ethnographically. o Correlation violence and frequence of LBK enclosures à fortifications. o Does not rule out practice of ritual, for the ritual was likely to be connected to conflict. Lindeatbandkeramik is perhaps the best-studied Neolithic culture in all of Europe, with hundreds of sites having been subjected to excavation iver the last century. It was initially believed that the movement of agriculture into central Europe occurred via a process of peaceful migration of peoples deriving from the Near East. Many researchers of LBK still believe that physical migration of a substantial number of people offers the best explanation for the sudden appearance of a radically new material culture and subsistence system between 5700 and 4900 calBC.
Peasants
Rural people who are integrated into a larger society politically and economically.
The early 20th century idea that language predetermines what we see in the world around us. In other words, we see the real world only in the terms and categories of our language. This hypothesis was later mostly rejected by anthropologists.
Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
Patterns pertaining to war
Scholars believe smaller groups go to war usually out of fear of unpredictable but devastating natural disasters such as storms or droughts. large nation states go to war less likely with allied nations because usually they depend on each other for trade. Democratic nations are less likely to go to war than authoritarian government do.
Settled life is called
Sedentarism
ego
Self
magic
Supernatural techniques used to manipulate natural forces and beings
1.Observation/Experimentation 2.Replication 3.Generalization 4.Predictions
Synchronic Studies
Court Systems
Systems in which authority for settling disputes and punishing crimes is formally vested in a single individual or group.
taboo
Taboo things should not be touched. Taboos surround food not to be eaten, places not to be entered, animals that are not to be killed, people not to be touched sexually
Unilineal Evolution
The 19th century theory that held that al cultures pass through a similar sequence of stages in their development (savagery, barbarism, civilization).
matrilineal descent
a descent system that highlights the importance of women by tracing descent through the female line, favoring marital residence with or near the bride's family, and providing for property to be inherited through the female line
Redistribution
The collection of products or money by a central authority, followed by distribution to the group's members (taxes).
Culture Shock
The feeling of uncertainty and anxiety that an individual experiences when placed in a strange cultural setting.
shaman and prophet
The first individual who, through ecstasies and dreams acts as an intermediary to the spirit world
totem and totemism
The first is a non human representation of the apical ancestor of a clan, while the second is a cult to the ancestors
Generalized Reciprocity
The giving of goods without expectation of a return of a gift of equal value at any definite future time.
Balanced Reciprocity
The giving of valuable goods with expectation of a return of equal value at some future time.
Civilization
The highest level of ethnic identity encompassing numerous ethnic nationalities whose cohesion is based on shared cultural tradition, usually religion.
Enculturation (socialization)
The transmission of culture to succeeding generations by means of social learning.
Prestige
The respect, esteem, and overt approval other members of the group grant to individuals they consider meritorious.
Compartmentalization
The simultaneous practice of the rituals of two competing religious traditions; one in public and the other in private.
Phoneme
The smallest unit of sound that speakers recognize as distinct from other sounds.
Phoneme
The smallest units of sound that make a difference in meaning in a language
Paleopathology
The study of disease as evidenced on ancient skeletal remains
Sociolinguistics
The study of how language is related to culture and the social uses of speech.
Witchcraft
The use of psychic power to cause harm to others by supernatural means.
proxemics
The use of space as a means of communication
Income
The value of what is earned during a given period of time, usually figured on an annual basis.
World View
The way a people interpret reality and events, including how they see themselves in relation to the world around them.
Evolutionary Psychology
The study of how natural selection affects the way we think and behave. However, there are no genes that code for specific behaviors.
Auxology
The study of human growth and development
Bioarchaeology
The study of human remains from archaeological contexts. Aims to interpret ancient behavior based on evidence in skeletons.
Phonology
The study of the sound system of a language.
Morphology
The study of the units of a meaning in a language.
Kinesics
The study of the way in which certain body movements and gestures serve as a form of nonverbal communication.
Transhumance
The wide spread pastoral pattern of migrating to different elevations in response to seasonal differences in temperature and pastureland.
Phonetics
The systematic identification and description of distinctive speech sounds in a language.
Holism
The theory that parts of a whole are in intimate interconnection, such that they cannot exist or be understood independently of the whole.
Grammar
The total system of linguistic knowledge that allows the speakers of a language to send meaningful messages and hearers to understand them.
Reciprocity
The transfer of goods for other goods between two or more individuals or groups.
hunter/gatherers, or foragers
These are social groups who earn their livliehood acquiring food by hunting fishing and collecting wild pplants and animals
double descent
Traces descent through both parents
unilineal
Traces descent through only one parent
Polygyny: (True/False) Great for men as far as reproductive success
True
Polygyny: (True/False) Other resources are depleted with this such as time, money, etc.
True
True or False: Males are driven to maximize reproductive success.
True
True or False: Men have more sexual partners than women.
True
True or False: Men like sex for its own sake.
True
True or False: Men want women who are faithful and willing to commit to fidelity.
True
True or False: More men than women want/approve of casual sex.
True
True or False: Women have bonding issues tied to sex.
True
True or False: Women look for good genes, decent resources, and willingness to commit.
True
(True or False) Polyandry: Rarest marriage form _____woman marries _____ husbands
True 1 Many
Getting in Touch: (True/False) Common in religious experience. 1. churches, temples, sin-agog are examples of______. 2. What other place could Number 1 be at?
True 1. sacred spots 2. A place in nature or a spot in the home such as a rug to pray on or an alter
Polygyny: (True/False) Divorce is rare. Explain this last True/False:
True Explain: Partnership (arranged marriage)
(True/False) Masses tend to be most often "manipulated" by religion (True/False) Religion is good for social control because knowing right from wrong in religion might be a good thing
True True
patrilineal descent
a descent system that highlights the important of men in tracing descent, determining marital residence with or near the groom's family, and providing for inheritance of property through the male line
Ethnography
a detailed description of a particular culture primarily based on fieldwork
diaspora population
a dispersed group of people living outside their original homeland
nuclear household
a domestic unit containing one adult couple (married or partners) with or without children
Band
a fairly small, usually nomadic local group that is politically autonomous
True or False: Men have more orgasms than women.
True: -Men have about 100% chance of orgasm during sex because they're built to "stick and move". -Women have < 25% chance of orgasm during sex because they hold emotion to it and want to give that emotion to someone with commitment.
slash and burn
a farming method involving the cutting of trees, then burning them to provide ash-enriched soil for the planting of crops
horticulture
a food- procurement strategy based on crop production without soil preparation, fertilizedrs, irriagation, or use of draft animals
intensive agriculture
a form of agriculture using a great amount of human labor and/or capital (machines) to farm small amounts of land
Silent trade
a form of barter in which no verbal communication takes place.
assimilation
a form of cultural change in which a culture is thoroughly acculturated, or decultured and is no longer distinguishable as having a separate identity
acculturation
a form of cultural change in which a minority culture becomes more like the dominant culture
generalized reciprocity
a form of exchange in which persons share what they have with others but expect them to reciprocate later
v Gravettian/Eastern Gravettian ways of life on the "mammoth steppe."
Upper paleo humans used culture as a buffer (well-built structures, tailored clothing, and symbolic interactions) to exploit new niches and explore climatic extremes during ice ages in Europe. Examples: -Kostenki, Russia: tent-like huts, bone needles for clothing, animal figurines, venus figurines -Dolni Vestonice, Czech Republic: Semi-subterranean huts built on hillside, hearts, burials, abundant lithics and bone tools, mammoth bones, clay figurines fragments, kilns. -Sungir, Russia: A lot of personal ornaments and personal goods in burial.
Define Applied Anthropology
Use of anthropological data perspectives, theory and methods to identify assess and solve social problems
Applied Anthropology
Use of anthropological methods, theories, and concepts to solve practical, real-world problems; practitioners are often employed by government agencies or private organizations.
"oasis" theory "readiness" theory
V. Gordon Childe=oasis theory 1920/1930s, coined Neolithic Revolution, climate drier, people/plants/animals forced to cluster at oasis, observation of plan/animal cycles=sedentary people, FLAW-no evidence to support VS. Robert Braidwood=readiness theory, 1950s, assumed no climate change, agriculture in Fertile Cresent=natural distribution of cereal grasses, accumulated plant/animal knowledge=familiarity and readiness for food production, based on field research/data.
Art & Culture
Visual, Verbal, and Musical art in varying cultures.
modernization
a model of change based on belief in the inevitable advance of science and Western secularism and processes, including industrial growth, consolidation of the state, bureaucratization, a market economy, technological innovation, literacy, and options for social mobility
creole
a person descended from French ancestors in southern United States (especially Louisiana)
family of orientation
a person's childhood family, where enculturation takes place
status
a person's position, or standing, in society
achieved position
a person's standing in society based on qualities that the person has gained through action
ascribed position
a person's standing in society based on qualities that the person has gained through birth
biomedical paradigm
a person's viewpoint in the way a patient should be treated. You have the Western medical system and the non Western system
Species
a population, or group of populations having common attributes and the ability to interbreed and produce live, fertile offspring. Different species are reproductively isolated from one another.
Hypothesis
a provisional explanation of a phenomenon
Caste
a ranked group, often associated with a certain occupation, in which membership is determined at birth and marriage is restricted to members of one own caste
polytheistic
a religion that recognizes many important gods, no one of which is supreme
Olduwan Tradition
a rock with 4+ flakes taken off to create sharp edge, many uses, tools get more complex with age, repeated flakes = skill "direct precison technique" --> from core scavenging, tools, diet, settlement
transhumance
a seasonal periodic movement of pastoralists and their livestock between highland and lowland pastures
development project
a set of activities designed to put development policies into action
social stratification
a set of hierarchical relationships among different groups as though they were arranged in layers, or "strata"
pidgin
a simplified form of speech developed from two or more languages
primary group
a social group in which members meet on a face-to-face basis
Nuclear family
a social unit composed of father, mother, and children.
Culture
a society's shared and socially transmitted ideas, values, and perceptions.
incest taboo
a strongly held prohibition against marrying or having sex with particular kin
social impact assessment
a study conducted to predict the potential social coasts and benefits of particular innovations before change is undertaken
Ethnolinguistics
a study of the relations between linguistic and nonlinguistic cultural behavior
life shock
a sudden unexpected experience that cause one to faint, become hysterial or vomit. More likely to occur when immersed in an unfamilar setting
patrilineal descent
a system of kinship in which males and females acquire the lineage of their father
long barrow/gallery grave
a type of Neolithic tomb structure (megaliths and monuments) with a a long structure with one entrance on one side; some of them are wooden but lots of them are standing stones with a cap stone; the idea is to bury person inside; overtime, more and more people get buried.
dolmen
a type of Neolithic tomb structure (megaliths and monuments) with a standing stones with a cap stone (a big stone on top of them) The idea: putting a person in the middle for a burial.
passage grave
a type of Neolithic tomb structure (megaliths and monuments) with small chambers are built aside on the long path - same principle (after people die, they bury people with goods, and seal it and walk away)
Menhir
a type of megaliths and monument structure that are a single standing stone; Presumuly they might have raised it top
Alignment
a type of megaliths and monument structure that is composed of a number of menhirs stretching; Couple of roads of standing stones; often parallel
traditional development anthropology
an approach to international development in which the anthropologist accepts the role of helping to make development work better by providing cultural information to planners
critical development anthropology
an approach to international development in which the anthropologist takes a critical-thinking role and asks why and to whose benefit particular development policies and programs are pursued
push-pull theory
an explanation for rural-to-urban migration that emphasizes people's incentives to move because of a lack of opportunity in rural areas compared with urban areas
society
an extended social group having a distinctive cultural and economic organization
new immigrant
an international migrant who has moved since the 1960s
scientific study of humankind in all times and places
anthropology
Religion
any set of attitudes, beliefs, and practices pertaining to supernatural power, whether that power be forces, gods, spirits, ghosts, or demons
The field of anthropology concerned with making anthropological knowledge useful is
applied anthropology
Forensic anthropology
applied subfield of physical anthro. Studying human skeletal remains for legal purposes
the study of past human culture by the things they left behind
archaeology
Skeletal features associated with bipedalism include
arched feet, a "knock-kneed" posture
basal ganglia (language)
are a group of nuclei interconnected with the cerebral cortex, thalamus, and brainstem area responsible for initiating a sequence of things
rites of passage
are cultural ceremonies that mark the transition from one stage of life to another (baptism, confirmations, weddings) or from life to death (funerals)
Prestige
being accorded particular respect or honor
polytheism
belief in many dieties
monotheism
belief in one diety
Totemism
belief that people are related to particular animals, plants, or natural objects by virtue of descent from common ancestral spirits.
Monotheism
believing in only one high god
Sexual Dimorphism: Females tend to be the________. 3 reasons why?
choosers/selectors (picky): 1. Because they have more to lose 2.They have the biggest investment 3. They put in so much effort
Henge
circles of standing stones within a bank and ditch enclosure; often built in wood; many also had large circular timber buildings; Lots of stone rings visible in landscapes. The henges also have a bank and ditch.
The anthropological attitude that a society's customs and ideas should be described objectively and understood in the context of the society's problems and opportunities is called
cultural relativism
no culture, taken as a whole, is inherently superior or inferior
cultural relativism
theories about the world and reality based on assumptions and values of one's own culture
culture bound
LBK (linearbandkeramik)
culture of the first true farming communities in central Europe; refers to the distinctive banded decoration found on pottery vessels on sites spread throughout central Europe; This group of people had 1.long houses 2.rapid migration from central to North 3. Relied on domesticated plants and animals
The kinds of cultures that have languages with extremely large vocabularies.
cultures with complex, diverse economies and advanced technologies
levirate
custom by which a widow marries the brother of her deceased husband
matrilocality
customary residence with the wife's relatives after marriage so that children grow up in theirs mothers community
Homo habilis
dating about 2 million years ago, an early species belonging to our genus, Homo, with cranial capacities averaging 630-640 cc, about 50% of brain capacity of modern humans
Australopithecines gracile
dating to about 2.5 mya
Why did A. robustus go extinct?
decline in global temperatures --> change in plants highly specialized diet made adaptation harder, culture changed
Archaic H. sapiens traits
decreased prognathism, little, no chin, occipital bun, mastoid process beginnings
genocide
deliberate elimination of a group through mass murder
ethnocide
destruction of cultures of certain ethic groups
Ordeal
determining guilt or innocence by submitting the accused to dangerous or painful tests believed to be under supernatural control
Convergent evolution
developing similar cultural adaptations to similar environmental conditions by different peoples with different ancestral cultures. i.e. Comanche and Lakota on the Great Plains.
Speciation
development of new species
A variant form of a language. (Hint: it usually sounds somewhat different.)
dialect
The phenomenon in which different dialects of a language or different languages are spoken by a person in different social situations. People who do this may quickly switch back and forth between dialects or languages, depending on the person they are talking to at the time.
diglossia
Jacques Boucher de Perthes
discovered ancient stone tools in association with the remains of extinct animals and believed that this established an early period of European occupation that is called "Prehistory"
Isaac de la Peyere
discovered tools from a group of humans that pre dated the descendants of Adam
ethnomedicine
discovering the health related beliefs, knowledge, and practices of a cultural group
pellagra
disease resulting from deficiencies in Maize (amino acids lysine/tryptophan and Niacin (Vitamin B complex≠protein)=Lock, *** Not a lot in Mesoamerica because of KEY cooking with alkali (base compounds: soda,potash, ammonia/New World: lime, lye, wood ashes)
John Ray
divided nature into Species and Genus and also common reproduction
age sets
division of people by age to divide up work
What is the gender dichotomy? Is it accpeted across all cultures?
division of sex into two categories, male and female; no
Fire
earliest example: 1.6 mya, E. Africa best evidence: 440,000 ya, Beeches Pit - 400,000 ya, Zoukoudian, China warmth, protection, light, cooking, hunting
bipedalism
early hominin skeletons East, South Africa very old condition, possibly arouse around 7 mya, no single reason, combination of different factors
Natural selection works because of
ecofact
Foragers: They have gender roles but are still_________: they do this because it makes more sense.
egalitarian
Sexual Permissiveness societies tend to be____ with shared resources.
egalitarian
artistic differences in egalitarian and stratified societies
egalitarian repetition of simple elements much empty or irrelevant space symmetrical design unenclosed figures stratified integration of unlike elements little empty space asymmetrical design enclosed figures
household
either one person living alone or a group of people who may or may not be related by kinship and who share living space
Movie on Maasai Women: Who in the group is the closest to a religious leader?
elder (male) "iban"
The upper Paleolithic was characterized by
emergence of art, proliferation of artifact types
The term referring to a classification of things according to the way in which members of a society classify their own world. In other words, this is the way their culture and language divide up and interpret reality.
emic category
Horticulture: Who is doing the most gardening depends on_______
environment
Famine
episodes of severe starvation and death, often appear to be triggered by physical events such as severe drought or a hurricane that kills or knocks down food trees and plants.
unilineal descent
establishes group membership exclusively through either the male or female line
usually separates a group of people with common origins and language shared history and selected cultural differences such as difference in religion
ethnicity
Movie on Medical Anthropology: What are some of the cultural elements in which the researchers engaged in participant observation?
ethnobotany eat monkey
If a person reacts to a new food by saying it is disgusting, this is quite probably an example of
ethnocentrism
Comparing modern cultures archaeologists remains in order to understood the past is better called
ethnographic analogy
detailed written account of a society
ethnography
In order to be a competent speaker a person needs to go beyond the grammatical rules and vocabulary of a language to understand the social and cultural norms of specifc situations
ethnography of speaking
investigate written documents to study how the ways of life of people have changed over time
ethnohistory
study of the relationships between language and culture
ethnolinguistics
study of contemporary human cultures
ethnology
The term referring to a classification of things according to some external system of analysis brought in by a visitor to another society. (Hint: this is the approach of biology in using the Linnaean classification system to define new species. It assumes that ultimately, there is an objective reality and that is more important than cultural perceptions of it.)
etic category
The idea that because of the interconnections and interdependence of various aspects and culture can only be understood when viewed in the broadest possible perspective
evolution
How do the Siwans of North Africa feel about homosexuality?
expect male homosexuality but forbid females
Data
facts from which conclusions can be drawn
Polygyny: (True/False) Is the most common form of marriage cross-culturally Most societies allow poylygyny
false
Polyandry: _____ is extremely valuable there.
farmland
Dolni Vestonice site "Venus" figurines
female figurines found in Kostenki hut 1; most carved in marl, a few in ivory. There are differences in Kostenki-Lespugue type and Western type figurines; symbolizes fertility; variety of forms - symbolizes stages in human life.
Most archaelogists believe that the____ was one of the earliest centers of plant ans animal domestication
fertile crescent
Religion
fertility or goddess cult? "Venus" figurines: made of stone, bone, ivory
The goals of historical linguistics include all of the following except
figure out what languages is best adapted to a environment
Hawaii kinship system
generational system, not a strong unilineal system
Microevolution
genetic alterations within a population.
Natural selection
genetic change in frequencies of certain traits in populations due to differential reproductive success between individuals.
Adaptation
genetic changes that allow an organism to survive and reproduce in a specific environment
Negative reciprocity
getting as much for as little as possible, cheating/false scales may be used.
ancestral spirits
ghosts of dead relatives
Cline
gradually increasing/decreasing frequency of a gene from one end of a region to another
The part of language analysis that is concerned with how the sounds are used to make sense. It consists of morphology and syntax.
grammar
Erasmus Darwin
grandfather of charles darwin who wrote poems of evolution
Define Brideservice
groom works for bride's family before and/or in beginning of marriage
Species
group of organisms that can interbreed to produce fertile offspring
kindred
group of people related by blood or marriage
monotheism
people who worship only one god. They do believe in many beings though such as angels, demons, spirits, etc.
Magic
performance of certain rituals that are believed to compel the supernatural powers to act in particular ways
Middle Stone Age
period in Africa between ca .250,000 to 50,000ya involved with the use of prepared core technique, Levallois and notch/denticulates & various points.
morpheme
in language, the smallest unit that carries meaning
devine intervention of the gods
in some societies, gods play a direct role in human cultures and, in others, gods play almost no role. Gods are asked to intervene for the good of oneself, or for the evil or another. Many times people ask for the gods blessing when traveling, hunting, etc.
Consequences of state formation typically include
increased inequality
If you try to buy food in Mississippi with Canadian dollars you will not eat. This is an example of
indirect constraint
In general which type of economic activity provides the most leisure time
industrial agriculture
Alfred Wallace
initiated the theory of evolution through natural selection which prompted Charles Darwin to to publish his own ideas.
The linguists general term for the distance our bodies are physically apart while talking with each other. (Hint: this is an aspect of proxemics.)
interaction distance
Anthropologists agree that race
is a cultural category
The part of non-verbal communication consisting of gestures, expressions, and postures. (Hint: it is also known as body language.)
kinesics
The study of non-verbal languages fro example: body movement, facial expression
kinesics
affinity
kinship by marriage or adoption
A specific set of rules for generating speech.
language
The most important kind of human symbolic communication system. (Hint: all societies have such a communication system even though they may be illiterate.)
language
The Sapir Whorf hypothesis suggests that
language affects how individuals perceive and conceive reality
Sapir- Wharf Hypothesis
language both shapes and reflects a culture
Birthing
large brain = less developed baby = more care provisioning?
Homo erectus primitive traits
large brow ridge - E. African, post-orbital constriction, receding forehead, broad flat face, no chin
Agriculture: Define, Example?
large scale crop production, Western Culture
Sexual Dimorphism: Men: have _______ muscles and are ________.
larger taller
H. sapiens traits
larger cranial capacity, decreased molar size, decreased robusticity, top of skull wider
Robust australopithecines differ from gracile ones in the following way
larger molars, jaws , and muscle attachments for jaw muscles
Nicolas Steno
law of superposition
Sir Isaac Newton
laws of gravity
Culture is
learned and shared with a social group
Participant observation
learning a culture through social participation and personal observation in a community being studied. Also includes interviews and discussions with individual members of a group over an extended period of time.
What is one support of the Expendability Theory?
less men are needed to maintain a healthy population of women making women's reproductive value more prized
the study of the great variety of languages; scientific study of human communication
linguistic anthropology
The term for what happens when learning a second language can be affected by the patterns of the first language (e.g., blending of phonemes from the different languages).
linguistic interference
The study of the function, structure, and history of languages and the communication process in general.
linguistics
mestizaje
literally, a racial mixture; in Central and South America, indigenous people who are cut off fro their Indian roots, or literate and successful indigenous people who retain some traditional cultural practices
Define: Matrilocal
live near mother (couple lives with wife's parents)
life project
local people's definition of the direction they want to take in life, informed by their knowledge, history, and context
Bipedalism
locomotion in which an animal walks on its two hind legs
Olduvai Gorge
lots of stuff found here, in Africa
In preindustrial societies, women tend to have a ___ status.
lower
Neanderthal Genetics
mT DNA: significantly different to us, diverged 740,000 and 320,000 ya, evolved separately, cross bred w/ modern humans
ethnocentrism
making value judgements based on one's own culture when describing aspects of another culture
Although it is not universal, what gender tends to dominate the political arena?
male
Across all cultures, what gender brings in more calorires? Why is this?
male because the work is often farther away from the home than child rearing allows
Sexual Dimorphism: usual expressed through...
male-male competition
polygamy
man with more than one wife
undernutrition
many people are suffering from malnutrition throughout the world. Deprivation of food sometimes starts as early as infancy. In ecuador, baby girls are weaned from their mothers alot earlier than baby boys. This leads to a higher infant mortality rate among girls compared to boys.
In primarily what geographics of the world do we find contemporary foragers
marginal areas
occurs when prices are subject to supply and demand
market exchange
monogamy
marriage between two people
polygamy
marriage involving multiple spouses
exogamy
marriage outside a particular group or locality
exogamy
marriage to a person belonging to a tribe or group other than your own as required by custom or law
Monogamy
marriage with only one person at a time
endogamy
marriage within a particular group or locality
Define: Monogamy
marry one person at a time
Sororal Polygyny
marrying sisters (polygyny)
Hominid
members of the family Hominidae, which include all bipedal hominoids back to the divergence from African great apes.
Primate
members of the order of mammals, which includes prosimians, monkey, apes and humans.
Andry means
men/husband
Ethnographic analogy
methods of comparative cultural study that extrapolates to the past from recent or current societies.
Fossils
mineralized remains or impressions of remains of plants and animals
Radiation Theory/Out of Africa/ African Replacement
modern humans developed in E. Africa, left and spread out around world, replacing whatever H. sapiens were there
dowry
money or property brought by a bride to her husband at marriage
Define: Patrilocal
more common (couples lives with husbands parents). *Western Culture
spine
more flexible, more curved
bipedalism disadvantages
more visible to predators, slower movement, increased risk of injury, restriction of habitat, restriction of birth canal
The smallest combination of sounds that have meaning and cannot be broken into smaller meaningful units. The English words "cow" and "boy" are examples. Words can be one or more of these units.
morpheme
How sound sequences convey meaning and how meaningful sound sequences string together from words is called
morphology
The study of how sounds are combined by language into larger units called morphemes.
morphology
international migration
movement across country boundaries
migration
movement from one place to another
internal migration
movement within country boundaries
Group Marriage
multiple number of males married to more than one female simultaneously
sickle cell trait
mutation compensates for malaria, malaria parasite can't be reproduced in red cells, sickle cells burst when invaded by parasite. Horticulture=Stagnant pools of water=Mosquito population increases=Malaria Increases=Increase of AS heterozygotes(+HbA/+HbS)=Increase of allel in sickle cell.
informant
native members of a society who give information about their culture to an ethnographer
A 1973 study in the Galápagos Islands documented a drought that dramatically changed the availability of food to the island's finches. Finches with larger beaks tended to survive the drought over other finches with beaks. This study illustrates
natural selection
Why do physiological difference exist between the sexes?
natural selection throughout human development
universality of law
no matter how simple or complex the society is, each group of people have their own way settling disputes within their state.
Pastoralism: Define
nomadic society that keeps herds and follow the seasons, discouraged to marry outside, bigger family to herd
AIDS
non curable disease that affects millions of people world wide
Which of the following languages has the highest vocabulary
none of these, all languages are about the same
Phenotype
observable physical appearance of an organism which may/may not reflect its genotype or genetic constitution. Usually affected by both genetic & environmental conditions
Balancing selection
occurs when a heterozygous combination of alleles is positively favored even through a homozygous combination
cross-cousin
offspring of either one's father's sister or one's mother's brother
Initial Occupation of W. Europe
old sites > 500,000 yrs rare Atapuerca, Spain: 800,000 yo, 28 individuals, flakes and cores, H. antesessor? Isernia la Pineta, Italy: 700,000 yo, animal bones, dense layer of >1,000 stone tools
The age at which most children have learned to use about three words consisting of single morphemes, such as "eat", "mom", and "more".
one
Lake Mungo site
one of the earliest site of Australia. Burials both inhumation and cremation, fishing, simple lithic technology, constructing fish weirs, nets, hooks, spears..etc to catch fish, use of freshwater mussels, bird eggs, animal hunting, underground oven for cooking.
Monte Verde site
one of the earliest sites in the Americas (Chile) dates about 16,600 BP. Since it is so far South in Americas, coastal-hopping route into Americas is suggested; had tent-like structures (for 20-30 ppl) made of animal hides and woods, evidence of edible plants, nuts, berries, seeds; People collected shellfish and hunted extinct forms of Ilama and elephants
Chatelperronian
one upper paelo industry which we actually have some fossil neandertals remain; traditionally <Upper-Moderns> & <Middle-Neandertlas>, so discovery of neandertals burals in Chatelperronian level was shocking.
Polyandry
one wife married to multiple number of husbands simultaneously
accidents or emergency
only when a few people are affected by an event
Foramen magnum
opening the base of the skull through which the spinal cord passes to brain
indigenous
original inhabitants of particular territories
study of skeletons
osteology
The kind of syntax error that young children learning English as their native language often make with the past tense of verbs (e.g., "give" becomes "gived", "take" becomes "taked", "eat" becomes "eated").
over regularize the common rule (i.e., inappropriately apply it to irregular words)
religious adaption for the needs of the people
page 385
study of early homonids
paleoanthropology
The term for auxiliary communication methods used by people talking to each other (e.g., variations in tone and character of voice along with non-verbal forms of communication).
paralanguage
god interaction mirrors child training
parent child interaction- if parents nurtured child when it cried, the child will want the god to nurture it after performing a ritual. If parents punished child, the child will believe the gods to punish it in life
Australopithecus bahrelghazali
partial hominin mandible in Chad similar to A. afarensis, 1,500 miles W about 3.0 - 3.5 mya
participant observation
participating in the culture while studying it at the same time
osmosis
passive transport of water
bridewealth
payment groom makes to father
Define dowry:
pays money, goods the women brings into the marriage. Western Culture*
Influences on characteristics and style of art in society
people different experiences affects art. Art like religion expresses the typical feelings, anxieties, and experiences of people in a culture
ethnic group
people of the same race or nationality who share a distinctive culture
people's interaction with the supernatural
people pray, perform rituals or ceremonies to the gods, take drugs to interact with spirits, trances and altered states of consciousness
In the United States, the class system
perpetuated in part because members of different classes do not sustain significant social contact
If a young man has Type A blood, this is his
phenotype
The smallest unit of sound can make a difference in meaning is called a
phoneme
The smallest unit of sound that can be altered to change the meaning of a word. These units of sound do not have meaning by themselves. The initial sound in the words bit, kit, sit, and pit are examples.
phoneme
The part of language analysis that is concerned with the sounds of a language.
phonology
The linguistic term for what Chinook was. (Hint: it was used by Indians from different cultures on the Northwest Coast of North America to communicate with each other.)
pidgin
What gender roles are associated with both men and women? (5)
planting tending and harvesting crops perserving meat preparing skins making baskets, mats, clothing, and pottery
Chiefdom
political unit, with a chief at its head, integrating more than one community but not necessarily the whole society or language group
J.B. Lamarck
popularized macroevolution and called Transmutation a new species. evolution was result of spontaneous evolution
Gloger rules
populations or birds & mammals living in warm, humid climates have more melainin than populations of the same species living in cooler, drier areas
supernatural
powers believed to be not human or not subject to the laws of nature
Witchcraft
practicing attempting to harm people by supernatural means, but through emotions and thought alone, not through the use of tangible objects
The way most linguists believe that children learn their native language.
primarily by listening to and trying to communicate with adult speakers
Rift Valley
primary area, East Africa - Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, 1200 miles, volcanic activity, mountain building, erosion
Tasks that involve collecting or harvesting food resources
primary subsitence activities
the order of mammals including prosimians, monkeys, apes, and humans, and our ancient homonid ancestors
primate
Acculturation
process of extensive borrowing of aspects of culture in the context of super ordinate-subordinate relations between societies
The language that is the most world wide in its distribution. It is an official language in 52 countries as well as many small colonies and territories. In addition, 1/4 to 1/3 of the people in the world understand and speak it to some degree. However, it is only the third most common language in terms of the number of native speakers.
English
Ardipithecus kadabba
Ethiopia 5.8 - 5.2 mya
Ancient Incas, Hawaiians, Egyptians
Examples of societies where sibling marriages are preferred _ _ _ _ _ _ _- _ _ _ _ _, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Market
Exchange by means of buying and selling, using money, at prices determined by the forces of supply and demand.
True or False: Sperm is expensive.
False
True or False: Women start sex at a younger age.
False
Factors influencing onset of puberty
Fat reserves, genetics, nutrition, disease, activity level, and stress
culture shock
Feelings of confusion, disorientation, and anxiety that result from being immersed in a foreign culture
Australian Homo sapiens
First arrive 40 kya at Lake Mungo. Very robust with Archaic traits.
Agriculture: What kind of environment?
Flat rich land
Anthropological Linguistics
Focuses on interrelationships among language and other aspects of a people's culture.
plant based subsistence strategies
Foraging managing cultivation extensive agriculture and intensive agriculture
Ways to identify individuals
Forensic odontology (dental records), prostheses and healed fractures, facial reconstruction, ancestry/sex/stature
Tattoos
Form of visual body art. Tattoo communities are everywhere. Some tattoos are spiritually related and significant.
Sodalities
Formal institutions that cross-cut communities and serve to unite geographically scattered groups; may be based on kinship groups (clans or lineages) or on non kinship groups.
1. Empirical 2. Self-Correcting 3. Probabilistic 4. Parsimonious
Four attributes of Science
1.Insight 2.Mastery of Subject 3.Evidence 4.Logic
Four criteria of scholarship and Science
Claude Levi-Strauss
French anthropologist saw exogamy as a form of inter-group social exchange in which "wife giving/taking" created social networks and alliances between distinct communities.
African Homo sapiens
From Herto, Middle Awash. Shows a clear African origin for humans.
The culturally prescribed set of traits used to define what is "masculine" "feminine" or "other"
Gender
The amount of power men and women have in relation to each other
Gender Stratification
the three types of reciprocity
Generalized, balanced and negative
Uyun al-Hammam site
Geometric Kebaran site, earliest cemetery in the Levant, warmer/wetter habitats of LGM may have contributed to the increase in social complexity, 2 humans buried with foxes.
Why leave Africa?
Georgia and SE Asia 1.8 mya, migration soon after appearance, Africa to Asia to Europe Why not the same time? --> environment, cold, danger, food Adapt: fire -> fuel, cook clothing, shelter, hunt/tools, preserve
Define Bridesprice
Groom (or family) presents property to bride (or bride's family) before marriage
brides service
Groom works for bride's family before or after marriage
Hypoplasia
Grooves or pits in teeth that marks points where enamel deposition was disrupted by disease or malnutrition
Flores
H. florensiensis 380- 420 cc 50 k - 18 k pathological?
Australopithecus afarensis
Hadar, Ethiopia "Lucy","First family", 200 fossils, sexual dimorphism in body size, woodland, scrub, grassland, mixed traits, ape-like: curved phalanges, big toe, prognathic face, 400-500 cc, canine diastema, flat cranial base, longer arms hominin-like: heel, height: 3'6" - 5' 4 -3 may (3.9 - 4.2 mya), older are more human-like
Foragers: Name 4 cultures that hunt.
Hadzabe, Native Americans, Akaa, Aborigines
Destruction of Biodiversity
Half of all plants and animals live in rainforests and by 2022 only half of current rainforest will be left
Preagricultural diet
High in animal protein, low in fats; highly varied
Ecclesiastical Practices
Highly organized religious practices in which a full-time priesthood performs rituals believed to benefit believers or the whole society; occur in complex societies.
What is distinctive about anthropology?
Holistic, Comparitive, and Relativistic
What was the first hominid to leave Africa?
Homo Erectus
Homo erectus vs. Homo habilis
Homo erectus had a larger, rounder cranium and smaller teeth. It was the first to have human-like proportions.
Order
Homo rudolfensis came first, overlapped with Australopithecines - time & place, increased brain size & complexity, facial reduction, refined bipedalism, hand and finger bones more human-like, first stone tool, industry
We are
Homo sapiens sapiens
Taxonomic family to which humans and other now extinct relatives belong
Homonid
Philip Lieberman
How did Language evolve: Three principles: (1) evolution occurs in incremental steps, (2) evolution builds upon prior adaptations, ***(3) behavioral changes drive genetic changes.*** Postulated extinct species are indicative of intermediate stages of language development. Example: Parkinson's disease demonstrates basal ganglia (sequencing engine - important for motor control, learning, and cognition) dysfunction causes walking problems/running impossible. *** Natural selection for walking may be implicated in the evolution of human speech, language, and cognition. *** Evidence - Narikotome boy-WT15000-H. Ergaster, small thoracic vertebral canal indicative of less control over diaphragm/muscles in torso postulated prevented language use because of control issues. ***
What do "Anthropos" and "Logos" mean?
Human Study
Burdash: the phenomena was documented in the ___ tribes.
ISS, Native American
Forensic Anthropologists
Identify and analyze human skeletal remains. Archaeology: Studies the human past through excavation and analysis of the material remains left behind by past peoples.
correlation between music and childbearing
If a society cares for its infant by keeping them in slings or pouches that the mother wears, the society usually has a rhythm to their music. Societies that put infants into cradles usually have an irregular beat or free rhythm.
Laura Nader
Immigrant from Lebanon. Plays a lead role in the development of the anthropology of law. First women faculty @ UC Berkeley. Taught during the Vietnam War era.
Acclimatization
Impermanent physiological changes that people make when they encounter a new environment
Hopi lineage roles
In Hopi culture, the actual functional social units consists of lineages, and there are several in each village. Each lineage is headed by a senior woman (usually the eldest) although it is a male who keeps the "medicine bundle". Most female authority is exerted within household.
neolocality
In a house following this residence pattern a husband wife and children get their own home
phoneme
In a spoken language, the smallest distinct sound unit
body decoration and adornment
In all societies, people decorate or adorn their bodies. These decorations may be permanent-scars, tattoos, or changes in the shape of a body part. Can also be temporary, in the form of paint or objects such as feathers, jewelry, skins, and clothing that are not strictly utilitarian. Jewelry can also indicate social status in society and tattoos can reflect political rank.
Thrifty phenotype
In ancestral populations, this ability to store calories for lean times was a crucial adaptation
arranged marriage
In most societies parents arrange marriages for their children. Marriage for love is rare cross-culturally.
the right of passage
In the film "The Nuer" the boys got their foreheads cut in order to undergo this
Bride wealth & dowry
In the first case, the woman brings wealth of some sort into the marriage, groom pays the woman's family
egalitarianism
In this form of society status is not a sign at birth, in fact what little status there is, is based of achieved works
Siblings
Incest occurs more often among _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ than parents & their offspring
Define Emic
Insider Perspective
Comparative Perspective
Insistence by anthropologists that valid hypotheses and theories about humanity be tested with data from a wide range of cultures.
Biocultural evolution
Intelligence, body shape, and growth result from interaction of environment and genetics. Since good health and adequate nutrition are important for child growth, socioeconomic status affects how they develop.
Hilazon Tachtit site
Israel, 12 kya cal BP, Late Natufian forrest site, evidence of social complexity
Kharaneh IV site
Jordan, Kebaran and Geometric Kebaran occupations, associated with wet conditions near a seasonal lake/marsh (1,000+ sea shells from Red Sea/Mediterranean used as ornaments from long distances (130-270 km (80-168 miles).
Who stated, "religion is the opium of the masses"
Karl Marx
lock and key hypothesis
Katz, (LOCK) is the biological plant adaptations that have Toxic/Anti-Nutritive Defences against insect/animal predation, however, cultural adaptation provides the (KEY) or knowledge to neutralize biological locks/unlock nutritive potential. Examples: Manioc (cassava) root crop processing neutralizes poisonous prussic acid: peeled, grated, placed in press and squeezed out
Movie on Maasai Women: What country was this is?
Kenya and Tanzania
Kenyanthropus platyops
Kenya, East Africa contemporaneous with A. afarensis, somewhat prognathic, mixed traits, ape-like: small brain (400-500 cc), prognathic, small earholes hominin-like: small molars, flat face, tall cheek region evidence for adaptive radiation? 3.5 - 3.2 mya
Why do women have a higher status in some societies and not others?
Kinship organization
Gravettian/Eastern Gravettian Eastern Gravettian organized by rivers:
Kostenki-Avdeevo and Kostenki-Borshevo (Don R.), Molodova (Dnestr R.), Central Russian Plain (Dnepr-Desna R.)
Dark-skinned people
Lack of vitamin D leads to rickets.
site of footsteps dating over 3 million years ago associated with what great anthropologist
Laetoli Mary Leakey
Tone Languages
Languages in which changing the voice pitch within a word alters the meaning of the word.
Obesity
Largely caused by physical inactivity, this is directly linked to heart disease. 80% of all new diabetes will be developed by 2025.
What are the trends in hominid evolution?
Larger brains and skull sizes Bipedalism Foramen magnum Smaller teeth Heavy to lighter bones More pronounced chins Slight to no brow ridge Spinal column Bowl shape pelvis
Ascribed political leadership
Leadership is passed down from generation to generation example: monarchy
Who coined the phrase, "Subsistence is the core to culture?"
Leslie White
Tribe
Level of Political integration: sometimes multilocal group Little specialization of political officials. informal leadership Extensive agricultural and/or herding small communities with low density egalitarian Form of distribution: mostly reciprocity
chiefdom
Level of political integration: Multilocal group Some specialization of political officials Extensive or intensive agriculture and/or herding Large communities: medium density Rank society Form of distribution: reciprocity and redistribution
entoptic phenomena
Lewis-Williams states the effect of trances can be found in the depictions on rock art regardless of the means that achieve it. Entoptic visions (with either open/shut eyes)-(1)flickering/wavy geometric lines translate into (2)familiar objects (3)shaman groups visions blended into animal/human hybrid images or other fantastical imagery.
skeletal remains at Laetoli are named what?
Lucy
Paleolithic cave art
Mainly found in SW France and N Spain. Reached climax during Magdalenian period.
The language that is spoken by the most people in the world today as a native, or first, language.
Mandarin Chinese
economy
Marriage outside the family or social group
Exogamous Rules
Marriage rules that prohibit individuals from marrying a member of their own social group or category.
polygyny
Marriage to multiple women (occurs in the majority of societies to wealthiest men only)
endogamy
Marriage within the family or social group
Acculturation
Massive culture change that occurs in a society when it experiences intensive firsthand contact with a more powerful society.
Social Control
Mechanisms by which behavior is constrained and directed into acceptable channels, thus maintaining conformity.
Light-skinned people
More likely to get cancer and folate vitamin deficiencies caused by solar radiation.
Define: Nuclear Family
Mother, Father, Kids
state
Multilocal group: often entire language group Much specialization of political officials Intensive agricultural and herding Cities and towns: high density Class and caste society Form of distribution: mostly market exchange
Know a Kinship Chart
NOTEBOOK
Mousterian
"Neanderthal tool industry". Found in Southwest Asia/Europe. About 40,000 to 124,000 yrs. Ago.
Two archaic Homo sapiens
"Petralona skull" "Rhodesian Man" broken H. erectus/ergaster + AHS Acheulian tools/variations "Steinheim man" skull - assigned to "archaic H. sapiens" but has some more modern traits
Georges Cuvier
"Pope of Bones" or "Father of Paleontology"
Homo rudolfensis
(1.9-1.6 mya) Large cranium and very robust mandible. Some consider to not be Homo.
Burdash: ___/___ tribes had females
*Not important
Chiefdoms, tribes, bands, states
...
Post modern anthropology
...
legal anthropology
...
myth
...
Oldest evidence of Early Homo
2.3 mya
Age set
A category of people based on year of birth. i.e. "baby boomers", or "generation X".
Chiefdom
A centralized political system with authority vested in formal, usually hereditary, offices or titles; exchange is often organized by redistribution.
State
A centralized, multilevel political unit characterized by a bureaucracy that acts on behalf of the ruling elite.
Semantic Domain
A class of things or properties, hierarchically organized, that are perceived as alike in some fundamental respect.
Morpheme
A combination of phonemes that conveys a standardized meaning.
Revitalization movement
A common reaction to repressive change. Usually rebellion or revolution.
Subculture
A cultural identity within the legal boundaries of a nation-state, based upon various recognized and relevant criteria.
Racism
A cultural, NOT biological, phenomenon that is found worldwide based on the false belief that intellect and cultural factors are inherited along with physical characteristics
Nuclear Family
A family unit consisting of only parents and children.
Rite of Passage
A public ceremony or ritual recognizing and making a person's transition from one group or status to another.
Dialect
A regional or subcultural variant of a language.
Chiefdoms
A regional polity in which two or more local groups are organized under a single chief, who is at the head of a ranked hierarchy of people.
Bands
A relatively small and loosely organized kin-ordered group that inhabits a specific territory and that may split periodically into smaller extended family groups that are politically independent.
Puberty (initiation) Rite
A religious ceremony that symbolically transforms the individual from a child into an adult.
Beringia (Bering land bridge)
A route where the peopling of the Americas occurred; today is submerged under water and known as Bering Strait. (If you simply cross Beringia, then they are basically blocked. Because they are blocked by two ice sheets. These ice sheets began to separate)
Myth
A sacred narrative that explains the fundamentals of human existence- origin of life, purpose, and ultimate future.
Symbol
A sign, sound, emblem, or other thing that is arbitrarily linked to something else and represents it in a meaningful way.
sibling
A sister or brother
Cueva Antón site
A site from spain recently yielded possible evidence for Neandertal symbolism at 50,000 ya cuz by 50,000 ya, there were no modern humans! = so there's no way they can copy modern humans; evidence of perforated and painted shell with orange-colored pigment on interior - maybe used as container or personal ornament?
Hambledon Hill site
A site of banks and ditches in England; circular construction Human skulls buried in the ditch of the causewayed camp about 350 people (also truncated skeletons and occasional whole skeletons); hypothesis: maybe a defense?
Mitochondrial DNA
A small amount of DNA that is located in the mitochondria of cells. Mitochondrial DNA is inherited only through the mother.
Homo floresiensis:
A species which lived 95,000 and 17,000 years ago while modern humans rapidly developed elsewhere; used bladelet technology; brains smaller than Austropithes and not proportionate limb portions; debates
Legend
A story about a memorable event or figure handed down by tradition and told as true but without historical evidence.
Intensive Agriculture
A system of cultivation in which plots are planted annually or semiannually; usually uses irrigation, natural fertilizers, and (in the Old World) plows powered by animals.
market economy
A system of exchange without currency
Class
A system of stratification in which membership in a stratum can theoretically be altered and intermarriage between strata is allowed.
Caste
A system of stratification in which membership in a stratum is in theory hereditary, strata are endogamous, and contact or relationships between members of different strata are governed by explicit laws, norms, and prohibitions.
Folklore
A term coined to distinguish between "folk art" and the "fine art" of the literature elite. (for rural unwritten stories).
Materialism (cultural materialism)
A theory holding that the main influence on human way of life is how people produce and distribute resources from their environment.
Hunting and Gathering (foraging)
Adaptation based on harvesting only wild (undomesticated) plants and animals.
Agriculture (cultivation)
Adaptation based primarily on the planting, tending, and harvesting of domesticated plants (crops).
Composite Bands
Autonomous or independent political units consisting of several extended families that live together for most or all of the year.
Simple Bands
Autonomous or independent political units, often consisting of little more than an extended family, with informal leadership vested in one of the other family members.
v Hypotheses for the origins and function of Upper Paleolithic cave art [Slides 36-56 mainly 45 to 53, Lecture 19] - unsure about the origins if they just serve the same purpose as function
Background: • many techniques or "styles" of cave art; use of natural features of the cave walls • they drew what they saw in wild animals (genetic work in horses has shown that prehistoric wild horses came in three color types, so that spotted horses are not imaginary animals) • elements of cave art: most common animal • horse (small smiling horse), bison, woolly mammoth, aurochs, ibex, deer • elements of cave art: least common animals • bear, panther, "penguin" (Great Auk), rhino, owl, humans (some had Venus figurine-like qualities), scribbles of faces, • elements of cave art: "signs" and other things • patterns, abstracts, scribbles, dots, hands ("mutilated" hands: but possibly just that there was no paint on a certain area of the hand) Why Upper Paleolithic art occured: •art for the sake of art (Lartet and Christy 1864) •hunting magic/initiation rituals (Breuil 1901) • male and female pairings (Leroi-Gourhan 1964) • horses, deer, ibex, carnivores = male symbols • narrow signs = male symbols • bison, aurochs = female symbols • wide signs = female symbols • aggregation rituals (social identity) (Conkey 1980) • entoptic phenomena (Lewis-Williams 1988) see: entoptic phenomena • information recall device (Mithen 1990)
________:cultural phenomena that happened among Native American people.
Bardash
Egalitarianism
Because surplus commodities are not practical in food foraging societies, no one person owns largely more than another. Material equality, not necessarily social equality.
58&
Between 1980-1992, deaths increased by ____ due to resistance to antibiotics
The term for a common social dialect spoken by many African Americans.
Black English or Ebonics
Mousterian tools
Black-core tools used by Neanderthals.
god
Chief among the beings of nonhuman origin. They are often anthropomorphic- that is, conceived in the image of a person
Ecofacts
Natural objects used or affected by humans
What is the relationship between climate change and the evolution of hominids?
Coincides with shift in African environment from rainforests to savannas/woodlands
Courts of Regulation
Court systems that use codified laws, with formally prescribed rights, duties, and sanctions.
Agents of enculturation
Cultur is SHARED and Culture is LEARNED. Shared through society's values, ideas, and messages. Learned one on one usually from family and friends. However, in this age of technology, t.v. and computer also teach culture as well.
Local Knowledge
Cultural knowledge that is disseminated orally and is thus known only by members of a local group.
Define Gender
Culture: Emic Example: Baby blue and pink colors
Autolysis
Degeneration of body tissues by digestive fluids
Zoonosis
Disease transferred to humans through contact with animals
division of labor
Dividing up workers so that each worker completes one job, which is one part of a larger job
Peyote art
Divine Visions among the Huichol. Huichol Indians living in Mexico's mountainous region create very colorful art from the peyote plant. The colorful designs express a religious worldview tied to the chemical "peyote". Its like a "getting high" religion.
Horticulture: Name 3 cultures
Dominicans, New Guinean, Mayans
Middle Pleistocene Homo Trends
No constant brain size Mosaic evolution
What are the earliest known stone tools?
Olduwun Tools - 2.5 - 1.5 mya
plastered skull
People cut the head of the dead bodies and sometimes carried with them/stored inside the house; known from pre-pottery Neolithic contexts at 'Ain Ghazal and Jericho; Plastered statues of humans are interpreted as religious in function, representing "mythical ancestors that founded clans or even humanity itself"
Acclimatization
Physiological adjustments to environmental changes
Horticulture: What is the typical religion?
Polytheism
Read the articles. Hadzabe
Read the articles.... Tanzania, People are taking their land, Hunter gatherer
Sexual Permissiveness:____are females
Responsibility
Arid Ecozone Adaptions
Scare supply of water A: 1-2 wk adjustment period, reduced salt in sweat and urine, reduced sweat, lower body temp R: Clothes, shelter, low population density
States that because men have greater strength and superior capacity to mobilize strength, they are more capable of performing certain tasks
Strength Theory
Monogamy: What are the two types? What is the difference between the two?
Strict: marry one person for the rest of their life. Sexual: Serial: Divorce, Marry, Divorce, Marry, etc.
Influence
The ability to convince people that they should act as you suggest.
pastoralists
These are people whose subsistence pattern focuses on herding domesticated animals
Postmortem interval
Time since death.
(True/False) Arranged Marriage is still the most common form cross culturally.
True
(True/False) Divorce is more common in marriages for love.
True
(True/False) Marriage for love is becoming more common around the world.
True
(True/False) The incest taboo is universal.
True
Agriculture: True or False: Gender roles switch from horticulture.
True
Kostenki site:
Upper paleo humans used culture as a buffer (well-built structures, tailored clothing, and symbolic interactions) to exploit new niches and explore climatic extremes during ice ages in Europe. Examples: -Kostenki, Russia: tent-like huts, bone needles for clothing, animal figurines, venus figurines
Example of a culture in which men could be considered masculine OR feminine even though they dress like women
Waria of Indonesia
culture
Well, this is a course "that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, arts morals, law, custom
What is the main debate of homosexuality?
Western vs. Nonwestern views
If we have some cut marks on a bone, how can we know if the people who made them killed the animal or scavenged it?
What marks were made on top of each other
Parallel Evolution
Whatever H. sapiens was in a place evolved into modern humans
450 ppm
When CO2 levels reach ______, life continues almost as today.
norms
When you violate these you may be sanctioned by society but not punished.
Difference between Magic and Religion?
With magic you demand, with religion you try to influence
polyandry
Woman with more than one husband
Define: Gyny
Women/Wife
Frederica De Laguna
Worked in southeastern Alaska with Tlingit Indians of Yakutat. Published "Under Mount St. Elias" in 1972. Studied the history of their life ways and traced their roots.
Globalization
Worldwide process through which diverse peoples and nations are integrated into a single system involving flows of technology, transportation, communication, travel, and market exchanges.
Example of a culture in which men would often dress as women but could still be considered masculine in society
Xanith of Oman
parallel cousins
Your father's brother's children, or your mother's sister's children.
Define: Kin
Your relatives
Class
a category of people who have about the same opportunity to obtain economic resources, power, and prestige
emic
an insider's view of a culture. this perspective in ethnography uses the categories and ideas that are relevant and meaningful to the culture under study
endocasts and language
are fossilized impressions, or synthetic casts, or the interior of crania that provide some idea of the relative size of lobes of brain inside the cranium in different primate and hominin species (The most famous endocast is a Taung child's). Based on the position of lunate sulcus (between parietal and occipital regions) researchers have argued for & against potential language capabilities in Australopiths.
Mutations:
are very important from an evolutionary perspective because they introduce new variation (new alleles) into the gene pool
The number of languages that have added words to modern English.
at least 240
Ethnocentrism
attitude other societies customs & ideas can be judged in context of own culture
Cultural relativism
attitude that a society custom & ideas should be viewed within context of that society's problem and opportunities
Charles Lyell
author of "Principles of Geology" which popularized James Hutton's concept of uniformitarianism
State
autonomous political unit with centralized decision making over many communities with power to govern force
Clothing
awls, bone needles - 19,000 ya -> infer clothes, residues of clothing - 22,000 ya, subsistence, hunter-gathers, big-game hunters: one species
The higher than expected frequency of Hbs (sickle cell) gene in malarial regions is an example of_________ selection
balancing
Empirical
based on observations of the world rather than on intuition or faith.
Why is it that men control craft production in highlu specialized societies?
because doing this can detract from the time spent looking after children and is not suitable for women
Culture
behavioral aspects of human adaptation
curve of spine
bipeds: weight centered above pelvis quads: center of gravity = front of body, spine vertical, not straight in bipeds
The general term for a morpheme that has meaning but can not stand alone. The prefix "dis" in the English word "disable" is an example.
bound morpheme
Semantics
branch of linguistics and logic concerned with meaning
cross cousins
children form parent's opposite sex sibling
How do most societies view extramarital sex?
double standard allowing it for men but not for women
Which of the following climate changes is associated with the emergence of hominids
drying that reduced forests and the growth of Savannas in Africa
barter
exchange goods without involving money
Which of the following is an example of a feature?
fountain
Language
group typical spoken language
polyandry
having more than one husband at a time
Polygamy
having more than one spouse at a time
polygamy
having more than one spouse at a time
polygyny
having more than one wife at a time
Participant Observation
he main technique used in conducting ethnographic fieldwork, involving living among a people and participating in their daily activities.
What are some tasks that support the Strength Theory?
heavy lifting using weapons chasing game animals
Forensic anthropology
help to identify human remains and assist in solving crimes
Though these things are not considered to be directly expected gender roles, what things do men usually have a tendency to do? (5)
herd animals prepare soil for planting butcher animals build houses exercise political leadership
Chimpanzee behavior
highly social, size/strength male dominance, high ranking females outrank lower ranking males. Complicated hunting strategies. Sharing meat=creating alliances/attracting sexual partners. Complex social system. Young chimps learn by observation (childhood development). Made simple tools, i.e. a stick to eat ants with, and stones to cruch things...etc.
reconstructing origins of languages and language families
historical linguistics
niche construction theory
humans' role in modifying/shaping environments in Holocene=food production, small scale societies, well-defined, ownership, protection of wild resource areas=year round settlement/stress on niche=food production, maintain/update comprehensive knowledge of local ecosystems=transferring of engineering ecosystems through TEK(traditional ecological knowledge). Increases abundance/accessibility of wild species through experimentation. Attracts animals which leads to (1) domestication (2) comensal ( a relation between two kinds of organisms in which one obtains food or other benefits from the other without damaging or benefiting it).
Cultural evidence
hunter-gatherers, geographic tool variation, Acheulean hand axes, retouched flakes: levallois or prepared, core technique, maximum use of core, sharp, symmetric tools
What are some of the gender roles associated with men? (5)
hunting and trapping mining rock gathering lumber combat making musical instruments
Neanderthal Lifeways
hunting medium-sized animals, close distance = very risky, shelter, burial of dead: first evidence of intentional burial: Shawdar Cave, Iraq La Chapelle, France Krapina, Croatia, had healed fractures = care of the sick? symbolic expression: supernatural beliefs?, symbolism, deliberate burials
Food foraging
hunting, fishing, and gathering wild plant foods.
Cultural adaptation
ideas, technologies, and activities that allow a people to survive and even thrive.
According to the Compatibility Theory, the roles women perform are roles that..
keep them closer to the home or allow them to bring children with them
parallel cousin
offspring of either one's father's brother or one's mother's sister
Fieldwork
on location research
study of primates
primatology
Sedentarism
settled life
refugee
someone who is forced to leave his or her home, community, or country
Paleopathology
study of disease in early humans
classes
system of differentiation not based on kinship but on access to wealth
Transmutation
the change of one species to another
invention
the discovery of something new
remittance
the transfer of money or goods by a migrant to his or her family in the country of origin
Catastropism
the view that the earth's geological landscape is the result of violent cataclysmic events.
How do Trobriand Islanders feel about premarital sex?
they encourage the practice
Pidgin
two groups in area to have trade language (bits and pieces) example: "Spanglish"
Creole
two languages put together: blend Example: Patwa
paleoanthropology
understand human evolution, multidisciplinary, reconstructs relationships, behaviors, dates and morphology
Class, or stratified societies are characterized by
unequal access to resources, power and prestige
patrilineal descent
unilineal descent rule in which people join the fathers group automatically at birth and stay members throughout life
matrilineal descent
unilineal descent rule in which people join the mothers group automatically at birth and stay members throughout life
Monogamy
Only recognized form of marriage in U.S.
Rebellion
Organized armed resistance to an established government or authority in power.
What might have happened to Neanderthals?
Outclassed by homo sapiens
Define Etic
Outsider Perspective
Wealthy
Polygyny is usually a sign that a man is _ _ _ _ _ _
Authority
The recognized right of an individual to command another person to act in a particular way; legitimate power.
Edward Tyson
chimpanzee anatomical exam
matriarchy
the dominance of women in economic, political, social, and ideological domains
Bipedalism
walking on two feet
Syntax
ways in which words are arranged to form phrases and sentences
Kin Group
A group of people who culturally consider themselves to be relatives, cooperate in certain activities, and share a sense of identity as kinfolk.
race
A group of people who share biologic and physical characteristics.
Extended Household
A group of related nuclear families that live together in a single household.
sapir-whorf hypothesis
A hypothesis about the relationship between language and culture that states that language constructs perseption
Revitalization Movement
A religious movement, usually based on the teaching of a prophet, to change the existing world.
Ambilocal Residence
A residence form in which a couple chooses to live with either the wif's or the husband's family.
Neolocal Residence
A residence form in which a couple establishes a separate household apart from both the husband's and wife's parents.
Patrilocal Residence
A residence form in which a couple lives with or near the husband's parents.
Matrilocal Residence
A residence form in which a couple lives with or near the wife's parents.
Horticulture: In __/__societies, women do more gardening
1/2
Karma
'Karma' is an Eastern religious concept in contradistinction to 'faith' espoused by Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam), which view all human dramas as the will of God as opposed to present - and past - life actions. In theistic schools of Hinduism, humans have free will to choose good or evil and suffer the consequences, which require the will of God to implement karma's consequences, unlike Buddhism or Jainism which do not accord any role to a supreme God or gods. In Eastern beliefs, the karmic effects of all deeds are viewed as actively shaping past, present, and future experiences. The results or 'fruits' of actions are called karma-phala. Witchcraft
Wealth
(1) Ownership of or access to valued material goods and to the natural and human resources needed to produce those goods, or (2) the total value of all property owned less the amount of debt owed.
Homo habilis
(1.9-1.4 mya) Found in Olduvai. More gracile and smaller teeth. Cranial capacity of 650 cc.
Homo erectus
(1.9-1.5 mya) First to leave Africa and use fire. First appears outside of Africa in Indonesia ~1.6 mya.
Neanderthals
(130-28 kya) Large cranial capacity but lack of chin. Very robust and broad and displayed Allen's and Bergman's rules.
Homo floresiensis
(850 kya) The stone tools made by this early Homo most closely resemble Upper Paleolithic tools. Like tiny Homo erectus.
Historical Particularism (historicism)
(American) An early 20th century approach that challenged evolutionism by emphasizing that each culture is a unique result of its distinctive past, which makes cross-cultural generalizations questionable.
Blombos Cave site
(Around 100,000 yrs ago, interesting features such as art, ochre, use of bone for tools and personal ornament appeared in Africa. Traditionally it has been assumed that these types of "modern human behaviors" did not appear until Upper paleo period in Western Eurasia around 40,000 yrs ago.) ca 100,000-75,000 yra: bone tools, perforated shells, art on ochre, Bifacial points, scrapers, perforated marine shells (possibly for necklaces), use of bone to make awls or bone points, ochre carved with designs
Functionalism
(British) Analyzes cultures in terms of their usual effects for individuals and/or for survival and persistence of the whole society or other groups.
ego
(Latin for I) The starting or perspective point of a genealogy (if you are drawing your own genealogy then you are this, if you are interviewing your friend and drawing his chart, than he is this)
Neolithic transition
(Neolithic Revolution) Around 10,000 yrs ago, where transition from food foraging to domestication of plants, animals, and settlement in permanent villages occurred.
Cultural Anthropology
(social, sociocultural anthro.) Studies the way of life of contemporary and historically recent human populations. (main focus is culture [customs and beliefs of some human group]).
Who is the father of anthropology of religion?* What 2 things did he say about them? Example?
*Not Important: E.B. Tyler* 1. People believe in dreams and death and souls 2. Death separates them Example: Animism souls/spiritual beings (found in bands and tribes) Polytheism, Monotheism
Horticulture: In __/__ societies, men and women do the same amount of gardening
1/3
When did the Neolithic transition begin
10,000 years ago
Bluestonehenge site
-Bluestonehenge is not far away from stonehenge; Bluestonehenge are taken and moved to reconstruct the stone hence; -maybe a site to cremate (burn) people; Durrington walls. When peope die, they move the dead people to bluestone henge. The cremated body goes to the stonehenge, where people are buried.
v Hypotheses about the extinction of Neandertals.
-Neandertals kept focusing on large animals for food while large animals became more scarce over time (VS. Modern humans ate abundant small game e.g. rabbits) -Volcanic eruption: not lava, but ashes which created a "nuclear winter" - might have cause extinction of Neandertals in central Europe and Eastern Europe. (VS. Modern Humans were in Africa/Southern parts of Eurasia of which are not affected by ash clouds) =whether we regard Neandertals behaviorally same as modern humans, Neandertals became extinct during the coldest periods.
settlement types
...
spirituality
...
*Polyandry: A lot of people went from _______ to______to practice this.
... Not Important
Polyandry: What percentage is it seen in societies?
.5%
The percent of languages in the world that are primitive in the sense of not having a system of sounds, words, and sentences that can adequately communicate the content of culture.
0%
practitioners and social complexity
1 type of practitioner: usually shaman and its society is nomadic, semi-nomadic food collectors. 2 types of practitioner: usually shaman and priests and have agriculture. 3 types of practitioner: agriculturalists or pastoralists with political integration beyond the community. 4 types of practitioner: have agriculture, political integration beyond the community, and social classes
The average price for an average girl is the same as _______________
1 year production of crop
Influences of Skin Color
1) Hemoglobin (red tint) 2) Carotene (yellow tint) 3) Melanin
4 Criteria of IQ tests
1) Intelligence must be based on one, single overarching factor of general intellectual capacity 2) This "amount" of intelligence must be measurable as a number 3) The number must measure an inborn quality of genetic constitution passed from generation to generation 4) An IQ must be permanent
Marriage: Infatuation/Passion Phase: Name 3 characteristics.
1. Attraction Phase (Phase 1) 2. Phenylthyiamine 3. Brain becomes used to this at about 2 to 3 years
John Shea
1. By calculating TCSA (tip cross-sectional area), he refutes points as projectiles in the MSA. "MSA points are not projectile points, but tips for thrusting spears, of which technology no different than Neandertals" 2. He found out that the type of Levallois used is different for NEandertals compared to archaic modern humans. He hypothesizes that this reflects different cultural traditions. 3. They hunted different animals : Neandertals (gaelle/fallow dear) and archaic moderns (aurochs/ovicaprids)
Sexual Dimorphism: Behavior: What are 3 reasons for both sexual characteristics?
1. Helps to have better sex 2. Select the best mate for the environment 3. Want to take care of the kids
Polyandry: Name 2 cultures that practice it?
1. Inuit 2. Marquesans 3. Tibetan
Marriage: Attachment Phase: Name 4 characteristics
1. Kicks in at about 2 to 3 years 2. Endorphins 3. Kids usually come along at this phase 4. Most commonly get divorced at 4 years with 2 or 3 children
Marriage: what are the two points of marriage? 1. It is natural to_____ 2. Where there is marriage there is also_____
1. Love 2. Divorce
Business Anthropology works in: (2 parts)
1. Market Research: selling to people who don't need it 2. Company relations and efficiency: moving "lost in translation"
Exogamy: 1. Define 2. Must marry_____ the society. 3. Usually seen in______ societies.
1. Marrying outside of the group 2. out 3. tribe/band
Endogamy: 1. Define 2. Must marry_____ the society. 3. Usually seen in______ societies.
1. Marrying within limits of community 2. in 3. large
The percent of all living languages that change over time.
100 %
Burdash: 2 reasons why males opt out of masculine gender role:
1. some were asexual 2. some lived like females
What are the four major areas of Applied Anthropology?
1.Corporate /Business (Industrial) Anthropology 2. International Development Anthropology 3. Urban Anthropology 4. Medical Anthropology
Patterns of Political Participation
16% of all societies have widespread participation and decision making is open to all adults. 37% of all societies have widespread participation but not all adults(men not women, certain groups and not others). 29% of all societies have some but not much input by the community. 18% of all societies have low or nonexistent participation, which means leaders make most decisions
Homo sapiens emerged at least
160,000 ya
Horticulture: ___% of societies where men do more gardening
17%
Magdalenian
17,000 -11,600 bp the most late period of Upper paelo; a long -distance networks; maybe a simple form of trade or people travelling?;
Neanderthals
1856, Neander Valley, Germany first skeleton found (human ancestor), stereotype: brutish, stupid, violent cavemen Oldest: France - 175,000 ya, Germany - 200,000 - 250,000 ya Youngest: Eastern Europe: 30,000 ya Generalized: Middle East, 150,000- 75,000 ya, haven't developed classic traits yet, last interglacial Classical: W. Europe, 75,000- 28,000 ya, first part of last glaciation 150,000 - 28,000 ya
Australopithecus africanus
1924, South Africa 430-530 cc, gracile Australopithecine, limestone caves (Karst set up), flat forehead, low vault, teeth- hominin, small incisor-like canines, fruit, leaves, grass, meat, longer arms to legs, remnant of grasping big toe, short, broad pelvis, fully bipedal, grasslands, few to no trees sexual dimorphic- height: male - 4.5 ft, female - 4 ft, weight: male - 90-130 lbs, female - 55 -66 lbs "Taung child": cranium, 3 years old 3.0-2.0 mya
Lactoli footprints
1978 75 feet in length, volcanic ash, non-divergent big toe, arch, heel strike: human-like 3.7 - 3.5 mya
Ardipithecus ramidus
1992 - 1995, Middle Awash, Ethiopia, East Africa 300- 350 cc, 17 fossils, one 45% complete, features mixture of primitive & derived, "root ground-ape", 1992, Ethiopia, Aramis site more --> 56 fossils, many post-cranial, most 4.4 mya 3 ft tall, 65 lbs, teeth -ape, pelvis/humerous/foraum magnum/big toe - derived 4.5- 4.3 mya, K/Ar
Homo sapiens
1st emerged about 200,000 yrs ago. All living people belong to one biological species. Which means that all human populations on earth can successfully interbreed.
Homo erectus
1st hominid species to be widely distributed in old world. 1.8 million yrs old. The brain was larger than that found in any of the Australopithecines or H. Habilis but smaller then modern human
Bipedal locomotion occurred prior to the expansion of hominid brains by approximately
2 million years ago
The earliest known stone tools are from
2.5 million ya
The earliest definite Australopithecine fossils date to approximately___ ya
3.6
Denisovans
30 - 40,000 ya link to Neanderthals
The number of phonemes that English usually uses.
40
Robust Australopthecines
410-545 cc, specialized diet, extinct, aka Paranthropus, not large body size, hominin-like: non-projecting canines, no canine diastema three species sharing: very large, robust posterior teeth, jaws, face, sagittal crest and flaring cheekbones, extinct 2.5 - 1.2 mya
In __% of world's societies, women do engage in extramarital sex.
57
Marriage: _____ year itch = ______ year itch
7...3
___% of surveyed societies were completely led by men
85
*Agriculture: ____% of men do more agriculture labor
85%* unimportant
In __% of societies, women never participate in war
87
___% of societies in one study view frequent sex as bad.
9
v Possible reasons for the success of "Out of Africa 2" migrations.
:The movement was successful because modern humans went everywhere -Controlled use of fire & its use to heat treat rocks to make stone tools -Use of symbolism to frame personal relationships the world -use of compound glues for hafting -invention of composite tools using microliths after 71,000 bp -invention of bow and arrow after 70,000 bp -invention of snares to capture animals after 70,000 bp -The "rugged fitness landscape" model for cognitive and behavioral evolution : Different groups will use different combinations of technologies, equipment, and behaviors to adopt to their specific contexts; dynamic and flexible = (you have a whole set of options, and you put some elements together, that helps you rise to that challenge. A process of putting things together leads to a cognitive development)
Ashley Montague
A British student of Boas (from England). A GUY? ...yes a man named Ashley. Also fought ethnocentrism/racism. Published, "Man's Morst Dangerous Myth: The Fallacy of Race" in 1942.
Sungir site
A Eastern Gravettian/Gravettian site that shows a lot of personal ornaments and personal goods in burial, Upper paleo humans used culture as a buffer (well-built structures, tailored clothing, and symbolic interactions) to exploit new niches and explore climatic extremes during ice ages in Europe; adult male burial contained 3500 beads, arctic fox teeth, ivory bracelets, and arm bands. Tailored clothing with ornamentation; a lot of ornamentations in Sungir double child burial
Animism
A belief that nature is animated (enlivened or energized) by distinct personalized spirit beings separable from bodies.
berdache
A blurred gender category, usually referring to a person who is biologically male but who takes on a female gender role.
Age grade
A category of people based on age. i.e. "teen-agers", or "adults".
Civilization
A form of complex society in which many people live in cities.
Nomadism
A form of seasonal mobility, usually referring to pastoral peoples who move their livestock to seasonally lush pasturelands.
Ranked Society
A form of society in which there are a fixed number of statuses (e.g. titles, offices) that carry prestige, and only certain individuals are eligible to attain these statuses.
Egalitarian Society
A form of society in which there is little inequality in access to culturally valued rewards.
Stratified Society
A form of society with marked and usually heritable differences in access to wealth, power, and prestige; inequality is based mainly on unequal access to productive and valued resources.
pastoral nomadism
A form of subisistence agriculture based on herding domesticated animals.
Catal Höyük site
A large Turkish Neolithic site that has many artifacts preserved well e.g. double-headed stone statue, Neolithic 'shrines or cult rooms', leopards wall relief & the village and volcano plaster painted picture, goddess figurines; a room with plaster reliefs of bulls with inset horns and exotic items. A recent excavation of new "shrine" room shows that they were used for everyday activities.
Key Consultant (informant)
A member of a society who is especially knowledgeable about some subject and supplies information to a fieldworker.
Horticulture
A method of cultivation in which hand tools powered by human muscles are used.
Free Morpheme
A morpheme that can stand alone as a word.
Bound Morpheme
A morpheme that is attached to a free morpheme to alter its meaning.
Secondary Ethnic Identity
A named ethnic group which is a subgroup of an ethnic nationality and thus does not have a claim to a separate homeland.
Ethnic Nationality (primary ethnic identity)
A named ethnic group with a claim to a geographic region or homeland over which they should have political autonomy.
Ethnic Group
A named grouping of people who identify themselves as members of a social distinct "people" based on shared cultural traditions and history that distinguish them from all other groups.
Clan
A named unilineal descent group, some whose members are unable to trace how they are related but still believe themselves to be kinfolk.
Shaman (medicine man)
A part-time religious specialist who uses his special relationship to supernatural powers for curing members of his group and harming members of other groups.
clan
A person recognized (acknowledged) as a family member
Shaman
A person who enter an altered state of consciousness-at will-to contact and utilize an ordinarily hidden reality in order to acquire knowledge, power, and to help others.
status
A person's postition in society
achieved status
A position or rank that is earned through the efforts of an individual.
Herding (pastoralism)
Adaptation based on the control and breeding of domesticated livestock, which are taken to naturally occurring pastureland.
v Biological responses (adaptations) and health/disease issues associated with the advent of agricultural lifeway. [Slide 33 to 46, Lecture 21, Slide 1 to 14, 20, Lecture 22]
Adaptations: Balancing selection creates a genetic equilibrium between the allele's costs and its benefits As long as the benefits outweigh the costs, potentially harmful alleles can be retained at relatively high frequencies in populations see: lock and key hypothesis see: sickle cell trait see: pellagra *Urbanization and disease: High population densities create conditions for epidemics or pandemics, which affect large geographic areas [e.g., bubonic plague]; Non-infectious common diseases (modern) [cancer, heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure] *Increased disease exposure: •Zoonoses (transmitted from animals to humans) [vectors = ticks, worms, insects, protozoans] •Infectious diseases -Less typical of hunter-gatherers because of small population size and nomadism -Occur in agriculturists because of large population size and sedentism [sanitation, alteration of natural environment) •Nutritional diseases (pellagra) *Changes in lifestyle with the advent of agriculture affected health with consequences seen in malnutrition, skeletal pathologies (superior athletes mirror Paleolithic folk), increased risks for certain diseases, and cavities in teeth (Paleolithic: 2% cavities, Humans: 70% cavities) Pre-agricultural hunting-gathering peoples have more pitting and scratching on their teeth than later agricultural groups in various parts of world, reflecting shift in dietary practices from harder to chew to softer foods. Use of stone ground foods meant that grit was part of the "flour" made from cereals, acorns, etc. Over time, this grit, which was part of the meals eaten, wore down the tooth enamel to the dentine. Sticky foods such as gruels, porridges, and other soft foods made from cereals, in combination with poor dental care, created many opportunities for formation of cavities and gum disease. • abnormalities steadily increased as modern diets were adopted, e.g., the Inuit (Eskimo) • traditional diet: no caries • store-bought food diet: 20% caries • exclusive government supplied food: 30% caries • loss of teeth and lowered resistance to diseases comparing Archaic and Woodland groups: Archaic: •few caries •some tooth loss •low dental hypoplasia Woodland: •16%-24% caries •more tooth loss •50%-60% dental hypoplasia *many lifestyle factors we take for granted are unique in free-living mammalian experience: sedentary living alcohol and tobacco high salt, high saturated fat high refined carbohydrate diet
Asian vs. African
Africa/Georgia: H. ergaster or African erectus (1.8 mya - 1 mya) no sagittal keel more alveolar prognathism less occipital angle Asia: H. erectus (1.8 mya - 50 k)
Sapir-Wharf Hypothesis
Agreement that language influences other aspects of culture, and that it affects how individuals in a society perceive and conceive reality
Example of a culture where women perform dangerous tasks that would seemingly be more suited for men
Agta women hunt deer and pigs
Kindred
All the bilateral relatives of an individual. (All people related to that person through either parents).
Define: ASC (True/False) Most common way to alter it is concentration (True/False) Sensory deprivation can be used (True/False) Sensory overload can include things such as drumming, singing, dancing, etc. (True/False) Metabolic change is when the metabolism is different than usual (True/False) Ritualized drug use is NOT a form of ASC
Altered State of Consciousness True: prayer, meditation True: isolation tank True: ping pong ball thingy with static True: starvation, drugs False:
Berdache
An anthropological term describing an individual who plays the role of the opposite sex in a culture. They may or may not have relations with the same sex.
Surplus
Food or other goods produces by a worker in excess of the amount needed for his or her own consumption as well as the needs of his or her dependents.
pastoralism
Food-production strategy based on care of herds of domesticated animals, use of animals for food. Hunting, gathering, fishing, cultivation, or trading. Mixed economics. Confined mostly to the old world. Nomadic and transhumance.
Free Trade
Free trade means that goods made be imported or exported between countries free from tax duties or quota limits.
violence against children
Frequent reasons for infanticide include illegitimacy, deformity of the infant, twins, too many children, or that the infant is unwanted. Infanticide is usually performed by the mother, but this does not mean that she is uncaring; it may mean that she cannot adequately feed or care for the infant or that it has a poor chance to survive. Physical punishment of children occurs at least sometimes in over 70% of the world's societies and is frequent in about 40%. Those at the bottom of the socioeconomic hierarchy are more likely than those at the top to practice corporal punishment of children
Mt. Toba Super- Eruption
Giant eruption that occurred 73 kya. Humans driven nearly extinct, causing a population bottleneck. Survivors went on to repopulation planet.
Tribute
Goods (typically including food) rendered to an authority such as a chief.
12
How many societies practice Polyandry?
Polyptic
Humans are _____: populations differ in expression of various genetic traits
Which of the following statements about human adaptation is INCORRECT?
Humans are no longer undergoing microevolution.
Extensive Tissue Hypothesis
Humans have too much brains but too few guts. Allows more energy for brain functions.
Multiregional hypothesis
Hypothesis that modern humans originated through a process of simultaneous local transition from Homo erectus to Homo sapiens throughout the inhabited world.
the "gift"
In the lecture presentation, the gift of the mask, these were the two dimensions expressing the idea of "the gift" in their dance-what are vertical with respect to reciprocity to the animist spirits, and horizontal, with respect to reciprocal, heterarchical relationships with other social groups
Production theory & Marxist approach
In this theory of economics the primary elements are labor means of production and mode of production
Growth
Increase in mass
Differences found in Modern Humans
Increased cranial height and roundness. Thinner skull bones. Reduction in anterior teeth
Applied Anthropology:* In 1992:__% of the world's population were non-western people. In 2025:__% of the world's population will be non-western people.
Increasing* 72% 85%
Types of violent resolution
Individual violence: violence that usually results as punishment from a wrong doing Feuding: a state of recurring hostilities between families or groups of kin, usually motivated by a desire to avenge an offense. Raiding: a short-term use of force, planned and organized, to realize a limited objective Large-scale confrontations: large conflicts usually between territories or other lager groups of people
Self-help System
Informal legal systems in societies that have no centralized political systems, in which authorities who settle disputes are defined by the circumstances of the case.
Developmental adjustments
Irreversible physiological changes that occur during the developmental period of an individual. (lung capacity, liver size)
Monogamy
Is Monogamy or Polygamy more common?
Ohalo II site
Israel, shores of the Sea of Galilee, well preserved Kebaran site, indicates high mobility (short-term stays) - occupation during height of LGM, changes in microliths, types of animals exploited over time (including fish), variety of plant remains (lots of wild barley), burial found (rare).
The common attitude In North America in regards to adults touching each other except in moments of intimacy or formal greeting (hand shaking or hugging).
It is discouraged, especially for men
Iroquis gender roles
Kinship terminology-A father & father's brother/mother & her sister are referred to by one term, whereas a father's sister and a mother's brother are referred to by a different term.
Domain (cultural/lexical domain)
Lexical: example: fruit, veggie, food: the way we describe and categorize Culture: the way we conceptualize example: good/bad
Define: Ambilocal
Live with either, whichever can afford to keep them, whichever is more convenient, etc.
How can archaeologists find out about the diet of people who lived in the past?
Makeup of the bones
sorarate
Man marries his late wife's sister
Define: Polygyny
Man with multiple wives at the same time
Define: Poly
Many
Band
Politically autonomous Local group or band Little or no specialization of political officials Foraging and food collecting small and low density communities egalitarian major form of distribution: Mostly reciprocity
Endogamous Rules
Marriage rules that require individuals to marry some member of their own social group or category.
polyandry
Marriage to multiple men (occurs in .5% of societies)
cross cousin marriage
Marrying a cousin related to ego by mother's brother or father's sister (cousins related through siblings of opposite sex)
parallel cousin marriage
Marrying a cousin related to ego by mother's sister or father's brother (cousins related through siblings of the same sex)
Complete replacement theory
Modern populations arose in Africa and replaced those in Asia and Europe. Genetic holocaust
Pastoralism: What is the typical religion? Example
Monotheism: one elderly leader based on hierarchy. Maasai
Neanderthal tools
Mousterian Industry: flakes wide variety: scrapers, hafted, no axes stone tools: prepared-core technology: shaped core, similar flakes, different shaped core = different flakes
Arctic Ecozone Adaptions
Must cope with extreme lows in temperature and prolonged periods of light/darkness D: Liver size and capacity, body shape and limb proportions A: Increased body temp, non-shivering heat production R: Clothes, shelter, high fat & protein diet
Moiety
Name of a group when a society splits into two halves on the basis of descent.
2 spirit
Native American term describing a person who has a "masculine spirit" and a "feminine spirit". Associated with their animistic beliefs. Someone who has relations with either gender.
Jericho site
Neolithic PPNA tower (suggestion of fortification BUT contradicts with low level) and wall. Individual (common) and multiple burials, often underneath abandoned house floors/courtyards, some decapitated (often plastered/molded-suggest features of a living person-ancestor cult?), infant burial (found in trash areas/indication of NOT a member of society?), some instances of gazelle buried w or w/o humans, few grave goods (occasionally personal ornamentation - necklace/bracelet). Examples: Abu Hureyra, Ain Ghazal (w/o head), Catal Höyük, Asikli Höyük.
desert "kite" site
Neolithic hunting technique in the Black Desert, Jordan (1980s), drive animals towards a point (configured like an arrow) where hominids slaughter them.
Ain Ghazal site
Neolithic life-people densely packed together (100s yrs) Example of the impact on local environments. Early vs. Late - PLANTS Early: 24 types of plant foods (domestic & wild) D=peas, lentils, wheat, barley, chickpeas W=pistachio, almond, fig, horsebean, vetch vs. Late no plant remains found possibly indications of loss of soil fertility. ANIMALS Early: 52 species (domestic & wild) D=goat W=gazelle, cattle, pig, fox, hare tortoise vs. Late - 12 species D=goat, cattle, pig, sheep W=8 OAK FOREST Early: plenty for house posts and fuel (plaster floors) 1 ton plaster = 2 tons limestone & 4 tons wood. Late: less for house post, 7K acres of forest gone. 36 per yr. or 40K in 1,500 yrs.
Regions of the world that have unusually high densities of different native languages today.
New Guinea and the Caucasus Mountains north of Turkey and Iran (also Native California in the past)
Which group of primates is most associated with having a prehensile tail?
New World Monkeys
incest taboo
No marrying close kin. Universal taboo around the world.
Define Forager
Nomadic Hunter:Men/Gather:Women on marginalized land area
Inbreeding
Non-random mating where relatives mate more often than expected
What percent of couples allow polygyny? societies?
Not important
Know the Subsistence Chart
ONLINE
Symbols
Objects, behaviors, and so forth whose culturally defines meanings have no necessary relationship to their inherent physical qualities.
How can you tell a monkey from an ape? How can you tell a monkey from the New World vs Old World?
Old world - Two Premolars Terrestrial New Monkeys - Three Premolars Grasping tails Arboreal
European Homo sapiens
Oldest evidence in Romania dating back 35 kya. Numerous huts made from mammoth bone with large central hearths. Used stone tools and had elaborate graves and decorative items.
Tools
Oldowan, Acheulean Bifaces - hard and soft hammer technique flakes: bones, ivory, antler, wood tools controlled, flatter flakes, straighter, sharper sides, flakes planned, cores flaked all over, skilled hand axes - pear shaped, tailored to different purposes, 1.4 mya - 300,000 ya, absent in Asia butcher animals, dig tubers and roots, hunt
Polygyny
One husband married to more than 1 wife at same time
Asian Homo sapiens
Only 7 early humans found in Asia dating less than 40 kya showing features of both modern humans and archaic forms.
nuclear family
Parents and Children residing together
political and economic influences on health
People with more social, economic, and political power in a society are generally healthier. The poor usually have more exposure to disease because they live in more crowded conditions. Political conditions can affect the health of some people.
Movie on Medical Anthropology: What type of medicine did the doctors give to the child?
Peruvian: general antibiotics Chinese: Chinese Herb
Marriage: What are the phases?
Phase 1: Attraction Phase 2. Attachment
Eugenics
Philosophy of "race improvement" through sterilization of some groups of people. Most popular in US and Europe
Big Men
Political leaders who do not occupy formal offices and whose leadership is based on influence, not authority.
1. geographical 2.ecological 3.behavioral 4.anatomical
Pre-Mating Isolation
Franz Boas
President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Criticized notions of superior races in his "Race and Progress" in 1909. Born and raised in Germany. Recognized dangers of ethnocentrism/racism.
v Features some archaeologists use to describe "modern" behavior in the archaeological record and why they are thought to be important. How many of them constitute sufficient evidence of modern behavior at any one site?
Principle 1 :Evolutionary change most often occurs through small incremental steps Principle 2: Each incremental step builds on prior adaptations Principle 3: Behavioral change drives genetic change Principle 4: Complex features evolve only if they are adaptive. = These evolutionary principles suggest that : 1. Continuities with other species are to be expected (e.g. Common chimps, bonobos, gorilla language capabilities) 2. Behavioral adaptations that require minimal genetic changes will be favored.
Incest Taboo
Prohibition against sexual intercourse between certain kinds of relatives.
bridesprice
Property presented to bride's family.
dowry
Property presented to groom or his family
FOXP2 Gene
Proved that Neanderthals had ability to speak.
Social functions of religion
Provides orderly function of the universe, explaining the unknown, prompt reflection concerning conduct, sets guidelines for behavior, lifts the burden of responsibility for conduct from the shoulders of the society's individual members (from believing the moral code is divinely ordained).
Revolution
Radical change in society or culture. In the political arena, it involves the forced overthrow of an old government and establishment of a completely new one.
What are the forms of exchange (forms of reciprocity, redistribution...) and what kinds of relationships do they create?
Reciprocity Redistribution Market
Individualistic Practices
Religious practices based on personal relationship between specific individuals and specific supernatural powers.
Shamanistic Practices
Religious practices in which special individuals (shamans) have relationships with supernatural powers that ordinary people lack.
Paleodemography
Reconstruct age/sex structures of ancient populations, and changes over time
Cultural resource management (CRM)
Recovering and preserving the archaeological record before programs of planned change disturb or destroy artifacts
Tribes
Refers to a range of kin-ordered groups that are politically integrated by some unifying factor and whose members share a common ancestry, identity, culture, language, and territory.
Hierarchical Nesting
Refers to the fact an ethnic identities are frequently subgroups of still larger ethnic identities.
Old World
Refers to the land masses of Europe, Asia, and Africa.
Fictive
Related by agreement, such as godparents, foster children, step-children, friend -of- family "uncles" and "aunts"
affinal
Relationship by marriage- includes spouses, in-laws, and step-relatives
affinity
Relationship through marriage
kin
Relationships traced to a common known ancestor
lineage
Relationships traced to a common unknown or mythical ancestor, usually composed of several lineages
Israeli Homo sapiens
Several caves with remains of both humans and Neanderthals, proving that the two species coexisted.
Group Marriage
Several women and several men married to one another simultaneously.
The biological trait defined by the ability to produce a specific type of gamete
Sex
The physiological difference between the sexes
Sexual dimorphism
Define Sexual Permissiveness
Sexual tolerance/acceptance
Norms
Shared ideas and expectations about how people ought to act in given situations.
Values
Shared ideas or standards about the worthwhileness of goals and lifestyles.
Culture
Shared, socially learned knowledge and patterns of behavior of some human group.
What culture thinks it is strange to have sex in marriage because they sleep in rooms of up to 50 people?
Siriono of Bolivia
Osteological paradox
Skeletal populations with high incidences of lesions do not necessarily mean the population was unhealthy but that they were healthy enough to survive
Morphemes
Smallest unit of sound that carries a meaning in language. Distinct from a phoneme, which can alter meaning but has no meaning by itself.
Prehistoric Archaeology
Study of people who lived before the development of writing by excavating sites and analyzing material remains.
Primatology
Study of primates (evolution, anatomy, adaptation, and social behavior of primates.)
Physical,Linguistic and Cultural Anthropology, and Archaeology
Subfields of Anthropology
Sue Ellen Jacobs
Social Impact Assessment. She was hired to do an assessment on a water diversion project in New Mexico. She found that the project would negatively affect the local Hispanic and Indian population. It infringed on local control of land.
mana
Some supernatural forces have no personlike character. For example, a supernatural, impersonal force called mana, after its malayo-polynesian name, is thought to inhabit some objects but not others, some people but not others
Australopithecus sediba
South Africa 420-435 cc, adult/child, cranial & post-cranial, closer to later homo Erectus than older, homoplasy, similarity not = relatedness 1.97 - 1.78 mya
Sterkfontain
South Africa no classification, virtually complete, 4' tall, foot bones - arboreal and bipeds If is A. africanus, is oldest If is A. afarensis, 3000 m --> convergent, gene flow, travel New 3.0- 3.6 mya
Australopithecus robutus
South Africa (biostratigraphy) 530 cc, 3 individuals?, 4'6" males, 3'7" females, post-crainal - similar to A. Africanus, huge molars, thick enamel, flaring zygomatics, large supraorbital torus, large sagittal crest, eat hard foods (grains, seeds) and meat --> isotopic tooth enamel 2.0 -1.8 mya
Movie on Medical Anthropology: What region did this film take place in?
South America: Peruvian border Central Africa: aaka
Paleoanthropology
Specializes in investigating the biological evolution of the human species.
Multiregionalism theory
Species integrity maintained by continual gene flow between different populations. However, geographic barriers would likely prohibit this.
Humid Tropic Adaptions
Sporadic food resources A: Increased subcataneous vasodilatation R: Less clothing, large families, high population levels
Forensic taphonomy
Stages through which a body passes through from being fresh to completely skeletonized
nationalism
Strong forms of this type of political philosophy can sometimes lead to ethnocide and genocide the desire of individuals with the common historical roots to control a particular nation.
Physical (biological) Anthropology
Studies biological and genetic evolution of the human species, behavior and anatomy of monkeys and apes, and physical variations among and between human groups.
Anthropology
Study of human kind (Homo sapiens) from a broad perspective, focusing especially on the biological and cultural differences and similarities among populations and societies of both the past and present.
Forensic entomology
Study of insect life cycle and succession on cadavers
family of procreation
The family group that consists of a husband, a wife, and their children
Power
The ability to make others do what you want based on coercion or legitimate authority.
Gender Crossing
The adoption of social roles and behaviors normatively appropriate for the opposite biological sex from one's own.
Ethnic Origin Myth
The agreed-upon story of the origin and history of the group by selective reference to certain historic events and people.
Holistic Perspective
The assumption that any aspect of a culture is integrates with other aspects, so that every aspect of culture must be understood in its social context.
Ethnocentrism
The attitude or opinion that the morals, values, and customs of one's own culture are superior to those of other peoples.
10
The average first marriage lasts _ _ years
Patterns of Behavior
The behaviors that most people form when they are in certain culturally defined situations
Animism
The belief in spiritual beings.
Proxemics
The branch of knowledge that deals with the amount of space that people feel it necessary to set between themselves and others.
Polymorphism
The characteristic of having more than one allele for a given gene.
Proxemics
The cross-cultural study of humankind's perception and use of space.
Cultural Identity
The cultural tradition a group of people recognize as their own; the shared customs and beliefs that define how a group sees itself as distinctive.
role
The culturally assigned behaviors and expectations for a person's social postition
Cultural Constructives
The culturally variable ways people perceive social and natural reality and divide those realities into categories, as illustrated by the cultural (social) construction of race.
Polygyny
The custom by which one man is allowed to have multiple wives.
Brideservice
The custom in which a man spends a period os time working for the family of his wife.
Bridewealth
The custom in which a prospective groom and his relatives are required to transfer goods to the relatives of the bride to validate the marriage.
Dowry
The custom in which the family of a woman transfer property or wealth to her upon marriage.
Gender Stratification
The degree of inequality between males and females based on culturally defined differences between the sexes; may be based on social status (rank, prestige) or on access to resources, wealth, power, or influence.
Social Distance
The degree to which cultural norms specify that two individuals or groups should be helpful to, intimate with, or emotionally attached to each other.
Inequality
The degree to which individuals, groups, and categories differ in their access to rewards.
Linguistic divergence
The development of different languages from a single ancestral language.
Parallel evolution
The development of similar cultural adaptations to similar environmental conditions by peoples whose ancestral cultures were already somewhat alike.
Define Sexual Dimorphism
The difference that evolve between the two sexes that evolve through competition of one sex for the other. Example: Peacock Feathers
Aurignacian
The earliest of upper Paleolithic & always associated with modern humans; the spread of Aurignacian has been traditionally seen as the migration of modern humans into western Europe, but there are now evidences that show modern humans might have arrived before the Aurignacian.
Global Trade
The economic exchange of goods and other products between the different peoples of the world via established trade networks.
Columbian Exchange
The exchange of people, diseases, domesticated animals and plants, and cultural knowledge between the peoples of the Old World and the New World.
Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
The idea that language profoundly shapes the perceptions and world view of its speakers.
Cultural Constructs of Gender
The idea that the characteristics a people attribute to males and females are culturally, not biologically, determined.
Syncretism
The integration of religious beliefs and practices of two or more religious traditions to create a new and distinct religious tradition.
New World
The land masses of NOrth America, South America, and the islands of the Caribbean.
universal categories used by healers
The naming process: If a disease has a name then it is curable; the patient realizes that the doctor understands his case The personality of the doctor: those who demonstrate some empathy, non possessive warmth, and genuine interest in the patient get results The patient's expectations: One way of raising the patient's expectations of being cured is the trip to the doctor; the longer the trip the easier the cure. An impressive setting and impressive paraphernalia also raise the patients expectations. Training is important as well as high fees the doctor charges. Curing techniques: drugs, shock treatment, conditioning techniques, and so on have long been used in many different parts of the world
Domestication
The process by which people control the distribution, abundance, and biological features of certain plants and animals in order to increase their usefulness to humans.
Globalization of Production
The process in which companies located in one country relocate their production facilities to other countries to reduce costs and be more competitive.
Industrialism
The productive technology that harnesses the energy of fossil fuels (petroleum, coal, and natural gas) to satisfy human material needs and wants.
religious conversion
The purpose of missionaries to convert people to new religions such as christianity and islam, due to fulfilling their religions need to spread the word or for selfish reasons
Reification
The notion that once something is given a name, it must exist in reality
Cultural Relativism
The notion that one should not judge the behavior or beliefs of other peoples using the standards of one's own culture.
Psychological Function of Religion
The notion that people derive comfort from religion and that religion helps people cope with misfortunes and death.
Social Function of Religion
The notion that religion maintains the institutions of society as a whole.
Intellectual/cognitive Function of Religion
The notion that religious beliefs provide explanations for puzzling things and events.
Postmodernism
The orientation that questions the truth of beliefs and knowledge, including those of science; focuses especially on how power relationships affect the creation and spread of ideas and beliefs.
Life Cycle
The patterned changes in roles, rights, obligations, and social relationships that individuals experience as they move through culturally defined age categories.
Sexual Division of Labor
The patterned ways in which productive activities and tasks are assigned to women versus men in a culture (strength, fertility maintenance (depression and infertile), child care and compatibility).
Division of Labor
The patterned ways in which productive tasks are divided up along the lines of gender, sex, skill and knowledge, interest, and other criteria.
Syntax
The patterns or rules by which words are arranged into phases and sentences
Indigenous Peoples
The people who were native to the Americas, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Oceania at the start of European expansion.
Sorcery
The performance of rites and spells for the purpose of causing harm to others by supernatural means.
Political Nationality
The political identity of an individual or group based on citizenship of a particular country.
Monogamy
The practice in which each individual is allowed to have only one spouse at a time.
Polyandry
The practice in which one woman is allowed to have multiple husbands.
Multiple Gender Identities
The presence in some cultures of more than two sexes, with the third- and fourth- gender identities often called by terms such as man-woman and woman-man.
enculturation
The process by which a child learns his or her culture
Market Globalization
The process by which capital, technology, products, and services cross national boundaries at prices largely determined by global supply and demand.
Artifacts
Things made or altered by people ex: litchis, ceramics, tools, your teddy bear
state
This defined territory has a centralized power base and monopolizes control over the use of force
conspicuous consumption
This is the aquisitation or use of goods because they add wealth or presige
nation- states
This is what we have in the world today since many states are coincided with nations
ambilineal
This is what you follow if you can trace descent through wither the mother or father's line
globalization
This process which is a particular contemporary configuration in the relationship between capital and nation states causes the loss of cultural diversity and was boosted by industrial revolution
Define: Burdash
This term means two spirits, neither female nor male
If your brother gives you a CD for your birthday and 8 months later you send him a book for his birthday this is an example of
generalized reciprocity
contagious magic
Whatever is done to an object is believed to affect a person who once had contact with it (voodoo)
Trobrianders and Cricket
When British missionaries pressed Trobrianders to celebrate their regular yam harvests with a game of civilized cricket rather than traditional wild erotic dances, they responded by transforming the staid British sport into an exuberant event that featured sexual chants and dances between innings. This is an example of SYNCRETISM-the creative blending of indigenous and foreign beliefs and practices into new cultural forms.
700 ppm
When CO2 levels reach ______, rising sea levels cause massive population displacement; ocean conveyer belt shuts down, survival possible but difficult
1100 ppm
When CO2 levels reach ______, there will be a biblical scale of disaster, conveyer shut down, ice melted, sea levels have risen, mass extinction
Rise
When economy is up/good, both marriage and divorce rates _ _ _ _.
Postmarital Residence Patterns
Where most newly married couples go to live after they become married.
Polyandry
Which is rarer: Polygyny or Polyandry?
First 5 codified races
White, yellow, red, black, brown
keep power and blood pure
Why were sibling unions encouraged?
Levirate
Widow marries the brother of her late husband
violence against wives
Wife beating is most common when men control the products of family labor, when men have the final say in decision making in the home, when divorce is difficult for women,when remarriage for a widow is controlled in the husband's kin, and when women do not have any female work groups. Societies that have violent methods of conflict resolution within communities, physical punishment of criminals, high frequency of warfare, and cruelty toward enemies generally have more wife beatings as well.
music
Wordiness and clearness of enunciation were found to be associated with cultural complexity. Hunter-gather type bands are more likely than we are to base much of their singing on lines of nonwords. Their songs are characterized by lack of explicit information by sounds that five pleasure in themselves, by much repetition, and by relaxed, slurred enunciation. Societies in which the leadership is informal and temporary seem to symbolize their local equality by an interlocked style of singing. Rank societies, society where a leader has prestige but no real power, are characterized by a song style in which one leader may begin the song, but the others soon drown out his voice. In stratified societies, where leaders have the power of force, choral singing is generally marked by a clear cut role for the leader and secondary answering role for the others. Societies marked by elaborate stratification show singing parts that are differentiated and in which the soloist is deferred to by the other singers.
v Features some archaeologists use to describe "modern" behavior in the archaeological record and why they are thought to be important. How many of them constitute sufficient evidence of modern behavior at any one site?
[Slide 47, Lecture 15] How do Neandertals compare to early modern humans? • both have ochre and other potential pigments • both have burials • both have Levallois and notch/denticulates • both have perforated shells of various types • both have evidence of broadened diets • both have similar settlement patterns • Neandertal symbolic evidence (perforated shells, pigments) is late • Neandertal broadened diet is sporadic and late It would seem that assigning "modern behavior" to Neandertals is complicated by a "trait list approach" to defining modernity and is still a matter of interpretation........only a handful of archaeologists consider Neandertals to be behaviorally similar to modern humans. No doubt, the perceived behavioral differences between Neandertals and modern humans results partly because of the mtDNA genetic differences between Neandertals and modern humans, but also because Neandertals appear to have biologically adapted to situations to which modern humans appear to have culturally adapted.
v Controversies concerning the CULTURAL relationship of Neandertals and modern humans (culture from the archaeological record). see: John Shea
[Slide 48 to 50, Lecture 15] Behavioral Variability: another way of thinking about "modern" behavior and its appearance in the archaeological record "We need to stop looking at artifacts as expressions of evolutionary states and start looking at them as byproducts of behavioral strategies." (Shea 2011, American Scientist, p. 135) Difficult to isolate behavior to one type of hominin: 1."First, the capacity for behavioral variability we think to be uniquely evolved among recent human populations may be evolutionarily primitive. 2.Second, this capacity for behavioral variability may be one shared with now-extinct hominin species. 3.Finally, differences in the capacity for behavioral variability may not explain why these other species are extinct and H. sapiens is not."
Overpopulation
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ leading to poverty is a culture bound view
Cohabitation
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ before marriage increases divorce rate
Tibetans
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ s practice Polyandry
95%
____ of HIV infected people live in developing countries
Theory
a broad statement of scientific relationships or underlying principles that has been substantially verified through the testing of hypotheses.
In class, we defined biological evolution as
a change in the frequency of alleles in a population
social group
a cluster of people beyond the domestic unit who are usually related on grounds other than kinships
extended household
a coresidential group that comprises more than one parent-child unit
Innovation
a creation (a new device or process) resulting from study and experimentation
endogamy
a cultural rule that dictates that one must marry within a designated group
chain migration
a form of population movement in which a first wave of migrants comes and then attracts relatives and friends to join them in the destination
caste system
a form of social stratification linked with Hinduism and based on a person's birth into a particular group
Ethnicity
a group a people emphasizing common origins and language, shared history and selected aspects of cultural differences
age set
a group of people close in age who go through certain rituals, such as circumcision, at the same time
family
a group of people who consider themselves related through a form of kinship, such as descent, marriage, or sharing
secondary group
a group of people who identify with one another on some basis but may never meet with one another personally
Homo Neanderthal
a group of robust and otherwise anatomically distinct hominids that are closely relatives of humans- so close that some believe it should be classified as Homo Sapiens netandertalensis.
sub-culture
a group within a single society who possess certain distinctive cultural elements that set them apart
neolocal residence
a home where the married couple live by themselves, away from both husband's and wife's families.
patrilocal residence
a home where the married couple live with the husband's family.
matrifocality
a household pattern in which a female (or females) is the central figure around whom other members cluster
matrilineal descent
a kinship system in which both males and female acquire the lineage of their mother
law
a legal code including trial and enforcement
Patralocality
a married couple resides with or near the husband's parents.
Allele
a member of a pair of genes
Balanced reciprocity
a mode of exchange in which the giving and the receiving are specific as to the value of the goods and time of their delivery.
Generalized reciprocity
a mode of exchange in which the value of what is given is not calculated, nor is the time of repayment specified.
band
a type of society common in foraging groups and marked by egalitarian social structure and lack of specialization
chiefdom
a type of society with an office of chief, most commonly hereditary, social ranking, and a redistributive economy
marriage
a union, usually between two people who are likely to be, but are not necessarily, coresident, sexually involved with each other, and procreative
Lucy
a. afarensis, adult female, arms longer than modern humans, small (3'3"), around 40% skeleton, first definitive hominin, 3-4 mya
Power
ability to make others do what they do not want to do or influence based on the threat of force
The age at which North American children begin to master the subtle cultural aspects of time, such as when one should arrive at a party or a business appointment.
about 12
The fraction of all languages in the world that are no longer spoken by children.
about half
Carolus Linnaeus
added Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order and Family to Ray's list
Anthropologists define an economic system as a system organizing
all of the above
Physical variation between human populations may be the result of
all of the above
Physical anthropology
also known as biological anthro. Study of humans as biological organisms
bracero
an agricultural laborer in Latin America and the Caribbean who is permitted entry to a country to work for a limited time
Adaptation
an anatomical, physiological, or behavioral response of organisms or populations to the environment.
shaman
an ancient doctor, healer, or priest, they were called upon for religious ceremonies
Australopithecus anamensis
best candidate for hominins near Lake Turkana --> Kanapoi and Allia Bay dry woods, open grass-lands, riverine areas, teeth, 100 - 130 lbs, unknown cc,cranial, post-cranial: 52 specimens, 3 individuals, mix of traits, ape-like: small ear holes, large canines, mandible and humeurus (chimp like), hominin-like: thick enamel, tibia- suggests bipedialism, sexual dimorphism of teeth, South ape of the lake region 3.9 - 4.2 mya
types of anthropology (8)
biological linguistic Paleo- primat- forensic osteology cultural ethnology
systematic study of humans as biological organisms
biological anthroplogy
habitually walk on 2 legs
bipedal
What evidence is used for a fossil to be definitely classified has a hominid:
bipedalism
trends
bipedalism, encephalization - brain size getting bigger, balance of cranium - flattened face (orthognathic increases), teeth shrink, lose canine complex, shortened skull, less robust, lose hair
Genus homo
brain size: 510 - 1880 cc, A. overlap: 400 - 545 cc, increased over past 2 my, shape: rounded cranium, face less prognathic, dental size: reduced, parabolic, post-cranial anatomy
taxonomy
branch of science concerned with the rules of classifying organisms on the basis of evolutionary relationships
Sexual Dimorphism: Women: have large breasts (only animals that have ______ swelling) What other characteristic does a woman have?
breast biological signal for horniness... lol gross -___- have buttocks (hips and butt)
Neanderthal Extinction
bred out, out competed, poor health, specialization
Holistic perspective
broadest possible view of human culture and biology
The primary way in which Latin derived languages, such as Spanish, French, and Italian change the meaning of a sentence.
by changing the endings of words (i.e., suffixes).
The primary way in which the meaning of a sentence is changed in Mandarin Chinese.
by changing the tone of syllables in words
The primary way in which the meaning of a sentence is changed in English.
by changing the word order
Fever, Shock, and trauma are examples of which of the following? a. sensory deprivation b. sensory overload c. metabolic change
c. metabolic change
What is the only gender role that is associated with women?
caring for infants
Reasons we became bipedal
carrying, weapons and tools, vegetable foods/water/infants, traveling between food trees, feeding from bushes, feeding on grass seeds, provisioning family, thermoregulation, looking over tall grass, more energy efficient
Art
cave paintings Lascaux Cave, France Grotte Chanvet, France figurines, carvings, pendants "Lion Lady" Baden, Germany
Modern Shelter
caves, rock shelters, manufactured: wood, animal bones and hide
development
change directed toward improving human welfare
Macroevolution
changes over time in population do result in the appearance of new species or speciation.
The smallest unit of sound that can be altered to change the meaning of a word. These units of sound do not have meaning by themselves. The initial sound in the words bit, kit, sit, and pit are examples.
click sounds used as consonants
When Alia's mother speaks to her in Arabic and Alia responds in English, this is an example of
code switching
ethnology
comparative study of cultures with the aim of presenting analytical generalizations w/n context of that society
Applied anthropology
concerns itself with applying anthropological knowledge to achieve practical goals
Andreas Vesalius
conducted anatomical examinations on the human body in order to understand how things worked
big toe enlarged
convergent (in line), feet aren't flat
What do we call the cross-cultural study of human perception and use of space
conversational distance
In the league of the iriquois, what was the highest political authority?
council of 50 male chiefs
Define: Neolocal (Common/Rare) across world (Common/Rare) here
couple starts up own/new household Rare Common
The general term for a pidgin language that has become the mother tongue of a population. In Haiti, for example, a French-African pidgin became this sort of language. It is spoken in that nation today by the majority of the population as their principle or only language.
creole
Participant observation refers to
cultural anthropologist studying a group of people by living among them
focuses on human behavior and the role of culture
cultural anthropology
Comparing the amounts of labor involved in subsistence pursuits among industrial versus food-gathering societies would be a topic of
cultural anthropology or ethnology
Lapita culture
cultural complex of the original human settlers of Melanesia, much of Polynesia, and parts of Micronesia; dating between 1600 and 500 bce. It is named for a type of fired pottery that was first extensively investigated at the site of Lapita; originally from Taiwan and other regions of East Asia; highly mobile seaborne explorers and colonists who had established themselves on the Bismarck Archipelago by 2000 bc; Beginning about 1600 bce they spread to the Solomon Islands; they had reached Fiji, Tonga, and the rest of western Polynesia by 1000 bce; and they had dispersed to Micronesia by 500 bce
What is the term for the spreading of ideas/traits from one culture to another?
cultural diffusion
homogeneous cultures
cultural group that shares most ideas, values, knowledge, behaviors, and artifacats. Typical of small cultural groups (ie foragers)
heterogeneous cultures
cultural group that shares only a few components. Typical of large societies such as states, where there are many subcultures such as ethnic groups
An archaeological technique employed to recover tiny objects by immersion of soil samples in water by immersion of soil samples in water is called
flotation
foraging
food procurement strategy that involves collecting wild plant and animal foods
Pollen found at an archaeological site is a good example of a(n)...
fossil
Robert Hooke
fossils and creatures are made of cells
Homo-sapiens
fossils appear around 200,000-400,000 yrs. ago in Africa, Asia, and Europe.
Homo erectus
found in 1891 (Asia) from Africa Pleistocene Epoch, "Ice Age" --> glaciers in northern hemisphere, "upright walking human" 1.8 my - 50,000 ya
Homo habilis
found in 1960 by Leakey in East Africa 610 cc av - range of 510 - 675 cc, "Able man," handy man -- makes tools, found hand bones, jaw, cranial, post-cranial, smaller teeth, larger brain, vault thicker, less post orbital constriction, smaller supraorbital tori, small: height 3'3", weight 70-85 lbs, relatively long arms (ape-like), some prognathism, around 11 specimens overlap with Australopithecines? context: found with stone tools Olduwan Tradition 2.0 - 1.6 mya
Orrorin tugenensis
found in 2000, Tugen Hills, Kenya cranial capacity unknown, teeth: ape like-primitive, femur: bipedal - derived,fragmentary --> several individuals 6 mya - East Africa (chronometric dating)
Sahelanthropus tchadensis
found in 2001, Chad small brain (350 cc), no post cranial, small canines, thick enamel, "Toumai skull", primitive and derived traits --> large supraorbital torus (ape), more vertical face (hominin) 6-7 mya (biostratigraphy)
Australopithecines robust
found in S. Africa caves dating from 1.8 to 1 mya. Not as large in the teeth and jaws.
bipedalism advantages
free hands, cooler, better vision
Shelter
frequently caves: least effort, sturdy, protective Terra Amata, France - 300,000 - 400,000 ya - non-cave structure on sand bar
Though these things are not considered to be directly expected gender roles, what things do women usually have a tendency to do? (5)
gather wild plants care for children cook food launder collect water or fuel
A term referring to sexual identity as male or female.
gender
Culturally assigned labors performed by men and women
gender roles
Interbreeding between population allows for
gene flow
Cross cultural research can help us discover
general patterns about human cultural traits
patriarchy
the dominance of men in economic, political, social, and ideological domains
Humans homo
habitual bipedalism, omnivores, primate heritage (body structure), very large/complex brains, spoken language
Sexual Dimorphism: Men: have more body and facial_____.
hair
androgynous
having both male and female characteristics
industrial revolution
historic transformation of " traditional" into "modern" societies through industrialization of the economy
Early hominins
hominin differentiation, late Miocene, group living adapted (8-5 mya), more evidence for around 4.5 mya
Which of the following is most characterized by producing a surplus in order to sell on the market
horticultures
With agricultural societies, what two types of work intensify?
household labor secondary subsitence
Define: Subsistence and say what it does?
how one makes a living, it shows the characteristics of a culture.
os coxa
ilium, ischium, pubis
foraging
the acquisition of food by hunting, fishing, or the gathering of plant matter.
The fact that Ashkenzai Jews living in the U.S. have a lower mortality rate for tuberculosis than non-Jews is most likely because
the ancestors of Ashkenazi Jews were captured for many years to tuberculosis in crowded, European ghettos, giving a selective advantage to tuberculosis resistant genotypes
medical anthropology
the application of anthropological knowledge to the study of health and illness.
supernatural force
the belief that most illnesses are caused by supernatural forces such as gods or spirits
animism
the belief that spirits are present in animals, plants, and other natural objects
Ethnocentrism
the belief that the ways of one's own culture are the only proper ones.
concept of balance
the body needs a balance of hot and cold items, or wet and dry items
Economics
the branch of social science that deals with the production and distribution and consumption of goods and services and their management
Hominoid
the broad-shouldered tail-less group of primates that includes all living and extinct apes and humans.
kinship
the complex system of culturally complex defined social relationships based on marriage (principle of affinity) and birth (principle of consanguity)
Social Stratification
the condition of being arranged in social strata or classes within a group
male bias in development
the design and implementation of development projects with men as beneficiaries and without regard to the impact of the projects on women's roles and status
mandarin chinese
the dialect of Chinese spoken in Beijing and adopted as the official language for all of China
Animism
the doctrine that all natural objects and the universe itself have souls
Enculturation
the process of a culture being transmitted from one generation to the next.
participant observer
the process of an anthropologists doing ethnographic fieldwork
agriculture
the raising of plants or animals for human use
Descriptive linguistics describes
the rules people follow when they speak properly
linguistics
the scientific study of the structure, sounds, and meaning of language
Morpheme
the smallest unit of sound that carry a meaning in a language.
Phonemes
the smallest unit of sound that makes a difference in meaning in language.
assimilation
the social process of absorbing one cultural group into harmony with another
Forensic anthropology
the specialty in anthropology that is devoted to helping solve crimes and identifying human remains, usually by applying knowledge of physical anthropology.
diffusion
the spread of culture through contact
Cultural diffusion
the spreading of ideas or products from one culture to another.
project cycle
the steps of a development project from initial planning to completion: project identification, project design, project appraisal, project implementation, and project evaluation
kinesics
the study of communication through body movements, stances, gestures, and facial expressions
Colonial powers
tried to change native land ownership to favor individual private property
fictive kinship
unrelated family friends who are addressed by kin terms
Applied anthropology
use of anthropological methods and knowledge to solve practical problems often for a specific client
Sorcery
use of certain material to invoke supernatural powers to harm people
Define: Magic (witchcraft/sorcery) (True/False) Religion is a human universal (True/False) Religions all have myths (True/False) Religion is based on belief not fact What distinguishes difference?
uses rituals to demand/compel/coerce or force supernatural powers. ex. sacrifice. True True True Intent
Code switching
using more than one language in the course of conversing
Binomial nomenclature
using to words to name species by their genus and species such as "homo sapien"
v Compare and contrast the lifeways of hunter-gatherers and early agriculturalists. see previous 2 essay questions
v Compare and contrast the lifeways of hunter-gatherers and early agriculturalists. see previous 2 essay questions
What is the social consequence of food production
variety of castes
polygny
variety of plural marriage in which a man has more than one wife
What is the Holistic approach to anthropology?
various parts of culture and biology must be viewed broadly to understand interconnections and interdependence
advantages of being bipedal
walking long distances, less sunlight directly on the body
Western Europe Upper Paleolithic Order & Map <Western European Upper Paleolithic>
• Magdalenian: ca. 17,000 - 11,600 cal BP • Solutrean: ca. 22,000 - 17,000 cal BP (SW Europe) • Gravettian: ca. 32,000 - 22,000 cal BP • Aurignacian: ca. 47,000 - 32,000 cal BP