An Introduction to Modern ArcheologySchenkman Publishing Company, 1972 - 96 Seiten |
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Seite 8
... remains ( how they were found , where they were found , what they look like ) , with little or no mention of the human society that created them . In contrast , it is the ... archeological remains , we 8 AN INTRODUCTION TO MODERN ARCHEOLOGY.
... remains ( how they were found , where they were found , what they look like ) , with little or no mention of the human society that created them . In contrast , it is the ... archeological remains , we 8 AN INTRODUCTION TO MODERN ARCHEOLOGY.
Seite 15
... archeological remains is a refined method of treating the in- formation derived from the studies . Attempting to introduce the scientific method into the study of culture , archeologists create models . As D. M. MacKay has described it ...
... archeological remains is a refined method of treating the in- formation derived from the studies . Attempting to introduce the scientific method into the study of culture , archeologists create models . As D. M. MacKay has described it ...
Seite 28
... archeological remains col- lected throughout the United States . The classifying process did not stop at sets or collections of varied artifacts ; the descripive urge was further satisfied by creating types — that is , groupings of ...
... archeological remains col- lected throughout the United States . The classifying process did not stop at sets or collections of varied artifacts ; the descripive urge was further satisfied by creating types — that is , groupings of ...
Inhalt
THE NEW ARCHEOLOGY | 7 |
Chapter 3 | 33 |
Chapter 4 | 57 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adaptive American animal anthropologists appear arche archeological model archeological record archeological remains artifacts attributes Binford Boas Boasians burial Caddo Caddoan cause clans complex CULTURAL ECOLOGY cultural evolution cultural materialism cultural subsystem cultural system culture change culture process culture's decoration defined determine direct historical approach ecological change econiche economic efficient Elman Service environment evidence example excavation explanation exploiting external extinct factor female fertile formulate function Hence historical particularism horticulture human culture hypothesis ideology increase Indian indicate interpretation involves irrigation Julian Steward Juntunen located maize major males managerial material remains matrilineal matrilocal modern archeology mounds Mousterian Mousterian assemblages ologist ology paleoanthropologist population density pottery prehistoric problem production relationship residence pattern result role semi-arid situation social organization social stratification societies sociofacts soil species structural-functionalism technofacts Teotihuacan tested theory tion traits tribes ture types unilinear Upper Paleolithic valley view of culture