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ANTHROPOLOGY 2201 EXAM 1 STUDY GUIDE INTRODUCTION TO ANTHROPOLOGY Anthropology Anthropos people man Logia study Study of people o Human history To Be Human Unique combination of 5 attributes o Bipedalism Walking on 2 legs o Material culture tools o Speech o Hunting tools and strategies o Domesticated foods plants and animals Anthropology Study of humans 4 Subfields o Cultural Study of human culture Study of shared learned behavior Patterns of behavior Political organization and social organization Rights of passage Puberty marriage child birth Ethnography Ethnology Book or writing of a single culture Book or righting comparing cultures Participant observation o Archaeology Study of patterns of behavior in the past Use material record Trash o midden trash heap Tomb Raiding vs Contextual Analysis o Linguistics Recording dying languages Grouping language families Study phonetics Understanding how words are used How they change Track population movement o Physical Biological Biological and bio cultural Humans past and present Primatology Study of non human primates Paleoanthropology Study of early hominins Evolution Crux of biological anthropology Human adaptation Forensics Legal system o Holistic Integrating all aspects Paleoanthropology and Human Evolution Primate human evolution Biological and geological background Theory of evolution o Origins of human species Bio archaeology Human remains in the past o 100 years Anthropology as a discipline Can the four subfields exist cohesively o Yes Anth is the science of humans How o By asking the same questions Add depth to each other s works Specialized but ultimate goal is broad How humans have changed and are changing HISTORY OF ARCHAEOLOGY Scientific Method Research strategy o Repeatable Make observations Create a question Hypothesis Test Analyze and conclude o Repeat the steps Theory Systems of ideas intended to explain something Why is theory important o Determines interpretations of the past o How archaeology is used Paradigm shift o Shift in basic assumptions Theories develop through change Necessary to better understand the past Driven by constant change Origins of Archaeology Nabonidus Babylon o City of Ur King Thutmose IV Egypt o Sphinx Reverence not exploration of past Renaissance Europe o First evidence of excavation to recover and explore Greek Roman and Celtic emphasis o Sir Francis Bacon Scientific method Not yet part of archaeology 18th century More sophisticated techniques in archaeology Happening elsewhere o James Hutton Uniformitarianism same process at work in present happened in past Same processes at work Ridiculed Early 19th Century Recovering artifacts BUT o Human made vs Natural processes o Thunderstones arrowheads Interactions with cultures o Expanding empires o Changes views 19th Century Happening at the same time o Jean Baptiste Lamarck physical traits Inheritance of acquired traits o Charles Lyell revisited Uniformitarianism o Charles Darwin On the Origin of Species Two major developments in archaeology o Three age system Christian Thomsen Cataloging artifacts into time periods Stone Age Bronze Age Iron Age Classification based on material used Assumptions Tools were not used at the same time Get better as you go on o Determination of age depth in antiquity Directly linked to the age of the earth New hominin discoveries Humans and their early ancestors Discovered in Germany and Java Uniformitarianism Evolution All changing scientist s perspectives Convincing the Community Jaques Boucher de Perthes o Book on tools and animals o Lyell is convinced John Lubbock o Closer look at stone age o Differences in appearance Divides into Neolithic Paleolithic 20th Century Development of method and theory o ID Native American cultural groups in archaeological record Early 20th century excavation for WPA project o Often ignore culture o Want artifacts Paradigm shift V Gordon Childe o Patterns and mapping across Europe Emphasis on cultural history Nature of prehistory Connecting between artifacts and social and economic relations o Two revolutions Neolithic appearance of settled villages Urban appearance of cities and complex governments Archaeology as a science Shift opens door to look at much more Incorporate statistics o A C Spaulding Cluster attributes to see changes over time Apply to social aspects New archaeology 1960s Processual Archaeology Based on scientific method and supported by development of theory Lewis Binford o Archaeology is either science or nothing Rooted in 1960s social environment Not good enough to interpret artifacts o Must ask the right questions Induction inferences based on artifacts Deduction inferences based on laws and models Systems theory o View culture as systems that produces steady state Can see rapid change Archaeology and Federal Legislation Around the same time National Historic Preservation Act NHPA o Section 106 take into account effects of building on historic or prehistoric sites o Anything with federal funding Cultural Resources Management o Identify sites minimize avoid adverse effects on historic or prehistoric sited Postprocessual Archaeology 1980s o Ian Hodder Too scientific too removed Archaeology should understand past from perspective of people who lived it Etic approach and understand of culture from outside processual Emic culture can only be understood from inside perspective o Context of artifacts Do not emphasis hypothesis o Rather interpretations on Contextual data o Interpretations are ongoing Competing views Processual separate past from present Post processual embraces present and the view it brings to interpreting the past NEED TO KNOW Know people and contributions Know broad time periods and what happened in them o 18th 19th centuries SITE METHODS Why Archaeology Objects from past o Understand lives from the past Look at o Distribution of sites o Distribution within sites Depends on the goal of the research Methods the past o CONTEXT o Four phases Survey How do we find the data necessary to make confident inferences about Testing Excavation recovery Analysis Types of Archaeology Traditional Archaeology Underwater Archaeology Site preservation Causes bias o Not everything preserves o Post depositional processes Once on in earth natural processes occur o Volcanic ash silt avalanche What preserves Stone tools Pottery Building and parts of buildings Organic remains Site formation Combination of o Geological deposits Sterile layers soil Anthropogenic deposits o Look


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OSU ANTHROP 2201 - EXAM 1 STUDY GUIDE

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