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Quiz 2
Domestication, Complexity, Disease, Human Variation/race, Culture,Language
132
Anthropology
Undergraduate 2
10/01/2012

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Term
Who had the 1st semi-sedentary culture?
Definition
Natufians
Term
What are the last of the 4 most significant events in human history?
Definition
Domestication of wild plants and animals
Agrarian Revolution
Sedentary life in settlements, urban centers
trade
Term
Broad Spectrum Collecting
Definition
focused less on large
game and more on a wider range of plant and animal life
Term
Vertical Economy or Seasonal Resource Use
Definition
Seasonal exploitation of varied environmental zones that are close to each other, e.g. hills and plains, by broad spectrum foragers.
Term
Domestication
Definition
Genetic modification of plant & animal species through artificial selection
Term
Dogs are a direct descendant of what animal? WHy?
Definition
Gray Wolf, trait of friendliness towards humans was artificially selected by humans
Term
What is the only species(other than humans) that understand a pointed finger?
Definition
canines
Term
Fertile Crescent :
Definition
day Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Syria, Turkey, Iraq, Iran; Watered by the Nile, Jordan, Euphrates and Tigris rivers, the region is naturally fertile
Term
What developed independently in several world areas
Definition
farming
Term
How are domesticated plants different from wild ones?
Definition
Larger plants, seeds, yield, and no natural seed dispersal mechanism.
Term
Paleoethnobotany or archaeobotany
Definition
the archaeological sub-field that studies plant remains from archaeological sites.
Term
how do Paleoethnobotanists identify and recover plant remains?
Definition
to sieve excavated material manually in a water bath in order to allow the organic material to float to the surface.(flotation)
Term
who had white mica in his stomach that came from a grinding stone on which wheat was ground found in Etsch valley
Definition
Otzi the iceman
Term
Where was the 4,000 BP yr old bowl of millet La-Mian style noodles found?
Definition
Laiji north-Western China
Term
Jericho
Definition
- A pre-agricultural & pre-ceramic Neolithic Site
Term
describe Jericho
Definition
cont. inhabited sonce 9,000 BC
20 successive settlements over 7000 yrs
oasis in a desert
ppl raised wheat and goats
surrounded by a massive stone wall and circular tower
Term
Tell or Tall (hill/mound)
Definition
is a type of archaeological site in the form of an earthen mound. It results from the accumulation and subsequent erosion of material deposited by human occupation over long periods of time.
Term
What was a common trade item for Obsidian(dark volcanic glass)
Definition
sea-shells or cowries
Term
What was used as eyes in burial rituals in jericho
Definition
cowries
Term
what was used as tools, in rituals, as poison, and was found with mummies.
Definition
obsidian
Term
In Mesoamerica, Obsidian used in:
Definition
blades used for bloodletting and human sacrifice
decorate early Christian atrial crosses
Term
In Egypt, Obsidian used for:
Definition
eyes in mummies
Term
What are the 5 consequences of the Neolithic Revolution?
Definition
1.Increase in population (30 million to 300 million
2. Increase in material complexity
3. Increasing social stratification(wealth)
4. Increase in political complexity(state, war, trade)
5. Decreae in health and nutrition(lack of variety in diets and disease)
Term
What is vertical economy
Definition
seasonal resource use
Term
Name 6 factors of growing complexity
Definition
1. Development of Agricultural States
2. Development of Crafts
3. Monumental Architecture
4. Writing systems, record keeping systems
5. Where did early humans live
6. Causes of the Collapse of State Societies
Term
What is the earliest known town and who was it settled by?
Definition
Jericho; settled by Natufian foragers
Term
Which civilization was known for urban planning and architecture, with its extravagant use of water as seen in the wells and tanks as also its attention to drainage and decent housing
Definition
The Indus Valley Civilization
Term
Which two cultures had the bull motif
Definition
Catal Huyuk and Indus Valley Civilization
Term
Which civilization had a Great bath, granary, and undeciphered writing system?
Definition
Indus Valley Civilization
Term
Which came first; development of metallurgy or ceramic pottery?
Definition
Ceramic pottery(8,000 BP) was before Metallurgy (5,000 BP)
Term
Which area was in the Tigris/Euphrates River Valleys?
and what was a defining characteristic of it?
Definition
Mesopotamia; Ziggurat
Term
Ziggurat
Definition
a temple tower with a terraced pyramid built of mud-brick or adobe. It housed gods, not the dead.
Term
What area was in the Nile River Valley? What was a defining characteristic of it?
Definition
Egypt; Pyramids
Term
What were built as burial chambers for Egyptian Pharaohs. Constructed with blocks of limestone, basalt, or granite.
Definition
Pyramids
Term
What are the three stages by which writing evolved from primitive ideography to a full alphabet.
Definition
WORD, SYLLABIC, AND ALPHABETIC
1.the use of signs to stand for word sounds, leading to a word-syllabic writing.
2.the creation of a Semitic syllabary of some 22 to 30 signs.
3. the creation of the Greek alphabet. This was accomplished by the systematic use of vowel signs.
Term
petroglyphs
Definition
are images created by removing part of a rock surfaces by incising, pecking, carving, and abrading
Term
Pictographic
Definition
signs that convey their meaning through pictorial resemblance to a physical object
Term
Ideographic or concept writing
Definition
signs that they do not picture things, but "indicate” use
Term
logogram or logograph
Definition
a single symbol which represents a word or a morpheme
Term
What language is in Northern Mesopotamia?
Southern?
Definition
Sumerian (Southern)
Akkadian (Northern)
Term
Both Sumerian & Akkadian languages used what kind of writing
Definition
used cuneiform writing
The term cuneiform means "wedge-shaped.”
Evolved to a stylus pressed in soft clay to record numbers
Term
Sumerian writing evolved from what kind of picture writing to what kind of concept wiritng?
Definition
pictographic to ideographic
Term
What form of writing simplifies a picture into a symbol and could represent the sound of the object or could represent an idea associated with the object.
Definition
Hieroglyphics
Term
What stage and particular example are considered "the most important advance in the history of writing”
Definition
Stage 2-syllabic writing; Proto-Sinaitic (Phoenician)
Term
Did the phoenician alphabet represent vowels and consonants?
Definition
NO just condonants
Term
alphabet
Definition
standardized set of letters
Term
Alphabetic writing diffused from the Phoenicians to Greece where what were added
Definition
vowels
Term
Where did early humans live?
Definition
Longhouses in Danube, Netherlands, Native Americans in NA, Malaysia, Indonesia, Iraq
Also, yurts/gers in Mongolia and Central Asia
Term
What are 5 possible causes of the collapse of state societies?
Definition
Catastrophic events- earthquakes, floods, volcanic eruption

Habitat destruction
Over-farming, deforestation (e.g. Easter Island - discussed again under culture)

Demographic pressure:Increase in population

Climate change

Warfare – social, political & military upheaval
Term
887 Megalithic statues, called what were created by the Rapanui people on Easter Islands
Definition
moai
Term
parasites we share with early hominids’ anthropoid ancestors, Give three examples pinworms, head, body, & pubic lice.
Definition
Heirloom species: pinworms, head, body, & pubic lice.
Term
Did Lucy have Body hair? Why/Why not
Definition
The closest relative of the pubic louse is the gorilla louse. Diverged 3.3 million years ago
Term
infectious disease that can be transmitted from wild and domestic animals to humans, give 3 examples
Definition
Zoonotic Disease: Avian tuberculosis, rabies, anthrax.
Term
Who was more likely to have disease? unter gatherers or mobile pops? why?
Definition
Hunter gatherers cause they were in contact with fecal parasites
Term
Vector (epidemiology)
Definition
an organism, often an invertebrate arthropod, that transmits a pathogen from reservoir to host
Term
An increase in what enhanced respiratory transmission of viral diseases, e.g. influenza, measles, mumps, chicken pox, & smallpox.
Definition
Increase in population size & density
Term
what created a cluster of disease vectors
Definition
Domestication of animals
Term
what increased parasitic infections because of contamination of water by human waste e.g. cholera
Definition
sedentarism
Term
what exposes workers to insect bites, & diseases, e.g. scrub typhus, malaria, yellow fever, filariasis, schistosomiasis
Definition
cultivation
Term
what increased dietary deficiencies & nutritional stress - size, stature, & robustness & average age of adults declined
Definition
agriculture
Term
Epidemics were made possible by what
Definition
cross-continental trade and travel
Term
Paleodemography and paleoepidemiology use what from archaeological sites to study the population and health characteristics of past human communities
Definition
skeletons
Term
Beau's lines
Definition
depressions across the fingernail. These lines can occur after illness, injury to the nail, and when you are malnourished.
Term
Was the mortality associated with the Black Death selective with respect to preexisting health conditions (‘‘frailty’’)? Or did it kill in indiscriminately, irrespective of age, sex, or frailty?
Definition
: The results suggest that the Black Death did not kill indiscriminately but it did discriminate less sharply than death normally does. It was, in fact, selective with respect to frailty
Term
Evidence of disease in prehistoric skeletons are mostly found in what 4 forms
Definition
1. teeth (food stress and wear)
2. leg bones(bent from vit D deficiency)
3. skeletons(trauma, malnutrition)
4. disease(ribs)
Term
what are some limits of DNA analysis
Definition
Contamination, Degradation and fragmentation
Term
When did the second epidemiological transition happen? public health measures, improved nutrition and medicine resulted in what
Definition
about a century ago, declines in infectious disease and a rise in non-infectious, chronic and degenerative diseases
Term
We are currently in the Third Epidemiological Transition which entails what?
Definition
-reemergence of infectious diseases previously thought to be under control
-the emergence of novel diseases
-many of the emerging and reemerging pathogens are antibiotic resistant
Term
what is todays biggest killer
Definition
extreme poverty
Term
Medical Anthropology
Definition
Study of disease, health problems, & health care systems; Theories about illness in different cultures & ethnic groups
Term
3 main cultural explanations are used for illness
Definition
1. Personalistic(agents such as witches)
2. Naturalistic: impersonal terms; attributed to bacteria, virus, accidents, or genes
3. Emotionalistic(emotional experiences cause illness)
Term
A culture-specific syndrome/disorder is characterized by:
Definition
familiarity in the culture and non familiarity in other cultures, no evidence of symptoms, treated by folk medicine of cultures
Term
Kuru(trembling/laughing sickness)
Definition
A prion disease effecting the brain and nervous system, like Mad Cows Disease
Symptoms:
palsy
contracted face muscles
loss of motor control - cannot walk or eat
Term
how does one get Kuru
Definition
ritualistic eating of brains of dead
Term
Amok
Definition
disorder: "to go mad with rage"
A male who has shown no previous anger or violence will attempt, in a sudden frenzy, to kill or seriously injure anyone he encounters.

(A dissociative episode characterized by a period of brooding followed by an outburst of violent, aggressive, destructive, or homicidal behavior.)
Term
Pibloktoq
Definition
arctic hysteria (Inuits) is most prevalent in winter
Symptoms: intense "hysteria”, speaking in tongues, depression, coprophagia (consumption of feces), insensitivity to extreme cold & more.
An abrupt dissociative episode.
Usually affects women.
Term
Windigo psychosis
Definition
Heavy snow, isolation, food shortages
Symptoms: poor appetite, nausea, & vomiting, individuals see themselves as cannibals & those around them as edible which leads to extreme anxiety and suicidal ideation.
Term
Hikikomori
Definition
Japanese disorder(acute social withdrawal) refers to reclusive individuals who have chosen to withdraw from social life, often seeking extreme degrees of isolation and confinement.
Usually affects adolescent boys
Term
what 2 disorders are the "cult of thinness" in Western culture
Definition
anorexia and bulemia
Term
• The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA 1990)
Definition
what act requires federal agencies and institutions that receive federal funding to return Native American "cultural items" to their respective peoples.
Term
Does all humankind belong to a single species?
Definition
yes
Term
Race is about ________, not ________
Definition
culture, not biology
Term
94
Definition
what % of the physical (phenotypic) variation lies within so-called racial groups
Term
Plural society
Definition
where people with different cultures and languages interact but do not assimilate and do not have to
Term
fairer
Definition
The unmistakable correlation showed that the weaker the UVR in an area, the fairer or darker the skin?
Term
What are advantages and disadvantages of having darker skin color?
Definition
A:protection from UV rays(more melanin)
D:more prone to frostbite and rickets(Vit D deficiency) in North
Term
What are advantages and disadvantages of having lighter skin color?
Definition
A:need for more vit D(lesser melanin)
D:more prone to sunburn & skin cancer in south
Term
The Inuit’s vitamin D intake isn’t dependent upon the sun but on what
Definition
They get all that they need from their diet, heavy on types of fatty fish that are naturally rich in vitamin D. The plentiful amounts of the vitamin kept them from developing less melanin.
Term
3 Populations = 3 Adaptive responses to Thin Air (high altitude hypoxia)
Definition
1.Andeans carry more oxygen in each red blood cell.
2.Tibetans increase oxygen intake by an increased rate of respiration (more breaths)taking more breaths per minute than people at sea level. In addition, their lungs synthesize larger amounts of a gas called nitric oxide which increases the diameter of their blood vessels and increases blood flow.
3.Ethiopians have neither and yet it is as if they were not living at high altitude at all-we dont know why
Term
social construct
Definition
The issue of RACE is a________that has served historically to support group dominance, & includes false notions of separate creation & superiority.
Term
Scientific racism
Definition
____denotes the use of scientific or ostensibly scientific findings and methods to investigate differences between races, often to validate racist attitudes and worldviews, to support political or ideological positions of racial supremacy
Term
Melting Pot theory(homogenous society)
Definition
What theory says that Assimilation is a political response to multi-ethnicity that encourages absorption of minorities into the dominant culture.
Term
Salad Bowl Theory(Multi-ethnic Society)
Definition
What theory says that Multiculturalism is an affirmative philosophy which recognizes & seeks to maintain cultural differences.
Term
white privilege
Definition
"weightless knapsack of special provisions, assurances, tools, maps, guides, codebooks, passports, visas, clothes, emergency gear, and blank checks"
Term
Is there evidence that BiDil works better on African Americans.
Definition
NO
Term
are 6 stages in the process: White Racial Identity Development Model
Definition
1. Contact: People in this stage are oblivious to racism, have minimal experiences with “Other” people, and may profess to be color-blind.
2. Disintegration: In this stage, the person becomes conflicted over unresolvable racial moral dilemmas, e.g. believing one is nonracist, yet not wanting one’s child to marry a minority group member. The person is increasingly conscious of their Whiteness.
3. Reintegration: The initial resolution of dissonance often moves in the direction of the dominant ideology. There is a firmer and more conscious belief in White racial superiority and racial/ethnic minorities are blamed for their own problems.
4. Pseudo-Independence: A person is likely to move into this phase due to a painful or insightful encounter/event. There is an attempt to understand racial differences and reach out to minority group members but more an intellectual exercise.
5. Immersion/Emersion: If the person is reinforced to continue a personal exploration of themselves as a racial being, questions become focused on what it means to be White and to benefit from White privilege (see next slide).
6. Autonomy: The person is knowledgeable about racial, ethnic and cultural differences, values the diversity, and is no longer fearful, intimidated, or uncomfortable with the experiential reality of race.
Term
culture
Definition
learned traditions & customs that govern human behavior & beliefs
Term
Yes - culture is NOT genetically transmitted, nor are we hard-wired for culture.
Definition
Is Culture Extra-genetic?
Term
Through enculturation;
Enculturation is a two-way process: Children are not passive recipients of culture.
Definition
How is Culture Learned? Through enculturation
Term
What are the three types of learning by which culture is learned?
Definition
1. situational learning(classical conditioning)
2. Social learning (observation)
3. Symbolic learning (uniquely human and culture specific)
Term
YES, we share values, beliefs & norms
Definition
Is Culture Shared
Term
Values: what is considered the good, bad & ugly

Beliefs: what is considered true & false

Norms: what is ok & what is a no-no
Definition
what are values, beliefs and norms
Term
Folkways: norms that guide everyday life through gentle social pressure and imitation – usually are not noticeable till violated and not punished severely, just laughed at, frowned upon, or scolded
Mores: stronger norms or enforced sanctions based on taboos, e.g. incest
Definition
what are the 2 types of norms
Term
YESCultures are not monolithic or bounded or static.
Cultures are fragmented, multi-sited, invented and historicized (not timeless)
Definition
is culture contested?
Term
Generation gap – e.g. taste in music
Deviance – e.g. nudity in US
Counterculture – e.g. Rastafaris
Definition
Subcultures are based on:
Term
There is one dominant group within which individual subcultures exist
Many overlapping groups exist. Some groups larger than others, but no dominant one exists
Definition
Two theories about subculture:
Term
Sociobiology
Definition
All humans, like animals, are genetically programmed to respond in certain ways and cultural practices are just a manifestation of inner biological drives.
Term
Ethnocentrism
Definition
: Using one’s cultural background as basis to judge other cultures – usually negatively
Term
diffusion
Definition
mech of cultural trade that borrows traits
Term
acculturation
Definition
mech of cultural trade that exchanges traits
Term
deculturation
Definition
the loss or abandonment of culture or
cultural characteristics of a people, society, etc.
Term
globalization
Definition
interlinked, mutually dependent world
Term
How do we study culture? as a science or a social science
Definition
SCIENCE:
Cultural selection directly influences a communities successful adaptation to its material environment, e.g. pig taboo, cow taboo.
So, anthropology must establish regular, predictable and verifiable laws just as natural sciences do.

SOCIAL SCIENCE:
Anthropology is not a positivist science.
Anthropology is a science of interpretations.
It is futile to seek scientific laws to explain human behavior.
Term
Bow-wow theory - imitating sounds of nature or onomatopoeic words
Ding-dong theory - natural sounds of objects
Definition
what are the two discredited theories of the evolution of language
Term
-Increasing brain size
- lower position of larynx (voice box) & lengthening of the upper vocal tract
-Symbolic learning
Definition
what are the three Evolutionary changes allowing for language development
Term
Productivity: flexible, creative, limitless capacity to express ourselves
Displacement: ability to refer to those that are not present
Arbitrariness: no necessary connection between words & objects
Definition
name three things unique about human language
Term
call systems
Definition
what is the equivalent of language to nonhuman primates
Term
name the 5 building blocks of language
Definition
Phonology: Sounds

Morphology: Words

Syntax: Sentences

Semantics: Meaning

Pragmatics: Context
Term
what are phonetics, phonemics, and phonemes?
Definition
Phonetics - variations in sound
Phonemics - variations in sound that distinguish meaning
Phonemes - smallest contrastive unit of sound that can change meaning, e.g.
/b/at /p/at
Term
what is a morpheme
Definition
- smallest unit of meaning
Free or Bound, e.g. ARTISTS


ART IST S
Term
rules for making sentences
Definition
what is syntax
Term
semantics
Definition
Study of the meaning of symbols, words, phrases and sentences of a language.
Term
honorifics
Definition
word or expression that conveys esteem or respect when used in addressing or referring to a person
Term
diglossia
Definition
high and low variants of the same language
Term
pragmatics
Definition
context -> meaning, culturally; like an implication of what someone says
Term
pastoralists(Nuer of Sudan)
Definition
who has a vast vocabulary to describe and identify their cattle by color, markings, horn configuration, also their ppl take on ox-names
Term
sport based colloquialisms like "she threw me a curve ball"
Definition
what's an american example of language reflecting culture
Term
does language determine culture?...gas drum example...safe or not safe?
Definition
Language shapes thoughts and perceptions and is a coercive force - it predisposes, imprisons, e.g. if a culture has only one word for aunt, all aunts are genealogically equal.
Term
what are kinesics
Definition
body motion, facial expressions & gestures
Term
Proxemics
Definition
perception & use of space in different cultures
Term
what are two forms of nonverbal communication
Definition
kinesics and proxemics
Term
name 2 characteristics of Kogals
Definition
anti-cute aesthetic
challenges female norms
challenges dominant models of gendered language
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