Archaeological
Biological
Cultural
Linguistic
Resumes
100

An object made or modified by humans for use.

What is an artifact?

100

Another name for biological anthropology.

What is physical anthropology?

100

The primary research method in cultural anthropology. (Three possible answers)

What is fieldwork, participant observation, or ethnography?

100

Refers to the study of the history of languages for the purpose of reading texts in their source language.

What is philology?

100

It outlines your work experience, skill sets, and qualifications.

What is a resume?

200

It is a mountain-top archaeological site in Peru.

What is Machu Picchu?
200

All species of apes living today. (List them)

What are gorillas, orangutans, bonobos, chimpanzees, gibbons, and humans?

200

The father of American anthropology.

Who is Franz Boas?

200

Describes the change in a person's language use depending on who they are talking to.

What is code switching?

200

Self-control, assertiveness, and conflict resolution to name a few.

What are transferrable skills?

300

A rule that archaeologists use that says that, in undisturbed layers of soil, the oldest deposits are on the bottom and the youngest are on the top.

What is the Law of Superposition?
300

Its full name is deoxyribonucleic acid.

What is DNA?

300

The principle that one's beliefs and practices should be understood based on their own culture, rather than against the criteria of another culture.

What is cultural relativism?

300

This linguist coined the term "linguistic anthropology" in the 1960s.

Who is Dell Hymes?

300

A complete list of your areas of expertise and experience.

What is a curriculum vitae or CV?

400

A dating method that archaeologists use to determine the age of organic materials.

What is radiocarbon dating?

400

This primate is ONLY naturally found in Madagascar.

What is a lemur?

400

The belief that your culture is superior.

What is ethnocentrism?

400

This assertions, named for two linguists who surprisingly did not co-author the idea, claims that language affects and limits one's worldview.

What is the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis?
400

They reduce the volume of resumes that do not match the job description.

What are applicant tracking systems or ATS?

500

A term that describes the exact location and association of an artifact in the soil.

What is provenience?

500

The long bones in the human body.

What are the femur, tibia, fibula, humerus, radius, and ulna?

500

The process of learning the characteristics and expectations of a culture or group different from your own.

What is enculturation?

500

The process through which linguistic features become characteristic of their groups.

What is iconization?

500

The key content in your resume.

What is name, contact info, professional summary, work history, skills, and education?