General Anthropology
Evolutionary Biology
Linguistics
Cultural
Archaeology
100

"Founding mother" of anthropology and also a student of Franz Boas

Margaret Mead

100

What is the study of primates called?

Primatology

100

The study of the structure of words; the component of the grammar that includes the rules of word formation

morphology

100

What is the belief that your culture is superior to others?

Ethnocentrism

100

Any object made, used, or modified by people found at a site.

artifact

200

One culture becomes completely merged into another and no longer has a separate identity

Assimilation 

200

Often confused for "bigfoot", this primate stood up to 10 ft tall and was mostly found in Southern China. 

Gigantophitecus

200

The mental representation of a speaker's linguistic competence; what a speaker knows about a language.

grammar

200

Term for maintaining the values of one's old culture, while trying to fit into a new culture

Biculturalism

200

A subdiscipline in which sites are located and recorded prior to construction projects, drainage projects, or urban development

Rescue/Salvage/Urgent Archaeology 

300

What genus is the hominin species that lived during the Late Pliocene and Early Pleistocene period collectively called?

Australopithecus 

300

What are the four mechanisms of evolution?

natural selection, genetic drift, mutation, and gene flow

300

The smallest units of linguistic meaning or function




morphemes

300

The study of the characteristics of various peoples and the differences and relationships between them

ethnology 

300

Archaeologists study past cultures through this, and it includes buildings, tools, and other artifacts that constitute material remains of past cultures

Material Culture

400

What is the approach that believes "no single aspect of human culture can be understood unless its relations to other aspects of the culture are explored"?

Holism/holistic perspective

400

The genetic isolation of populations may render them incapable of producing fertile offspring

Reproductive isolation

400

a morpheme added to a stem or root to form a new stem or word, possibly, but not necessarily, resulting in a change in syntactic category

derivational

400

a branch of archaeology tied to government policies for the protection of cultural resources and involving surveying and/or excavating archaeological and historical remains threatened by construction or development

Cultural Resource Management


400

A rock stele that provides the key to the modern understanding of Egyptian hieroglyphs

Rosetta Stone

500

The first theoretical anthropological perspective to take root. Proposed three stages of humanity (savagery, barbarism, civilization), and viewed cultural attributes as the effects of innate, biological differences.

unilineal evolution

500

Overlapping fields of vision, with both sides of the brain receiving images from both eyes, thereby providing depth perception

Binocular structure

500

type of assimilation in which a consonant becomes like a neighboring palatal

palatalization

500

The two kinds of field research applied in anthropology, one gives the perspective of the subject from within the social group, and the other from outside or the perspective of the observer

emic and etic

500

This theory tries to answer the question of why by looking at the relationship between social/economic aspects of culture and the environment of that culture.


What is Processual Archaeology