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         African Archeology:     more books (33)
  1. AIDS education for African-American and white school children in one state: African-American students received less.: An article from: Journal of Evolutionary Psychology by Rusell Eisenman, 2002-03-01
  2. African Tales.(Book Review) : An article from: Folklore by Ruth Finnegan, 2006-04-01
  3. Manual of Egyptian Archeology by Gaston CamilleCharles Maspero, 2008-02-04
  4. Whose tangle is it anyway? The African-American family, poverty and United States kinship.(African-American anthropological and social research methodologies ... from: The Australian Journal of Anthropology by Anthony Marcus, 2005-04-01
  5. Archeology series by James William Karbula, 2000
  6. Black Magic: Religion and the African-American Conjuring Tradition.(Book Review): An article from: Folklore by Michael Pickering, 2005-08-01
  7. Cento Objets Disparus / One Hundre Missing Objects : Pillage En Afrique / Looting in Africa by Rosemary Andrade, Ndeonika Manang, 1997
  8. The Weans by Robert Nathan, 1966
  9. For the City Yet to Come: Changing African Life in Four Cities.(Book Review): An article from: Journal of Cultural Geography by Garth Myers, 2005-09-22
  10. An Ethnoarchaeological Analysis of Human Functional Dynamics in the Volta Basin of Ghana: Before and After the Akosombo Dam (Mellen Studies in Archeology) by Emmanuel Kofi Agorsah, 2004-02
  11. Nelson Mandela's Favorite African Folktales.(Book Review) : An article from: Marvels & Tales by Jessica Tiffin, 2005-10-01
  12. Olorgesailie: Archeological Studies of a Middle Pleistocene Lake Basin in Kenya (Prehistoric Archeology and Ecology) by Glynn Llywelyn Isaac, Barbara Isaac, 1977-06
  13. "We're Rooted Here and They Can't Pull Us up": Essays In African Canadian Women's History. (book reviews): An article from: The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology by Christina Simmons, 1996-02-01
  14. Pronouncing and Persevering: Gender and the Discourse of Disputing in an African Islamic Court.(Review): An article from: The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology by Anne Meneley, 2001-08-01

61. Anthropology - Spring 2000 Courses
ANTH 388/788 african ARCHAEOLOGY (3) LAVIOLETTE MWF 1000 1050. In this lectureand discussion class we begin with a brief overview of human evolution,
http://www.virginia.edu/~anthro/listings/s00.html
DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY
COURSE DESCRIPTIONS
SPRING 2000
Previous Listings
Courses that meet Major Area Requirement: Prin. of Social Analysis Cultural Diversity Archaeology Linguistics
Non-Western perspectives Senior Seminars Links to course WEB pages
Undergraduate courses:
ANTH 101 INTRODUCTION TO ANTHROPOLOGY (3) HANDLER
T R 1400 - 1500
This course provides an introduction to human diversity as studied by the four fields of anthropology: biological anthropology, archaeology, linguistic anthropology and sociocultural anthropology. Special attention is given to diversity imagined in terms of race, language, culture and history; "Western" and "non-Western" worldviews; and egalitarian and hierarchical social systems. Meets non-western perspectives. ANTH 222 BUDDHISM (3) SENEVIRATNE
T R 9:30 - 10:45
An introduction to the sociology of Buddhism. Discusses the transformation of an ethical religion of an urban elite into a ritualistic mass religion of the peasantry. After a brief introduction to the Buddhist Doctrine, its social origins and the sociology of its transformation are discussed with particular reference to the orthodox traditions of Burma, Thailand and Sri Lanka.
T R 09:30 - 10:45
The six books of Carlos Castaneda represent what is perhaps an anthropological ideal-a world in which the native's concepts of power, sorcery, and transformation are "real" rather than the social systems, adaptations, and symbolic processes generally used to explain them. They are not ethnography; in his latest preface Castaneda prefers to treat them as "autobiography." Yet they can be used very effectively to illustrate a wide range of conception anthropology and traditional religious, which is what this course, is all about. It will not teach you to fly, it may teach you to write, but I will hopeful, help you to understand how anthropologists think. The course will be given in an open seminar format, with discussion encouraged. Grades will be based on 3 papers.

62. African Archaeology - Cambridge University Press
Home Catalogue african Archaeology african Archaeology. 3rd Edition.David W. Phillipson. University of Cambridge. Add to basket
http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=052154002X

63. Asian And African Archaeology - Cambridge University Press
african Archaeology 3rd Edition David W. Phillipson £24.99 This book providesthe only comprehensive and upto-date examination of african archaeology.
http://www.cambridge.org/uk/browse/default.asp?subjectid=234

64. Archaeologyfieldwork.com - Anthropology And African Archaeology Directories
Since 1996, archaeologyfieldwork.com has offered employment listings in archaeologyand related disciplines, resumes, field schools, volunteer opportunities
http://www.archaeologyfieldwork.com/cgi-bin/yabb/YaBB.cgi?board=weblinks;action=

65. ARAF Database Databases
The following 2databases are available. Bibliography african Archaeology (12434objects) Archaeological Map of Northeast Nigeria (3291 objects)
http://141.2.187.123/start.fau?prj=ifaust

66. Antiquity, Reviews: Sinclair Review September 2003
in the scholarly tradition of synthesis in southern african archaeology.The growth of historical archaeology in southern Africa is a widespread dynamic
http://antiquity.ac.uk/reviews/sinclair.html

Home
About Antiquity
Online archive
Project Gallery ... Search Quick search Current Issue Terms and Conditions Notes for Contributors Subscriptions
Book Review
PETER MITCHELL 2002
The archaeology of southern Africa
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
Review by PAUL J.J. SINCLAIR
Peter Mitchell has produced a comprehensive overview of southern African archaeology. It is well written, very generously referenced and sensibly balanced. It is set in a standard, western, scientific framework, characterised by a primary focus on the artefactual component of material culture assemblages. Standard typological and chronological frameworks are used. Although this might be reassuring for the student, it does impose interpretative limits. Southern Africa presents a remarkably complex set of biomes and evidence for climate changes (Chapter 2). The archaeological record ranges from insights into human evolution from early hominids (Chapter 3) to the behavioural developments of anatomically modern humans (Chapter 4), through the long yet punctuated developments of stone technology (Chapters 5 and 6) to the array of subsistence activities in southern Africa today (Chapter 7). Evidence for these developments provides a material frame to assess, inter alia , transitions in subsistence and the enigmatic evidence for early forms of mobiliary art (Chapter 8). Agricultural communities

67. Fekri HASSAN: Institute Of Archaeology UCL
The Origins and Development of african Livestock Archaeology, Genetics, Hassan, FA african Archaeology from Nationalism to Globality. in Podgorny I.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/staff/profiles/hassan.htm
@import url(/css/fonts.css); @import url(/css/extras.css); UCL INSTITUTE OF ARCHAEOLOGY
Who We Are: Introduction Contacting Us Our Staff Our Research ... Our Facilities for Research and Learning Our Courses For: Undergraduates Graduate Students Research Degrees Affiliate Students Events: Programme For Current IoA Members: Institute Intranet
Fekri HASSAN - B.Sc., M.Sc., M.A., Ph.D.
  • Petrie Professor Vice-President, World Archaeological Congress Chairman, Dams and Cultural Heritage Task Force, World Archaeological Congress Secretary, International Water History Association Honorary President, Egyptian Cultural Heritage Organization Editor, African Archaeological Review Contributing Editor, The Review of Archaeology Member of the Scientific Committee, UNESCO Potential Conflict to Co-Operation Project Member of the Executive Board, Forum for African Archaeology and Cultural Heritage Member of Scientific Committee, UNESCO IHP Water and Civilization Project Member of the Steering Committee, UNESCO Water and Civilization Project: International Hydrological Programme Member of the Ethics and the Use of Freshwater Working Group

68. Institute Of Archaeology UCL
MA in african ARCHAEOLOGY. NB This course is NOT running in 2004/2005. ProgrammeCoordinators Dr Andrew Reid. Photo of Ife Terracotte Bust,
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/masters/summary/MAafrican.htm
@import url(/css/fonts.css); @import url(/css/extras.css); UCL INSTITUTE OF ARCHAEOLOGY
Who We Are: Introduction Contacting Us Our Staff Our Research ... Our Facilities for Research and Learning Our Courses For: Undergraduates Graduate Students Research Degrees Affiliate Students Events: Programme For Current IoA Members: Institute Intranet
MA in AFRICAN ARCHAEOLOGY
Programme Co-ordinators: Dr Andrew Reid Ife Terracotte Bust,
12th-15th Century AD This programme builds on the Institute's research initiatives on the African continent and provides students with a unique opportunity to undertake comprehensive study of the African continent at graduate level. It should appeal equally to students interested in field or laboratory research, museology, heritage management or conservation. The programme combines the considerable and diverse expertise of Institute of Archaeology staff and visiting African archaeologists. Students follow two core courses and also choose to study one other whole element or two half elements from other courses offered under Masters degrees at the Institute of Archaeology in addition to writing a 15,000 word dissertation. Assessment is by written coursework. The degree is available either full-time over a calender year or part-time over two calendar years (commencing September).

69. Collections: African Art - Museum Of Art And Archaeology - University Of Missour
West Africa, Mali, Dogon tribe 20th century Museum of Art and Archaeology 1Pickard Hall Columbia, MO 652111420 phone 573-882-3591 fax 573-884-4039
http://maa.missouri.edu/collections/african.html
skip navigation
University of Missouri-Columbia

Museum Hours:
Tuesday through Friday
9:00 am - 4:00 pm
Saturday and Sunday
Noon - 4:00 pm
Admission is free and open to the public.
The Museum is ADA Accessible.
map and parking
Information
Calendar
News ... Home
Collections: African Art
Collections Home Ancient Coins Oceanic ... Asian Seated Female Shrine Figure Seated Female Shrine Figure Ghana, Asante people, Attributed to Yaw Mprah Ca. 1912-1979 Wood, clay and glass beads Gift of Dr. and Mrs. Milton Gross “Lovely Maiden" Mask (mwanaphwo) Mwanaphwo literally means "young woman." Masks like this depict an archetypal ancestral personality who died at a young age. The mask's eyes are rendered as narrow slits, indicative of a dead person. Only male dancers wear these masks; women never do. The masks are used in village performances for boys' initiation, or "coming of age," ceremonies. Such masks also symbolize the prominence women enjoy in the Chokwe's matrilineal society. “Lovely Maiden" Mask

70. Archaeology Staff
Research Interests african archaeology (especially southern african and the Later Archaeology of Southern Africa ( in press 2002); The Southern african
http://athens.arch.ox.ac.uk/schoolarch/whoswho/school_staff.php
School of Archaeology Staff
School of Archaeology Dr Nicholas Barton Post: Lecturer in Palaeolithic Archaeology Address: Institute of Archaeology
36 Beaumont Street email: nick.barton@arch.ac.uk Research Interests: Palaeolithic and Mesolithic archaeology; site formation processes; fossil hominid behaviour; lithic technology; cultural resource management. Current Activities: Gibraltar Caves Project; archaeology of karstic landscapes in Western Britain; Upper Palaeolithic of Northwest Europe; Stone Age Britain (Batsford 1997); Hengistbury Head: Late Upper Palaeolithic and Early Mesolithic Sites (OUCA 1992); Lateglacial of NW Europe (CBA1991, with A.J. Roberts and D.A. Roe). Personal Home Page Professor Barry Cunliffe Post: Professor of European Archaeology Address: Institute of Archaeology
Institute of Archaeology
, 36 Beaumont Street, Oxford OX1 2PG Phone: FAX: email: barry.cunliffe@arch.ox.ac.uk Research Interests: European archaeology especially in first millenum BC and early first millenium AD. Focusing on social and economic dynamics and the relationships between the Mediterranean world and 'barbarian' Europe. Current Activities: Current work is on Atlantic trade systems, cultural interaction and state formation in Southern Iberia and social hierarchies in Central Southern Britain. In addition to a number of site specific monographs (including Porchester Castle, Bath, Fishbourne, Danebury etc), publications include

71. Archaeology | The WWW Virtual Library
african Archaeology african Archaeology Resources and information on africanarchaeology gathered over the last few years and listed under specific topic
http://vlib.org/Archaeology
Archaeology :   en es fr zh
The WWW Virtual Library
Archaeology
Quick search: Archaeology Archaeology
ArchNet serves as the World Wide Web Virtual Library for Archaeology.
see also: Anthropology Archaeology and Prehistory
this resource in English is indexed under: Archaeology Social and Behavioral Sciences
African Archaeology
African Archaeology
Resources and information on African archaeology gathered over the last few years and listed under specific topic headings.
this resource in English is indexed under: Archaeology Regional Studies
Archaeology and Prehistory
Archaeology and Prehistory
Archaeological, anthropological and prehistorical resources. This Virtual Library, also known as Anthropology Resources on the Internet (ARI), is a part of the WWW Virtual Library History network. It complements the other Virtual Library sites in archaeology and anthropology.
see also: Anthropology Archaeology this resource in English is indexed under: Archaeology History European Archaeology European Archaeology The WWW Virtual Library for European Archaeology: Archaeological Resource Guide for Europe database contains links to evaluated Internet resources (mainly web pages, but also other resources such as discussion lists) concerning European archaeology. this resource in English is indexed under: Archaeology Regional Studies Paleoclimatology and Paleoceanography Paleoclimatology and Paleoceanography Resouces on ancient climate and ocean conditions: radiocarbon dating, carbon dioxide data sets, ice core data, tree ring links, journals, societies

72. Robertshaw, Peter. Sibling Rivalry? The Intersection Of
Thus, his first and major criticism of african archaeology is its nearly total What do historians think of african archaeology and its practitioners?
http://www.h-net.org/~africa/africaforum/Robertshaw.html
AFRICA FORUM
SIBLING RIVALRY? THE INTERSECTION OF ARCHAEOLOGY AND HISTORY
Peter Robertshaw
California State University, San Bernardino

(Editor's Note: Peter Robertshaw's article is in response to Jan Vansina's
"Historians, Are Archeologists Your Siblings?
, republished on H-AFRICA with permission)
Introduction A couple of years ago while enjoying the luxury of a sabbatical (thanks to the National Endowment for the Humanities and my university), I stumbled across Jan Vansina's article, "Historians, are archaeologists your siblings?", published in History in Africa 22 (1995), 369-408. Which archaeologist could resist reading a critique of his discipline by a respected historian? I plunged in with both anticipation and trepidation. These feelings turned out to be justified. I was both excited and a little dismayed by what I read, though I was relieved to find that my own archaeological efforts in Uganda were favorably viewed by the eminence gris. I used Vansina's article as a starting-point for a discussion on the historiography of oral traditions and archaeology that I incorporated into a chapter of a book that I am writing at a glacial pace. Subsequently I have been disappointed that no archaeologists (to the best of my knowledge) have taken up in print the issues raised by Vansina.

73. Archaeopress Search Results
BAR S1308 2004 Cambridge Monographs in african Archaeology 61 An EthnoarchaeologicalStudy of IronSmelting Practices among the Pangwa and Fipa in Tanzania
http://www.archaeopress.com/searchBar.asp?title=Sub Series&id=25&sql=[Sub Series

74. South Africa Archeology
South Africa archeology Please submit locations of sites in South Africa archeology.
http://www.hobotraveler.com/ar_southafricaarcheology.php
South Africa Archeology
South Africa Archeology
Archeology site are great tourist attractions and a history of our world. Whether you visit Machu Picchu, Angkor Wat, Tikal, Hampi, or the Egyptian Pyramids there are so many great sites in the world you can always visit another. I recommend you review the UNESCO Sites before you travel to any country, as the United Nations does have a good list of Archeology site or Historical sites. UNESCO Submit your favorite Archeology sites on the planet.
I personally would appreciate the locations where Archeologist are presently digging. Thanks
Andy the HoboTraveler.com
Click Here to Add a New Travel Link or Comment
Add a New Travel Link or Comment
To Add a Travel Link to this Hobotraveler.Com page fill out the form below and click submit. GOT a Travel Tip or something to say about a topic? Adding a comment is easy! Just, fill out the Name, E-mail, Title, Location, Comments fields and click 'Add Comment'. * indicates required fields needed for posting a comment
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If you would like to receive the credit for referring another travel site as a great resource for budget travelers please fill in these two fields.

75. ARCHAEOLOGY OF AFRICA
african Archaeology, 2002, David W. Phillipson, 2nd Edition, Cambridge Press . african Archaeology is a general introductory survey course to diverse
http://www.stpt.usf.edu/arthurj/archaeology_of_africa.htm
ARCHAEOLOGY OF AFRICA ANT 4930 Spring 2004 Place: Davis Hall 224 - Tuesday - 6:00 - 8:50 Email: arthurj@stpt.usf.edu Office: Davis Hall 270 Phone: (727)553-4960 Office Hours: Monday 10-11 am, Wedneday 9-11 am, or by appointment WEBPAGE TEXTBOOK COURSE DESCRIPTION EXAMS GRADES CLASS OUTLINE WEBPAGE http://www.stpt.usf.edu/arthurj Brief outlines for each lecture and questions for film days should be printed out before class. These will be available by 11 PM on the evening before the lecture by clicking on the LECTURE TOPIC for the day. I will not give out my lecture notes nor will the film be available on another day. If you miss a film, class lecture or discussion, you must obtain the notes from another student. Material not on the outline but presented in class may appear on the exam and you will be responsible for it. You also should take notes during class discussions and on the posted question sheet for films. All material from lectures, discussions, films, and readings is potential material to be included on the exam. In addition, proper classroom etiquette requires that you abstain from talking, reading, or leaving the class early (without first notifying me before class). It is very distracting to other students and to the professor.

76. PROGRAM Index - SAfA2006
of african archaeology and related disciplines historical linguistics, metallurgy, of african archaeology and other archaeologies in terms of theory,
http://homepages.ucalgary.ca/~safaconf/SAFA/program/programindex.htm
SAfA 2006 Conference Program Theme and Outline Calgary, Alberta, Canada Pre-Conference Day - June 22nd 2006
Conference - June 23-26 2006 The Theme : Integrating African Archaeology Exciting papers documenting new discoveries are an essential feature of any good conference. We hope to welcome many such papers. However a con-fer ence also entails a bringing together of data, perspectives and people and it is our aim in 2006 to maximize the synergy generated by such interactions. The pre-conference Student Meeting to be initiated in Calgary will, we hope, serve both ends. Let "integration" be broadly construed to include the interrelationships:
This listing is in no way intended to limit the range of topics discussed at the conference but rather to encourage delegates to reflect on the wider significances of their research and practice, and to build connections with colleagues whose "distance" may be more apparent than real. For example the following topics/sessions could bring together materials and colleagues in productive ways:
  • Behavior and Cognition in the African Early Stone Age Diffusion and the invention of tradition African by Africans in Africa and those of the diasporas during the Slave Trade period Multi-disciplinary approaches to ancient migrations and disease: the contribution of genetic, archaeological, and medical sciences

77. Nic David's Home Page
2003. Action on matter the history of the uniquely african tamper and concaveanvil potforming technique. Journal of african Archaeology 1 (1)3-38.
http://homepages.ucalgary.ca/~ndavid/Homepage/
Nicholas David
Ethnoarchaeologist
This page has a number of sections: 1. Academic life so far
2. Research

including slideshows on the DGB sites of N. Cameroon
and a Sukur website

3. The Ethnoarchaeology Bibliography

Ethnoarchaeology in Action

5. The Mandara+ Bibliography
...
Link to Archaeology Department, U. of Calgary
1. Academic life so far I was born in 1937 and educated at the universities of Cambridge (B.A. Arch. and Anth. 1960) and Harvard (A.M. 1962 and Ph.D. Anthro. 1966). My research interests are in ethnoarchaeology, archaeological theory, African later prehistory and culture history, and in the European Upper Palaeolithic. I have directed the Mandara Archaeological Project in Cameroon, Nigeria, and Ghana, since 1984, and have also worked in the southern Sudan and the Central African Republic. I served for four years as head of the Department of Archaeology at the University of Ibadan, Nigeria, before moving to Calgary in 1980. From 1980 to 1985 I was founding editor of the African Archaeological Review . I retired at the end of December 2001 and have since then been heavily involved in fieldwork in northern Cameroon, once again doing dirt archaeology and investigating what were formerly thought to be stone-built strongholds but now seem more likely to be

78. Georgian Homo Erectus Crania
which some researchers believe is an african version of H. erectus. ARCHAEOLOGYreported the discovery, dated at that time to 1.8 million years,
http://www.archaeology.org/0001/newsbriefs/georgia.html
Your browser does not support javascript Georgian Homo Erectus Published May 11, 2000 by Angela M.H. Schuster Editors note: The May 12 edition of the journal Science presents the first scientific description of two 1.7-million-year-old crania excavated at Dmanisi in the Republic of Georgia. According to the article's authors the age and skeletal characteristics of the Dmanisi fossils link them to the early human species Homo ergaster, which some researchers believe is an African version of H. erectus. ARCHAEOLOGY reported the discovery, dated at that time to 1.8 million years, in its January/February 2000 issue and on its website. The authors of the Science paper add, that while numerous fossil finds confirm that H. erectus was the first hominid species to leave the African continent, what prompted such a migration continues to be a topic of debate. Most believe that H. erectus, armed with an advanced tool kit, known as the Acheulean or hand-ax tradition, became the first human species capable of braving an array of challenging environments outside Africa. "The Dmanisi fossils, however, undermine this tale of the technologically triumphant hominid," says paper co-author Carl C. Swisher III of the Berkeley Geochronology Center. "Even though raw material suitable for making Acheulean tools was readily available," he says, "stone tools found with the two skulls are of a pre-Acheulean pebble-chopper type that appeared in Africa as early as 2.4 million years ago, arguing for early, pre-Acheulean migrations."

79. African And Comparative Archaeology: Research
Studies in african Archaeology 13. Doctoral thesis, Department of Archaeology, Studies in african Archaeology 18. Uppsala 133 pp., 38 figs, 25 tables.
http://www.arkeologi.uu.se/afr/research/Public.htm
Browse our electronic bookshelves:
AUN

BOREAS
(External site)
OPIA

Studies in African Archaeology

Studies in Global Archaeology

TOR
... Afrikansk och jämförande arkeologi : Publikationer/Publications
Publications from African and Comparative Archaeology: Studies in African Archaeology
The African and Comparative Archaeology section have assisted in producing a number of publications in the Studies in African Archaeology series, as well as a number of other papers. Abstracts from these publications can be found below. Links to the author's email address as indicated. Ricardo Duarte Northern Mozambique in the Swahili World: an archaeological approach Fil. Lic. thesis, Department of Archaeology, Uppsala University 1991. ABSTRACT
Archaeological evidence from Later Farming Community sites of northern Mozambique is described in relation to previous socio-economic research on precolonial Mozambique, and in the wider contexts of Indian ocean and southern African studies. Particular attention is paid to the impact of mercantile trade on existing risk buffering networks which link coastal and hinterland communities. Architectural features and finds of ceramics, glass beads, shell and iron from the sites of Foz do Lurio, Soman and Gomene are presented in detail. Before you order Matenga, E.

80. Washington Univ. Anthropology Faculty
Fiona B Marshall (Prof; Archaeology) Old World Prehistory, african Archaeology,Ethnoarchaeology, Zooarchaeology, Early food production, the archaeology of
http://www.artsci.wustl.edu/~anthro/anthfac2.html
Anthropology Faculty, Staff and Associates
Faculty
Lois C Beck (Prof; Sociocultural)
Political anthropology, history, tribe-state relations, Nomadic Pastoralism, Islam, Gender; Iran, the Middle East.

John R Bowen
Religion and ritual, Islam, social theory, kinship and social organization, historical studies, culture and political change; Sumatra, Indonesia, Europe.

Pascal Boyer
(Henry Luce Professor of Collective and Individual Memory; Sociocultural and Psychology)
Cognitive processes, cultural transmission, cognitive development, evolutionary psychology, cross-cultural psychology, religion.

David L Browman
(Prof; Archaeology)
North and Latin American archaeology; origins of agricultural economies; development of complex societies; pastoralism; historical archaeology.

Margaret L Brown
(Asst Prof; Sociocultural)
Equality and Hierarchy, kinship and social organization, economic and political development, Madagascar, Indian Ocean.

Robert L Canfield
(Prof; Sociocultural)
Political anthropology, peasant society, ethnicity and symbolism, historical anthropology; Afghanistan, Central Asia and Eastern Islamic World.

James Cheverud
(Prof; Physical Anth and Anatomy)

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