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Anthropologist

Index Anthropologist

An anthropologist is a person engaged in the practice of anthropology. [1]

1872 relations: A Return to Salem's Lot, A. Aiyappan, A. H. J. Prins, A. W. F. Fuller, Aalborg University, Aarne–Thompson classification systems, Aaron Fox, Abner Shimony, Abraham M. Halpern, Abstraction, Action Office, Adam Kuper, Adam Nayyar, Adapting Minds, Adaptive strategies, Adeline Masquelier, Adio Kerida, Adolf Bernhard Meyer, Adolph Luetgert, Adrienne L. Kaeppler, Afflictions: Culture & Mental Illness in Indonesia, Afrocubanismo, Agantuk, Ahetze, Akbar Ahmed, Akhil Gupta, AL 129-1, Alain le Pichon, Alan Duff, Alan Morinis, Alan Tippett, Alanah Woody, Albanian nationalism, Albanian nationalism (Albania), Albanian sworn virgins, Albert Buell Lewis, Albert Piette, Albert Sánchez Piñol, Aldo Massola, Aleš Hrdlička, Alex Trebek, Alexander D. Shimkin, Alexander Ecker, Alexander Francis Chamberlain, Alexander Goldenweiser (anthropologist), Alexander Henn, Alexander Javakhishvili, Alfred E. Johnson, Alfred Gell, Alfred Métraux, ..., Alfred North Whitehead, Alfred William Howitt, Alfredo Barrera Vásquez, Alfredo Torero, Ali's Smile: Naked Scientology, Alice Beck Kehoe, Alice Cunningham Fletcher, Alice Dewey, Alison S. Brooks, Allègre, Allison Davis, Aloha, Alumni of the American University of Beirut, Alvinolagnia, American Folklore Society, Americanist phonetic notation, Ammonite (novel), An Instinct for Dragons, Ananias Dare, Anarcho-primitivism, Anarchy, Anastasia Karakasidou, Anatole Lewitsky, Anatoli Bogdanov (zoologist), Anatoly Khazanov, Aníbal Buitrón Cháves, Anders Retzius, André-Georges Haudricourt, Andrea Abrams (anthropologist), Andrew Gray (anthropologist), Andrew Pettigrew, Andrzej Zajączkowski, Ang Choulean, Angus Donald, Animatism, Anita Álvarez de Williams, Anna Kingsley, Anna Lou Dehavenon, Anne Everett, Annihilation (VanderMeer novel), Anoop Chandola, Antanas Poška, Anthony Aveni, Anthony D. Smith, Anthropology, Anthropology (disambiguation), Anthropomorphism, Antoon Postma, Apache, Apocalypto, Aramis, or the Love of Technology, Archie Phinney, Arcot Ramachandran, Ardbraccan, Aris Poulianos, Armando Marques Guedes, Arnold Ap, Arnold Henry Savage Landor, Arshak Sarkissian, Artas, Bethlehem, Arthur Fauset, Arthur J. O. Anderson, Arthur Keith, Arthur Maurice Hocart, Arturo Escobar (anthropologist), Arudy, Ashley Montagu, Association for the Recovery of Historical Memory, Assyrian continuity, Assyrian nationalism, Auguste Comte, Aureliano Oyarzún, Austracantha, Australasia, Australian Anthropological Society, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, Australopithecus garhi, Ayten Aydın, Azande witchcraft, Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, Baba of Karo, Baka people (Cameroon and Gabon), Bal Gopal Shrestha, Balinese art, Barbara Freire-Marreco, Barbara Myerhoff, Barbara Smuts, Barbeau Peak, Bare Bones (novel), Barleywood Female University, Barrera, Barrik Van Winkle, Barry Sautman, Bay Miwok, Beardmore Relics, Beatrice Blackwood, Beatriz Góis Dantas, Beaune, Bechukotai, Behnam Abu alsoof, Belief, Beloit College, Ben Finney, Bengt Danielsson, Benton Johnson, Beothuk, Beothuk language, Berava (people), Bernard Bernier, Bernard Sahlins, Bernardino de Sahagún, Bernardo Arriaza, Bernhard Helander, Bertha Marian Skeat, Berthold Laufer, Bertil Lundman, Bettina Hauge, Betty Meehan, Bill Maurer, Biloxi people, Bindibu expedition, Bing Xin, Birchgrove, New South Wales, Birgit Zotz, Birutė Galdikas, Bjørn Thomassen, Black flight, Black Hebrew Israelites, Blackfoot Confederacy, Božina Ivanović, Bolivar Trask, Bone Clones, Bonnie McCay, Bonnie Nardi, Bonno Thoden van Velzen, Brachygastra lecheguana, Brackette Williams, Brain Games (National Geographic), Bramham, West Yorkshire, Brazilianist, Breaker Morant, Bride price, Brigantine, New Jersey, Broca's Brain, Bronisław Malinowski, Bronisław Piłsudski, Brooklyn Island, Brownsville, Pennsylvania, Bruce Elliot Tapper, Bruno Beger, Buhl Woman, Burleigh B. Gardner, Burundi Black, Bush medicine, Byron Khun de Prorok, C. Hayavadana Rao, Caldera, Camberwell, Camilla Marazzi, Camilla Wedgwood, Cannibalism in popular culture, Captivity narrative, Carl Henrik Langebaek, Carl Vilhelm Hartman, Carleton Beals, Carlo Severi, Carlo Tullio Altan, Carlos Navarrete Cáceres, Carmen Bernand, Carol Beckwith, Carol Palmer, Carol R. Ember, Caroline Humphrey, Caroline Wilkinson, Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban, Carolyn Hamilton (historian), Casa Malpaís, Caterina Magni, Catharine McClellan, Catherine L. Besteman, Catherine Lutz, Cenozoic Research Laboratory, Center for Advanced Judaic Studies, Center for Humans and Nature, Central Philippine University, Cevin Soling, Chad Oliver, Chambri people, Chantal Boulanger, Chantek, Characters of the Cthulhu Mythos, Charles E. Dibble, Charles F. Voegelin, Charles H. Fairbanks, Charles Harrison McNutt, Charles Kingsley Meek, Charles Miller Leslie, Charles P. Mountford, Charles Ramble, Charlotte Viall Wiser, Chauhan, Cheikh Anta Diop, Cheikh Anta Diop University, Chellian, Cherokee, Cherokee history, Chiara Ottaviano, Chicago school (sociology), Chief Culture Officer, Children's street culture, China Misperceived, Chinampa, Chinookan peoples, Choctaw, Chosen people, Christian Frei, Christian Giordano, Christian Lorenz, Christian Rätsch, Christianity and violence, Christina Warinner, Christoph Theodor Aeby, Christopher C. Fennell, Christopher Pinney, Christy G. Turner II, Chronique d'un été, Church of Saint Francis of Assisi (Ouro Preto), Clara Passafari, Clarisa Hardy, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Claude Nelson Warren, Claudia Müller-Ebeling, Clellan S. Ford, Clifford Geertz, Climate governance, Clinton, Ontario, Clive Gamble, Columbus Day, Commemorative coins of Poland: 2002, Comparative mythology, Competition, Compulsory sterilization, Confirmed Dead, Conservation refugee, Constanza Ceruti, Constitution, Contemporary Islamic philosophy, Cooking, Cora Du Bois, Cornplanter Medal, COWI A/S, Craniometry, Criticism of science, Cross Bones (novel), Cross-cultural, Crystal skull, Cubicle, Cueva de la Pileta, Cuisine of the United States, Cultural translation, Culturally modified tree, Culture and positive psychology, Culture of Angola, Culture of Denmark, Culture of the Marquesas Islands, Curt Nimuendajú, Cusabo, Cyril Belshaw, Da Sweet Blood of Jesus, Dan Hicks (archaeologist), Dangaria Kandha, Daniel Martin Varisco, Daniel Ortega, Daniel Owen Stolpe, Daphne Berdahl, Darcy Ribeiro, Darrell A. Posey, Daryll Forde, Dave Fredrickson, Davi Kopenawa Yanomami, David Aberle, David Carrasco, David Crockett Graham, David E. Stuart, David Graeber, David Grove, David J. Wineland, David Kertzer, David Maybury-Lewis, David Prescott Barrows, David Price (anthropologist), David R. Harris, David Zolotarev, Dawn Prince-Hughes, Déjà Dead, De Loys' Ape, Deadly Decisions, Death Cafe, Death du Jour, Deben Bhattacharya, Debt: The First 5000 Years, Declared death in absentia, Dehumanization, Delby, New South Wales, Dell Hymes, Delwar Hussain, Demalagattara, Democratic Labour Party (Brazil), Denis Blondin, Denny Moore, Dentalium shell, Derek Freeman, Detlev Ploog, Diane Barwick, Diane Bell, Diane Gifford-Gonzalez, Diane Zaino Chase, Diderot effect, Didier Raoult, Diffusion of innovations, Digraphia, Dimosthenis Kourtovik, Disappearance of Lauren Spierer, Disordered Minds, Dmitry Anuchin, Don Brothwell, Don Kalb, Donald A. Swan, Donald Cole (anthropologist), Donald Symons, Donald Thomson, Donat Savoie, Dong Tichen, Dor Bahadur Bista, Dorothea Bleek, Dorothy D. Lee, Double bind, Douglas R. White, Dounia Bouzar, Dr Challoner's Grammar School, Dragon, Drua, Dunham (surname), Dunno, E. E. Speight, E. Lloyd Du Brul, E. O. James, Early Kurdish nationalism, EcoHealth Alliance, Edgar Lee Hewett, Edgar Thurston, Edith Turner (anthropologist), Edmund Snow Carpenter, Edna Ahgeak MacLean, Edogawa Ranpo, Eduard Seler, Eduardo Mondlane, Eduardo P. Archetti, Eduardo Viveiros de Castro, Edward Barna Kurjack, Edward Bruner, Edward Burnett Tylor, Edward Dozier, Edward H. Spicer, Edward Sapir, El Infiernito, Eleanor Leacock, Eliécer Silva Celis, Elinor Ochs, Elio Modigliani, Elisabeth Burgos-Debray, Elisabeth Croll, Elizabeth Alexander (actress), Elizabeth Grant (anthropologist), Elizabeth Jacobs, Ella Cara Deloria, Ellen Diggs, Elliott Skinner, Ellis R. Kerley, Ellsworth, Maine, Elphin, County Roscommon, Elsie Clews Parsons, Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney, Emil Ludwig Schmidt, Emil Torday, Emily Martin (anthropologist), Emma Shah, Emmanuel de Merode, Emmanuel Todd, Emor, Enjo kōsai, Enrico Hillyer Giglioli, Entomophagy, Environmental psychology, Eocorona, Eparterial bronchus, Epeli Hauʻofa, Eric Dingwall, Eric Gans, Eric Sunderland, Eric Wolf, Erica Lehrer, Erie people, Erik Mueggler, Erminie Wheeler-Voegelin, Ernest Bornemann, Ernest Chantre, Ernest Chinnery, Ernest Crawley, Ernest Hamy, Ernest Manheim, Ernst Platner, Ernst Zacharias Platner, Ervin Marton, Erwan Dianteill, Erwin Bälz, Eskimo words for snow, Esther Newton, Ethel Alpenfels, Ethnic groups in the Philippines, Ethnobotany, Ethnocynology, Etsko Schuitema, Etterbeek, Eucalyptus gillenii, Eugène Pittard, Eva Perón, Everglades National Park, Evolutionary game theory, Evon Zartman Vogt Ranch House, Ewha Womans University, Exchange of women, Expedition Africa, F. G. Bailey, F.C. De Kampioenen, F.E. Williams, Facing Mount Kenya, Faculty of Arts, Banaras Hindu University, Fairy tale, Fakanau, Family, Family honor, Family Life (Amish magazine), Fanny Colonna, Far-Fetched Facts, Fatal Voyage, Félix Faustino Outes, Federico Brito Figueroa, Fedir Vovk, Fei Xiaotong, Felicitas Goodman, Felix Bryk, Female infanticide, Ferdinand Karsch, Fernando O. Assunção, Fernando Ortiz Fernández, Fidel Nadal, Fieldwork Under Fire, Filipinos, Filmmakers Without Borders, Fiona Graham, Fiona Marshall, First Universal Races Congress, FitzRoy Somerset, 4th Baron Raglan, Fixing Sex, Flight from Death, Florence M. Hawley, Florida Women's Hall of Fame, Floyd Lounsbury, Folk saint, Forced conversion, Formosan Aboriginal Culture Village, Fosco Maraini, Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology, François Bizot, Frances Densmore, Frances J. White, Frances Toor, Francesco Remotti, Francis Clark Howell, Francis La Flesche, Frank A. Beach, Frank H. Hankins, Frank Hamilton Cushing, Franz Boas, Franz Ignaz Pruner, Franz Tappeiner, Frédéric Ozanam, Fred Eggan, Frederic Ward Putnam, Frederic Wood Jones, Frederica de Laguna, Frederick S. Hulse, Frederik Jacobus Johannes Buytendijk, Freida Pinto, Friedrich Bieber, Friedrich Heinrich Ranke, Friedrich Nietzsche, Froelich Rainey, G. William Skinner, Gabriella Coleman, Ganja & Hess, Gary Larson, Gary O. Rollefson, Gayatri Reddy, Géza Róheim, Gender inequality in China, Georg Gerland, Georg Thilenius, George Bent, George Bird Grinnell, George Carr Frison, George Clapp Vaillant, George Cowgill, George Grant MacCurdy, George Herzog (ethnomusicologist), George Horse Capture, George J. Armelagos, George Murdock, George Pitt-Rivers, George W. Grace, George Wynn Brereton Huntingford, Georges Balandier, Georges Condominas, Georges Vacher de Lapouge, Georgia Political Science Association, Gerald Warner Brace, Gerd Koch, Germaine Dieterlen, Gholamali Raisozzakerin, Ghost, Ghost Dance, Gilberto Freyre, Giovanni Battista Bronzini, Gitel Steed, Giulio Angioni, Gloria Goodwin Raheja, Gloria Hatrick McLean, Godfrey Wilson, Gonzalo Correal Urrego, Gonzalo Rubio Orbe, Good Eats, Gora dialect, Gordon Willey, Gorky Park (novel), Goucher College, Grahway, New South Wales, Grand Canyon Adventure: River at Risk, Grant McCracken, Grave Secrets, Great Ape Project, Greenville Goodwin, Grimaldi Man, Guillermo Abadía Morales, Gullah, Gustav Fritsch, Gustav Klemm, Gustav Schwalbe, Guy Mary-Rousselière, Gwilliam Iwan Jones, H. Otley Beyer, Haida argillite carvings, Haitian diaspora, Haku Shah, Halleh Ghorashi, Hank Wesselman, Hannah Morris, Hans Fleischhacker, Hans Peter Duerr, Harbhajan Singh (poet), Harka Gurung, Harold A. Gould, Harold Courlander, Harold E. Lambert, Harold S. Gladwin, Harrison County, Ohio, Harry Männil, Harvey Whitehouse, Hassan Wario, Haximu massacre, Hélène Metzger, Heidi Ravven, Heinrich von Ranke, Helen Codere, Helen Mack Chang, Helena Group, Helmut de Terra, Henning Haslund-Christensen, Henri Breuil, Henri Victor Vallois, Henri-Alexandre Junod, Henry Evans Maude, Henry F. Dobyns, Henry Field (anthropologist), Henry Fry (anthropologist), Henry Gravrand, Henry Taube, Henry Timberlake, Henry Usher Hall, Herbert Halpert, Herbert Spencer, Herman Frederik Carel ten Kate (anthropologist), Herman Frederik Carel ten Kate (artist), Hermann Heinrich Ploss, Hermann Mückler, Hermann Poppelbaum, Hermann von Tappeiner, Hermann Welcker, Hermannsburg, Northern Territory, Hernando de Soto, Hero's journey, High-context and low-context cultures, Hilma Granqvist, Hinilawod, Historical document, History of anarchism, History of Asian art, History of Indonesia, History of Long Island, History of Luzon, History of lysergic acid diethylamide, History of materials science, History of Montana, History of Montreal, History of Native Americans in the United States, History of North America, History of Presque Isle, History of Sierra Leone, History of slavery in New York, History of the Americas, History of the Cherokee language, History of the United States, History of Virginia, Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, Hofstede's cultural dimensions theory, Homeward (Star Trek: The Next Generation), Hominidae, Hortense Powdermaker, Houma people, Howard Reid (filmmaker), Howard Vyse, Howling III, Hubbard Medal, Hueyapan, Hugh Brody, Hugh Fox, Hugh Gusterson, Hugh Raffles, Hugh Trevor-Roper, Hugo O. Engelmann, Hugo Obermaier, Human ecosystem, Human mating strategies, Human physical appearance, Humphrey Ocean, Huzurpaga, Hyborian Age, Hypocognition, I am a Curator, I. H. N. Evans, Iain R. Edgar, Icelandic Phallological Museum, Identity (social science), Iglesia ni Cristo, Ignacio Baleztena Ascárate, Ignacio Bernal, Igor Gorevich, Ikland, Ilium (bone), Imma von Bodmershof, Imprinting (psychology), Improving Access to Psychological Therapies, Inalienable possessions, Inclusive capitalism, Indian Anthropological Society, Indigenization, Indigenous people of the Everglades region, Ineke van Wetering, Inequity aversion, Infanticide, Instinct (film), Institute of Anthropology and Ethnography, Intellectual Property Issues in Cultural Heritage project, Intercultural competence, International Commission on Orders of Chivalry, International Congress of Americanists, International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs, Interruption (speech), Intimate relationship, Iraq at a Distance, Irawati Karve, Irina Podgorny, Iroquois, Irving Hexham, Isabel Kelly, Isabella Bordoni, Ishi, Ishida Eiichirō, Ishmael (novel), Islam in Australia, Islamophobia, Itasca State Park, IUAES, Ivan Van Sertima, Ivar Skarland, J. Clyde Mitchell, J. P. S. Uberoi, J. Philippe Rushton, Jaap van Velsen, Jaara baby, Jack Goody, Jack Herbert Driberg, Jack Tobin (anthropologist), Jacqueline Roumeguere-Eberhardt, Jacques Legrand (Mongolist), Jacques Ruffié, Jalpana, James C. Faris, James Deetz, James Ferguson (anthropologist), James M. Freeman, James Page (Australian educationist), James Sterling Young, James Stevenson (geologist), Jan Czekanowski, Jan III Sobieski High School, Kraków, Jan Pouwer, Jane E. Buikstra, Jane H. Hill, Jane MacLaren Walsh, Janet Carsten, Janet Roitman, Janine R. Wedel, Japanese occupation of British Borneo, Jared Diamond, Jaroslav Malina (anthropologist), Jatari Indian Folk Association, Javier Melloni, Józef Piłsudski, Jean Briggs, Jean Rouch, Jean-Claude Passeron, Jean-Louis Berlandier, Jean-Marie Brohm, Jeff Halper, Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock, Jenn Lindsay, Jerald T. Milanich, Jeremy Boissevain, Jeremy Narby, Jesús Arango Cano, Jesse D. Jennings, Jesse Walter Fewkes, Jimmy Hoffa, Joachim Burger, JoAllyn Archambault, Joan Halifax, Joann Kealiinohomoku, João de Pina-Cabral, Jocelyne Dakhlia, Joe Craig, Joe Leaphorn, Johan Grimonprez, Johann Friedrich Blumenbach, Johann Jakob Bachofen, Johannes Overbeck, Johannes Ranke, John Adair (anthropologist), John C. G. Röhl, John G. Fleagle, John Grattan, John Hemming (explorer), John Henry Hutton, John Holmes McDowell, John Howard Payne, John Howland Rowe, John La Farge, John Landers, John Marshall (filmmaker), John Mathew, John Morris (anthropologist), John P. Jacob, John R. Lukacs, John R. Swanton, John Shae Perring, John Tooby, John Waiko, John Whiting (anthropologist), Johnny Clegg, Joliet Central High School, Jonathan Boyarin, Jonathan Friedman, Joni Adamson, Jorge Gamboa Mendoza, José Ferrer Canales, José Leandro Montalvo Guenard, José María Arguedas, Jose Migel Barandiaran, Josef Weninger, Josep Pons Rosell, Joseph Deniker, Joseph J. Sherman, Joseph Orpen, Joseph Tonda, Joseph Whitecotton, Journal of Historical Sociology, Jovan Trifunovski, Juan de Esteyneffer, Juan Francisco Salazar, Juan Mauricio Renold, Juan Vucetich, Judaization of Jerusalem, Juke joint, Julia Averkieva, Julian Steward, Julien Ries, Julien-Joseph Virey, Julio Caro Baroja, Julius Kollmann, June Helm, Junichiro Itani, K. David Harrison, Kaḻayapiṯi, Kabete, Kaffir (racial term), Kalyeserye, Kanesatake, Kapwani Kiwanga, Karen Ho, Karl Ernst Ranke, Karl Joseph Hieronymus Windischmann, Karlsschrein, Kathleen Gough, Kathryn B. H. Clancy, Kay Warren (anthropologist), Kayan people (Myanmar), Kayhausen Boy, Kazuko Sinoto, Kendra Coulter, Kenelm Burridge, Kenneth A. R. Kennedy, Kenneth Binmore, Kenneth Emory, Kerala model, Kevin Avruch, Khal Torabully, Khiara Bridges, Kigango, Killing of Susanna Feldmann, Kim MacQuarrie, Kim Yeshi, Kinnaraya, Kinship terminology, Kirin Narayan, Kirsten Hastrup, Kiss, Kitselas, Kittitas County, Washington, Kittitas, Washington, Kobarweng or Where is Your Helicopter?, Koentjaraningrat, Konstantin Bogdanov, Koryaks, Krippendorf's Tribe, Kris L. Hardin, Kristen Gremillion, Kuboraum, Kuphar, Kurdish nationalism, Kwakwaka'wakw art, L. A. Krishna Iyer, L. K. Ananthakrishna Iyer, L. P. Vidyarthi, Ladislav Holý, Langsuyar, Lapu-Lapu, Larry Nesper, Lars Krutak, Last voyage of the Karluk, Laura Bohannan, Lauriston Sharp, LaVerne Jeanne, Lawrence Blair, Layla AbdelRahim, Lélia Gonzalez, López de Lacalle, Lūcija Jēruma-Krastiņa, Lebanese people, Leda Cosmides, Lee Ann Newsom, Lee Henderson Watkins, Lemur, Lenape, Lene Hara cave, Leo Klejn, Leon Stover, Leonard Hofstadter, Leopold III of Belgium, Lepidoblepharis buchwaldi, Leslie Spier, Lev Sternberg, Lewis H. Morgan, Leyla Neyzi, LGBT history, LGBT in Mexico, Liberation theology, Lila Abu-Lughod, Lin Yaohua, Lina Fruzzetti, Lincoln School (Farley, Iowa), Lionel Tiger, Lisa Peattie, Lissant Bolton, List of African-American inventors and scientists, List of agnostics, List of Alpha Kappa Alpha sisters, List of alumni of Jesus College, Oxford, List of Archer characters, List of atheist Americans, List of atheists (miscellaneous), List of atheists (surnames A to B), List of Baptists, List of Barnard College people, List of Brigham Young University–Idaho alumni, List of British Bangladeshis, List of British Muslims, List of Central Philippine University people, List of Columbia College people, List of Columbia University alumni and attendees, List of Cornell University alumni, List of Danganronpa characters, List of Darkwing Duck characters, List of Darkwing Duck episodes, List of Duke University people, List of feminist rhetoricians, List of fictional anthropologists, List of fictional presidents of the United States (K–M), List of George Washington University Law School alumni, List of Harvard University people, List of Ipswich Grammar School Old Boys, List of Iyers, List of Jewish atheists and agnostics, List of Lost characters, List of Louisiana Creoles, List of Madhwa Brahmins, List of New College of Florida alumni, List of Nicaraguan Americans, List of Norwegians, List of Old Carthusians, List of Old Wykehamists, List of people educated at Bedford School, List of people from Antwerp, List of people from Bournemouth, List of people from Bremen, List of people from Buffalo, New York, List of people from Missouri, List of people from Montana, List of people from New York City, List of people from Philadelphia, List of people from San Juan, Puerto Rico, List of people from Tbilisi, List of people from Yorkshire, List of people in Montana history, List of people with breast cancer, List of Please Save My Earth characters, List of political families in Argentina, List of Prince George's County Public Schools middle schools, List of psychologists on postage stamps, List of Puerto Ricans, List of Queens College people, List of Russian explorers, List of Silliman University people, List of systems scientists, List of The Amazing Spiez! episodes, List of The Big Bang Theory characters, List of Timothy Asch films, List of University of California, Berkeley alumni in academia, List of University of Connecticut people, List of University of Florida alumni, List of University of Florida faculty and administrators, List of University of Michigan alumni, List of University of Oklahoma people, List of University of Pennsylvania people, List of University of Utah people, List of University of Washington people, List of University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee people, List of unsolved deaths, List of Weber State University people, List of Wesleyan University people, Literature about intersex, Liza Dalby, Lola Romanucci-Ross, Long hair, Long Walk of the Navajo, Longland (Holicong, Pennsylvania), Lordosis behavior, Loren Eiseley, Louis Diène Faye, Louis Dumont, Louis Dupree (professor), Louis L. Jacobs, Louis Laurent Gabriel de Mortillet, Louis R. Sullivan, Louise Burkhart, Louise Leakey, Luís Cristóvão dos Santos, Luís da Câmara Cascudo, Lubor Niederle, Lucien Castaing-Taylor, Lucy (Australopithecus), Lucy Suchman, Ludwig Feuerbach, Ludwig Woltmann, Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan, Luhya people, Luis Díaz Viana, Luis Eduardo Luna, Luis Kemnitzer, Luisa Accati, Luiz Mott, Lumbee, Lyall Watson, Lydia T. Black, Lyman Belding, Lyn Miles, Lynn Emanuel, Maasai people, Mabel Cook Cole, Madeleine Pelletier, Madeline Kneberg Lewis, Mage Parab, Mai Yamani, Mailu Island, Makassan contact with Australia, Malakula, Malcolm Carr Collier, Male and Female (book), Malek Chebel, Maliseet, Man cave, Man's First Word, Manahoac, Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nation, Mannadiyar, Manning Nash, Manuel Arturo Izquierdo Peña, Manuel Delgado Ruiz, Manuel João Ramos, Manuel Zapata Olivella, Maqam (shrine), María Rostworowski, Marc Augé, Marc Meyer, Marc-Adélard Tremblay, Margaret B. Blackman, Margaret Jolly, Margaret Lantis, Margaret Mead, Margarita Nolasco Armas, Marguerite Dupire, Maria Czaplicka, Marianne Cardale de Schrimpff, Marianne Nøhr Larsen, Marie Brenner, Marie Margaret Keesing, Marie-Claude Mattéi-Müller, Marija Gimbutas, Marimba Ani, Mariza Corrêa, Marjorie F. Lambert, Marjorie Halpin, Mark Nathan Cohen, Mark Ritchie (trader), Mark Turin, Marklo, Marriage, Marshall Sahlins, Marta Turok, Martín von Hildebrand, Martha Ellen Davis, Martha Kaplan, Martial Arts Odyssey, Martin Mystère, Marvin Harris, Marvin Opler, Mary Butler Lewis, Mary Catherine Bateson, Mary Douglas, Mary Howitt, Mary-Ann Ochota, Mass-Observation, Matthew Kapell, Maurice Bloch, Mauro Campagnoli, Mauro Guillén, Mayan languages, Mércio Pereira Gomes, McKim Marriott, Mediated, Melanesia, Melungeon, Melville Jacobs, Menstruation, Mentifact, Metoac, Meyer Fortes, Mezcala culture, Micaela Portilla, Michael Asch, Michael Carrithers, Michael D. Coe, Michael Feinstein, Michael Katakis, Michael Rockefeller, Michal Josephy, Michel Boivin, Michelle Rosaldo, Middletown studies, Miguel León-Portilla, Miguel Vale de Almeida, Mike Davis (boat builder), Mikhail Mikhaylovich Gerasimov, Milton Singer, Mimesis, Mireya Mayor, Miriam Tildesley, Miriam Van Waters, Missing Link (Space: 1999), Mistress of the Apes, Mists of Dawn, Miwok, Miyamoto-cho, Tokyo, Moana (2016 film), Model of hierarchical complexity, Modern dance, Modern dance in the United States, Mohammad Reza Ale Ebrahim, Mohegan, Monday Mourning, Monica Connell, Monica Heller, Monique Scheer, Monte Verde, Moritz von Leonhardi, Morris Carstairs, Morris Edward Opler, Morris Swadesh, Moses Asch, Mossi people, Motsoalle, MS Fnd in a Lbry, Muisca Confederation, Mummy Juanita, Munro S. Edmonson, Murder of David Reed, Museo Histórico y Antropológico Maurice van de Maele, Museology, Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York v. Hillmon, My Favorite Martian, Mysteries at the Monument, Nair, Nair Service Society, Nambikwara, Nancy Oestreich Lurie, Naparay, Napoleon Andrew Tuiteleleapaga, Napoleon Chagnon, Narcissism of small differences, Narmala Shewcharan, Nasir Uddin (anthropologist), Nasser Fakouhi, Nataliia Lebedeva, Nathalie Luca, National Museum of Singapore, National Sexuality Resource Center, Native American fashion, Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, Native Americans in the United States, Navajo weaving, Nazca culture, Nazca Lines, Négritude, Néstor Osvaldo Perlongher, Neanderthal (novel), Nebraska City, Nebraska, Negara: The Theatre State in Nineteenth-Century Bali, Neil L. Whitehead, Nematollah Fazeli, Nettlemas, New Brunswick, New Jersey, Newington College, Newton County John Does, Niara Sudarkasa, Nicholas J. Saunders, Nicholas Miklouho-Maclay, Nicolae Lahovary, Nicolas Maranda, Nicolette Bethel, Nigel Barley (anthropologist), Nikolay Kradin, Nikolay Zograf, Nina Jablonski, Nipmuc, Nirmal Kumar Bose, No más bebés, Noel B. Salazar, Nomads of India, Nommo, Norman Tindale, North Toraja Regency, Northcote W. Thomas, Northwestern Europe, Northwind (comics), Nova Scotia Home for Colored Children, Oak Park and River Forest High School, Oasisamerica, Oaxaca, Obermaier, Obin, Oceania, Oculesics, Oh No, Ross and Carrie!, Okapi Wildlife Reserve, Oleksa Storozhenko, Olga Najera-Ramirez, Olia Lialina, Oliver La Farge, On Growth and Form, On the Postcolony, Once Were Warriors, One-drop rule, Optometry, Oral history, Orazak Ismagulov, Origin of language, Osbert Lancaster, Oscar Kawagley, Oscar Lewis, Oscar Peschel, Osman Hill's mangabey, Osteoporosis, Oswestry, Oton Župančič, Otto Ammon, Otto Schlaginhaufen, Otto von Sadovszky, Out of Asia theory, Overbite, Pak ganern game, Paleo-Indians, Paleopathology, Palestinians, Pamunkey, Panchanan Mitra, Paolo Mantegazza, Paranormal, Paranthropus robustus, Parapsychology, Parasites Like Us, Parker McKenzie, Pascal Boyer, Pascual Romero, Pashtuns, Pat Caplan, Patawomeck, Patricia May, Patricia Sawin, Patricia Seed, Patricia Wright, Patricia Zavella, Patrick Moraz, Paul Bohannan, Paul Broca, Paul Du Chaillu, Paul Farmer, Paul Friedrich (linguist), Paul Gebhard, Paul Heelas, Paul Jorion, Paul K. Benedict, Paul Kirchhoff, Paul Taçon, Paul V. Kroskrity, Paul W Draper, Paul Wolfowitz, Pavlova (food), Pál Lipták, Pearl Primus, Pedram Khosronejad, Pedro Armillas, Pedro Geoffroy Rivas, Pegi Vail, Pei Wenzhong, Pequot War, Pere Bosch-Gimpera, Periannan Senapathy, Peter Aaby, Peter La Farge, Peter Macnair, Peter N. Peregrine, Peter Wade, Petrus Camper, Philip Ainsworth Means, Phillip Harold Lewis, Phillip McArthur, Phoenix of Hiroshima, Phraya Anuman Rajadhon, Physiographic macroregions of China, Piłsudski (disambiguation), Pierre Colas, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre-Roland Giot, Piers Vitebsky, Piled Higher and Deeper, Pinsk Marshes, Piscataway Indian Nation and Tayac Territory, Piscataway people, Plains indigenous peoples, Poles, Polly Schaafsma, Popol Vuh, Portrait of Michel Leiris, 1976, Potlatch, PPG Place, Prehistoric Indonesia, Prehistory, Prehistory of West Virginia, Pretty Modern: Beauty, Sex, and Plastic Surgery in Brazil, Prey (TV series), Prince Alfred College, Professor Edward Travers, Professor X, Pseudocerastes persicus fieldi, Psychology Today, Pueblo, Pulangi River, Pulpurru Davies, Pwojè Pyebwa, Qualitative research, Queens College, City University of New York, Quesalid, Quiggly hole, R. Brian Ferguson, R. H. Barlow, R. T. 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Simons, Ronald Frankenberg, Ronald Nigh, Ronald Spores, Ronald Stade, Ronald Suleski, Rosamond Spicer, Rose Mary Allen, Rosemary Joy Hendry, Rosemary Joyce, Ross Hassig, Roswell UFO incident, Roy Rappaport, Ruby McCollum, Ruby the Galactic Gumshoe, Rudolf Pöch, Rudolf Wagner, Rugeley, Rui (surname), Ruth Behar, Ruth Benedict, Ruth Cardoso, Ruth Hill Useem, Ruth Landes, Ruth Mace, Ruth Tringham, Ruth Underhill, Sacred natural site, Sacred–profane dichotomy, Saddeka Arebi, Sadegh Malek Shahmirzadi, SAFE13 study, Saharan rock art, Saint, Sajama Lines, Salishan languages, Salvador Debenedetti, Sambadrome Marquês de Sapucaí, Sambia people, Sami people, Samuel Barrett, Samuel Haven, Samuel Kirkland Lothrop, Samuel Thomas von Sömmerring, San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation, San Diego Museum of Man, San Jose de Moro, Sandy Balls, Sanford Plummer, Sangiran, Sappony, Sara C. 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Glazier, Stephen D. Houston, Stephen Plog, Stephen Powers, Stephen Smith (journalist), Stereotypes of Jews, Sterkfontein, Steven Erikson, Steven Feld, Steven Rubenstein, Stone carving, Street photography, String figure, Structural functionalism, Structural Marxism, Structuralism, Structuralist theory of mythology, Structuration theory, Stuart Struever, Style tribe, Subsistence pattern, Supermodel, Surajit Chandra Sinha, Susan Block, Susan D. Gillespie, Susan Price, Susanne Küchler, Susanne Schröter, Suzanna W. Miles, Sven Haakanson, Sweetgrass (film), Sydel Silverman, Sylvia M. Broadbent, T. T. Paterson, Tadao Umesao, Tadodaho, Tagalog Wikipedia, Taisha Abelar, Taja Kramberger, Takie Lebra, Talal Asad, Tammari people, Tamu Samaj, Tana Toraja Regency, Tanya Luhrmann, Tarak Chandra Das, Taraki Sivaram, Tastil, Technogypsie, Ted Polhemus, Teito Monogatari, Temperance "Bones" Brennan, Temple (novel), Tequendama, Teresa Giménez Barbat, Thanadelthur, The 10,000 Year Explosion, The Ax Fight, The Children of Sanchez (book), The Chrysanthemum and the Sword, The Chrysanthemum and the Sword (Mad Men), The Flying Sorcerers, The Forest People, The Future of Work and Death, The God Who Wasn't There, The Hebrew Goddess, The Interpretation of Cultures, The Journey of Man, The Left Hand of Darkness, The Legend of Tarzan (TV series), The Lele of the Kasai, The Lost World (1960 film), The Man from Earth, The Many-Colored Land, The Mind of Primitive Man, The Modernist City, The Overflow, New South Wales, The Raw and the Cooked, The Relic (film), The Seeker (film), The Sentinel (TV series), The Serpent and the Rainbow (book), The Snow Creature, The Trail of Cthulhu, The Tribal World of Verrier Elwin, The Utopia of Rules, The Vampire Tapestry, The Word for World Is Forest, The Younger Lady, Theodor Waitz, Theodora Kroeber, Thick description, Think of the children, Third culture kid, Thomas Athol Joyce, Thomas Cullen Young, Thomas Des Jean, Thomas Griffith Taylor, Thor Heyerdahl (ship), Tibesti Mountains, Tikopia, Till Lindemann, Tim Asch, Time capsule, Timeline of İzmir, Timeline of Polish science and technology, Tivi Etok, Tiwanaku, Tobacco smoke enema, Tobias Hecht, Tobias Schneebaum, Tohunga, Tom Boellstorff, Tom Dillehay, Tom Gill (anthropologist), Tonawanda Reservation, Toraja, Townsend, Tennessee, Trance, Trevor Hoyle, Trial of the Juntas, Tribe (Internet), Tribes of Jharkhand, Triloknath Pandit, Tristes Tropiques, Tsimihety people, Tullia Magrini, Two Hearts Among the Beasts, Two-spirit, Tzav (parsha), Uloqsaq, Ulrich Schiefer, Umm Badr, Uncontacted peoples, Unilineal evolution, University of Tsukuba, Unnatural History (TV series), Unnur Birna Vilhjálmsdóttir, Unstrange Minds, Ursula Cowgill, Ursula Graham Bower, Ushinosuke Mori, V-12 Navy College Training Program, Valery Alekseyev (anthropologist), Vasily Nalimov, Vayikra (parsha), Vedda, Vera D. 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Wiser, William Hanks, William Healey Dall, William Henry Crocker, William Henry Holmes, William Henry Scott (historian), William John McGee, William Montgomery McGovern, William Mulloy, William Ramsay Smith, William S. Laughlin, William Shipley (linguist), William T. Sanders, William Ury, William W. Fitzhugh, Wolf-Dieter Storl, Women in brewing, Women in Ghana, Women in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, World Vision India, Wu Dingliang, Wyandot language, Yaakov Havakook, Yaliboylu Tatars, Yan Yunxiang, Yanoama, Yasmine Zaki Shahab, Yolanda T. Moses, Yolngu, Yoshiharu Sekino, Yoshitaka Ota, Youssef Seddik (philosopher), Yusuke Hashiba, Yves Coppens, Zagorka Golubović, Zakir Naik, Zanea, Zelia Nuttall, Zero Hunger Political Culture and Antipoverty Policy in Northeast Brazil, Zhoukoudian, Zora Neale Hurston, Zuni, Zuni mythology, 10th Mountain Division, 1558 in science, 1752 in science, 1780s in archaeology, 1821 in France, 1824 in France, 1824 in science, 1838, 1838 in science, 1858 in science, 1859 in Ireland, 1870 in Ireland, 1880 in France, 1880 in science, 1898 in France, 1907 in France, 1909 in Italy, 1911 in France, 1927 in Canada, 1931 in science, 1978 in science, 1979, 1992 in philosophy, 1992 in science, 1996 in archaeology, 1996 in France, 1998 in France, 2 krooni, 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, 2008 in France, 2012 in science, 2013 in the Philippines, 2065 Spicer. Expand index (1822 more) »

A Return to Salem's Lot

A Return to Salem's Lot is a 1987 American horror film co-written and directed by Larry Cohen and starring Michael Moriarty, Andrew Duggan and Samuel Fuller.

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A. Aiyappan

Ayinapalli Aiyappan (5 February 1905 – 28 June 1988) was an museologist who served as Superintendent of the Government Museum, Madras from 1940 to 1960.

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A. H. J. Prins

Adriaan Hendrik Johan Prins, generally known as A. H. J. Prins (1921, Harderwijk, Gelderland – 11 February 2000) was a Dutch Africanist and maritime anthropologist.

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A. W. F. Fuller

Alfred Walter Francis Fuller (29 March 1882 – 13 December 1961) was a British anthropologist and ethnographic collector, best known for his collection of over 6,800 items from the Pacific that is now held in the Field Museum in Chicago.

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Aalborg University

Aalborg University (AAU) is a Danish public university with campuses in Aalborg, Esbjerg, and Copenhagen founded in 1974.

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Aarne–Thompson classification systems

The Aarne–Thompson classification systems are indices used to classify folktales: the Aarne–Thompson Motif-Index (catalogued by alphabetical letters followed by numerals), the Aarne–Thompson Tale Type Index (cataloged by AT or AaTh numbers), and the Aarne–Thompson–Uther classification system (developed in 2004 and cataloged by ATU numbers).

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Aaron Fox

Aaron Fox is an American ethnomusicologist, anthropologist, and linguist.

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Abner Shimony

Abner Eliezer Shimony (March 10, 1928 – August 8, 2015) was an American physicist and philosopher.

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Abraham M. Halpern

Abraham "Abe" Meyer Halpern (February 20, 1914, Boston, Massachusetts – 1985) was a linguist and anthropologist who specialized in Native American Languages.

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Abstraction

Abstraction in its main sense is a conceptual process where general rules and concepts are derived from the usage and classification of specific examples, literal ("real" or "concrete") signifiers, first principles, or other methods.

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Action Office

The Action Office is a series of furniture designed by Robert Propst, and manufactured and marketed by Herman Miller.

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Adam Kuper

Adam Jonathan Kuper (born 29 December 1941) is a South African anthropologist most closely linked to the school of social anthropology.

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Adam Nayyar

Dr.

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Adapting Minds

Adapting Minds: Evolutionary Psychology and the Persistent Quest for Human Nature is a book published by MIT Press written by philosopher of science David Buller, piecing together his criticism of evolutionary psychology.

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Adaptive strategies

The expression adaptive strategies is used by anthropologist Yehudi Cohen to describe a society’s system of economic production.

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Adeline Masquelier

Adeline Marie Masquelier (born 1960) is a Professor of Anthropology at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana.

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Adio Kerida

Adio Kerida: Goodbye my Dear Love is an award-winning 2002 documentary by American anthropologist Ruth Behar that follows her trip to Cuba, which her family left when she was four.

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Adolf Bernhard Meyer

Adolf Bernhard Meyer (11 October 1840, Hamburg – 22 August 1911, Dresden) was a German anthropologist, ornithologist, entomologist, and herpetologist.

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Adolph Luetgert

Adolph Louis Luetgert (December 27, 1845 – July 7, 1899) was a German-American charged with murdering his wife and dissolving her body in lye in one of his sausage vats at the A.L. Luetgert Sausage & Packing Company in 1897.

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Adrienne L. Kaeppler

Adrienne Lois Kaeppler (born 1935) is an American anthropologist, curator of Oceanic Ethnology at the National Museum of Natural History at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC.

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Afflictions: Culture & Mental Illness in Indonesia

Afflictions: Culture and Mental Illness in Indonesia is a six-part ethnographic documentary film series on the lives of the mentally ill living on the islands of Bali and Java in Indonesia.

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Afrocubanismo

Afrocubanismo was an artistic and social movement in black-themed Cuban culture with origins in the 1920s, as in works by the cultural anthropologist Fernando Ortiz.

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Agantuk

Agantuk is a 1991 Bengali-language drama film written and directed by Satyajit Ray.

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Ahetze

Ahetze was a village in the traditional Basque province of Labourd and is now a commune in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region in southwestern France.

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Akbar Ahmed

Akbar Salahuddin Ahmed, (born. January 15, 1943) also known as Akbar Ahmed, is an American-Pakistani academic, author, poet, playwright, filmmaker and former diplomat.

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Akhil Gupta

Akhil Gupta (born 1959) is an Indian-American anthropologist whose research has focused on the anthropology of the state and of development, as well as on postcolonialism.

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AL 129-1

AL 129-1 is a fossilized knee joint of the species Australopithecus afarensis.

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Alain le Pichon

Alain le Pichon is a French Anthropologist.

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Alan Duff

Alan Duff, (born 26 October 1950), is a New Zealand novelist and newspaper columnist.

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Alan Morinis

Alan Morinis (born 1949) is an anthropologist, filmmaker, and writer who has been a leading figure in the contemporary revival of the Musar movement, a Jewish ethical movement.

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Alan Tippett

Alan Tippett was a Methodist missionary, missiologist, and anthropologist.

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Alanah Woody

Alanah Woody (March 24, 1956 – July 19, 2007) was an American archeologist, anthropologist, professor and executive director of the Nevada Rock Art Foundation.

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Albanian nationalism

Albanian nationalism is a general grouping of nationalist ideas and concepts generated by ethnic Albanians that were first formed in the 19th century during the Albanian National Awakening (Rilindja).

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Albanian nationalism (Albania)

Albanian nationalism emerged in Albania during the 19th century.

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Albanian sworn virgins

The Albanian sworn virgins (burrnesha) are Albanian women who take a vow of chastity and wear male clothing in order to live as men in the patriarchal northern Albanian society.

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Albert Buell Lewis

Albert Buell Lewis (June 21, 1867 – October 10, 1940) was the first American anthropologist to conduct a systematic, long-term field study in Melanesia, A. B. Lewis is best remembered for the collection and documentation of over 14,000 Melanesian objects gathered in the colonial territories of Melanesia during his time as the leader of the Joseph N. Field South Pacific Expedition from 1909 to 1913.

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Albert Piette

Albert Piette (born April 18, 1960) is a Belgian anthropologist from Namur, Belgium.

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Albert Sánchez Piñol

Albert Sánchez Piñol (born 1965 in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain) is a Spanish anthropologist, non-fiction writer and novelist writing in Catalan and Castilian Spanish.

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Aldo Massola

Aldo Massola (September 9, 1910 – July 6, 1975) was an Italian-Australian anthropologist, a curator at the National Museum of Victoria in Melbourne from 1954 to 1964, who overcame scandal in his personal life to author a number of influential books about Victoria's indigenous Koori population.

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Aleš Hrdlička

Alois Ferdinand Hrdlička, after 1918 changed to Aleš Hrdlička (March 29, 1869 – September 5, 1943), was an Austro-Hungarian anthropologist who lived in the United States after his family had moved there in 1881.

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Alex Trebek

George Alexander Trebek (born July 22, 1940) is a Canadian-American television personality.

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Alexander D. Shimkin

Alexander Demitri "Alex" Shimkin (October 11, 1944 - July 12, 1972) was an American war correspondent who was killed in Vietnam.

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Alexander Ecker

Johann Alexander Ecker (10 July 1816 – 20 May 1887) was a German anthropologist and anatomist born in Freiburg im Breisgau.

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Alexander Francis Chamberlain

Alexander Francis Chamberlain (1865–1914) was a Canadian anthropologist, born in England.

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Alexander Goldenweiser (anthropologist)

Alexander Aleksandrovich Goldenweiser (– July 6, 1940) was a Russian-born U.S. anthropologist and sociologist.

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Alexander Henn

Alexander Henn is a German anthropologist and Professor for Religious Studies at the School of Historical, Philosophical & Religious Studies Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona.

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Alexander Javakhishvili

Alexander Nikolayevich Javakhishvili (ალექსანდრე ნიკოლოზის ძე ჯავახიშვილი) born 5 August 1875 (Old Style Julian Calendar), 17 August 1875 (New Style Gregorian Calendar) in Gori, Georgia – died January 22, 1973, Tbilisi, Georgia) was a Georgian geographer and anthropologist. Professor A. N. Javakhishvili was one of the oldest geographers and anthropologists in the Soviet Union. He was the founder of Soviet Georgian geography which, under him, developed into a school. His qualifications and awards include Doctor of Geographical Sciences (1937), recognition as an Academician of the Georgian Academy of Sciences (1944), a Merited Scientist, an honorary member of the USSR Geographic Society, and winner of a State Prize of the Georgian SSR.

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Alfred E. Johnson

Alfred E. Johnson was an anthropologist and archaeologist at the University of Kansas.

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Alfred Gell

Alfred Antony Francis Gell, (June 12, 1945 – January 28, 1997) was a British social anthropologist whose most influential work concerned art, language, symbolism and ritual.

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Alfred Métraux

Alfred Métraux (Lausanne, 5 November 1902 – 12 April 1963, Paris) was a Swiss and Argentine anthropologist, ethnologist and human rights leader.

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Alfred North Whitehead

Alfred North Whitehead (15 February 1861 – 30 December 1947) was an English mathematician and philosopher.

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Alfred William Howitt

Alfred William Howitt CMG (17 April 1830 – 7 March 1908) was an Australian anthropologist, explorer and naturalist.

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Alfredo Barrera Vásquez

Alfredo Barrera Vázquez (1900—December 28, 1980) was a Mexican anthropologist, linguist, academic and Mayanist scholar.

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Alfredo Torero

Alfredo Augusto Torero Fernández de Córdova (September 10, 1930, Huacho, Lima Region, Peru – June 19, 2004, Valencia, Spain) was a Peruvian anthropologist and linguist.

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Ali's Smile: Naked Scientology

Ali's Smile: Naked Scientology is a collection of essays and a short story by American Beat writer William S. Burroughs (1914–97).

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Alice Beck Kehoe

Alice Beck Kehoe (born 1934, New York City) is an anthropologist.

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Alice Cunningham Fletcher

Alice Cunningham Fletcher (March 15, 1838 in HavanaApril 6, 1923 in Washington, D.C.) was an American ethnologist, anthropologist, and social scientist who studied and documented American Indian culture.

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Alice Dewey

Alice Greeley Dewey (December 4, 1928 – June 11, 2017) was an American anthropologist who studied Javanese society.

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Alison S. Brooks

Alison S. Brooks is an American paleoanthropologist and archaeologist whose work focuses on the Paleolithic, particularly the Middle Stone Age of Africa.

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Allègre

Allègre is a commune in the Haute-Loire department in south-central France.

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Allison Davis

William Boyd Allison Davis (October 14, 1902 – November 21, 1983) was an American educator, anthropologist, writer, researcher, and scholar.

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Aloha

Aloha is the Hawaiian word for love, affection, peace, compassion and mercy, that is commonly used as a simple greeting.

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Alumni of the American University of Beirut

This is a list of alumni and former students of the American University of Beirut.

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Alvinolagnia

Alvinolagnia or belly fetish or stomach fetish is a partialism in which an individual is sexually attracted to the stomach or belly.

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American Folklore Society

The American Folklore Society (AFS) is the US-based professional association for folklorists, with members from the US, Canada, and around the world, which aims to encourage research, aid in disseminating that research, promote the responsible application of that research, publish various forms of publications, advocate for the continued study and teaching of folklore, etc.

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Americanist phonetic notation

Americanist phonetic notation, also known as the North American Phonetic Alphabet or NAPA, is a system of phonetic notation originally developed by European and American anthropologists and language scientists (many of whom were students of Neogrammarians) for the phonetic and phonemic transcription of indigenous languages of the Americas and for languages of Europe.

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Ammonite (novel)

Ammonite is Nicola Griffith's first novel, published in 1992.

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An Instinct for Dragons

An Instinct for Dragons is a book by University of Central Florida anthropologist David E. Jones, in which he seeks to explain the alleged universality of dragon images in the folklore of human societies.

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Ananias Dare

Ananias Dare (c. 1560 – 1587, legal death) was the husband of Eleanor White, whom he married at St Bride's Church in Fleet Street, City of London.

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Anarcho-primitivism

Anarcho-primitivism is an anarchist critique of the origins and progress of civilization.

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Anarchy

Anarchy is the condition of a society, entity, group of people, or a single person that rejects hierarchy.

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Anastasia Karakasidou

Anastasia Karakasidou (Αναστασία Καρακασίδου) is a Greek scholar.

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Anatole Lewitsky

Anatole Lewitsky (22 August 1903 – 23 February 1942) was a French anthropologist and member of the French Resistance in World War II.

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Anatoli Bogdanov (zoologist)

Anatoli Petrovich Bogdanov (Анатолий Петрович Богданов; 13 October 1834 – 28 March 1896) was a Russian zoologist and anthropologist, born in Voronezh Governorate in southern Russia.

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Anatoly Khazanov

Anatoly Mikhailovich Khazanov (Russian: Анато́лий Миха́йлович Хазáнов, born December 13, 1937) is an anthropologist and historian.

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Aníbal Buitrón Cháves

Aníbal Buitrón Cháves was an anthropologist in Ecuador.

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Anders Retzius

Anders Adolph Retzius (Lund 13 October 1796 – Stockholm 18 April 1860), was a Swedish professor of anatomy and a supervisor at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm.

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André-Georges Haudricourt

André-Georges Haudricourt (January 17, 1911 - August 20, 1996) was a French botanist, anthropologist and linguist.

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Andrea Abrams (anthropologist)

Andrea Abrams is an American anthropologist, Associate Professor, President of the Association of Black Anthropologists and Author of God and Blackness: Race, Gender and Identity in a Middle Class Afrocentric Church.

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Andrew Gray (anthropologist)

Andrew Gray (21 July 1955 in Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom – 7 May 1999, near Vanuatu) was a British anthropologist and activist for the rights of indigenous peoples.

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Andrew Pettigrew

Andrew Marshall Pettigrew OBE (born 11 June 1944) is Professor of Strategy and Organisation at the Saïd Business School at the University of Oxford.

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Andrzej Zajączkowski

Andrzej Zajączkowski (27 May 1922 in Lublin – 16 December 1994 in Warsaw) was a Polish sociologist, cultural anthropologist, and Africanist.

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Ang Choulean

Ang Choulean (អាំង ជូលាន) (born 1 January 1949 in Kompong Kleang, Siem Reap) is a Cambodian anthropologist.

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Angus Donald

Angus Donald (born 1965 in China) is a British writer of historical fiction.

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Animatism

Animatism is a term coined by British anthropologist Robert Marett to refer to "a belief in a generalized, impersonal power over which people have some measure of control".

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Anita Álvarez de Williams

Anita Álvarez de Williams (born in Calexico, California in 1931) is an American anthropologist, photographer and historian.

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Anna Kingsley

Anna Madgigine Jai Kingsley (born Anta Madjiguene Ndiaye) (18 June 1793 – April or May 1870) was a West African slave from present-day Senegal turned slave trader and plantation owner’s wife, and then planter in early 19th-century Florida.

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Anna Lou Dehavenon

Anna Lou Dehavenon (November 24, 1926 – February 7, 2012) was an urban anthropologist.

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Anne Everett

Anne Everett (1943–2013) was an American artist from the Blue Ridge Mountains, Bedford county, Virginia.

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Annihilation (VanderMeer novel)

Annihilation is a 2014 novel by Jeff VanderMeer.

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Anoop Chandola

Anoop Chandola (born 24 December 1937) is an American linguist-anthropologist, originally from Pauri (Uttarakhand) India, where he was raised in a priestly Brahmin family.

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Antanas Poška

Antanas Paškevičius – Poška (– 16 October 1992) was a prominent Lithuanian traveler and anthropologist, as well as an active member of the Esperanto movement in Lithuania.

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Anthony Aveni

Anthony Francis Aveni (born 1938) is an American academic anthropologist, astronomer, and author, noted in particular for his extensive publications and leading contributions to the field of archaeoastronomy.

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Anthony D. Smith

Anthony David Stephen Smith (23 September 1939 – 19 July 2016) was a British historical sociologist who, at the time of his death, was Professor Emeritus of Nationalism and Ethnicity at the London School of Economics.

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Anthropology

Anthropology is the study of humans and human behaviour and societies in the past and present.

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Anthropology (disambiguation)

Anthropology, or Anthropologie in some languages, refers primarily to a science.

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Anthropomorphism

Anthropomorphism is the attribution of human traits, emotions, or intentions to non-human entities.

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Antoon Postma

Antoon Postma (28 March 1929 – 22 October 2016) was a Dutch anthropologist who married into and lived among the Hanunuo, a Mangyan sub-tribe in southeastern Mindoro, Philippines.

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Apache

The Apache are a group of culturally related Native American tribes in the Southwestern United States, which include the Chiricahua, Jicarilla, Lipan, Mescalero, Salinero, Plains and Western Apache.

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Apocalypto

Apocalypto is a 2006 American epic adventure film directed and produced by Mel Gibson and written by Gibson and Farhad Safinia.

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Aramis, or the Love of Technology

Aramis, or the Love of Technology, was written by French sociologist/anthropologist Bruno Latour.

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Archie Phinney

Archie Phinney (September 4, 1904 – October 29, 1949) was a Nez Perce Indian and an anthropologist.

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Arcot Ramachandran

Arcot Ramachandran is an Indian scientist, anthropologist, author and a former Under-Secretary General of United Nations Centre for Human Settlements, known for his scholarship on the subjects of heat and mass transfer and environment and his social commitment to the cause of sustainable development.

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Ardbraccan

Ardbraccan is an ancient place of Christian worship in County Meath, Ireland.

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Aris Poulianos

Aris Poulianos (born on July 24, 1924, in Ikaria) is a Greek anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Armando Marques Guedes

Armando Manuel de Barros Serra Marques Guedes (born September 9, 1952 in Lisbon, Portugal) is a political scientist, anthropologist and a former diplomat with expertise in international relations, political science, theory and philosophy, diplomacy, security and defence, and geopolitics.

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Arnold Ap

Arnold Ap (July 1, 1946 on Numfor Island – April 26, 1984 in Jayapura) was a West Papuan cultural leader, anthropologist and musician.

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Arnold Henry Savage Landor

Arnold Henry Savage Landor (2 June 1865 – 26 December 1924) was an English painter, explorer, writer, and anthropologist.

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Arshak Sarkissian

Arshak Sarkissian (born December 26, 1981 in Gyumri), is an Armenian painter artist.

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Artas, Bethlehem

Artas (أرطاس) is a Palestinian village located four kilometers southwest of Bethlehem in the Bethlehem Governorate in the central West Bank.

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Arthur Fauset

Arthur Huff Fauset (January 20, 1899 – September 2, 1983) was an American civil rights activist, anthropologist, folklorist, and educator.

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Arthur J. O. Anderson

Arthur James Outram Anderson (November 26, 1907 – June 3, 1996) was an American anthropologist specializing in Aztec culture and translator of the Nahuatl language.

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Arthur Keith

Sir Arthur Keith FRS (5 February 1866 – 7 January 1955) was a Scottish anatomist and anthropologist, and a proponent of scientific racism.

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Arthur Maurice Hocart

Arthur Maurice Hocart (26 April 1883, Etterbeek – 9 March 1939, Cairo) was an anthropologist best known for his eccentric and often far-seeing works on Polynesia, Melanesia and Sri Lanka.

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Arturo Escobar (anthropologist)

Arturo Escobar (born 1952) is a Colombian-American anthropologist and the Kenan Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA.

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Arudy

Arudy (Gascon: Arudi) is a commune in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region of south-western France.

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Ashley Montagu

Montague Francis Ashley-Montagu (June 28, 1905November 26, 1999), previously known as Israel Ehrenberg, was a British-American anthropologist who popularized the study of topics such as race and gender and their relation to politics and development.

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Association for the Recovery of Historical Memory

The Association for the Recovery of Historical Memory (Asociación para la Recuperación de la Memoria Histórica or ARMH in Spanish) is a Spanish organization that collects the oral and written testimonies about the White Terror of Francisco Franco and excavates and identifies their bodies that were often dumped in mass graves.

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Assyrian continuity

Assyrian continuity is the claim by modern Assyrians and supporting academics that they are at root the direct descendants of the Semitic inhabitants who spoke originally Akkadian and later Imperial Aramaic of ancient Assyria and its immediate surrounds.

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Assyrian nationalism

Assyrian nationalism or Assyrianism increased in popularity in the late 19th century in a climate of increasing ethnic and religious persecution of the indigenous Assyrians of what is today northern Iraq, south east Turkey and north west Iran (Upper Mesopotamia).

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Auguste Comte

Isidore Marie Auguste François Xavier Comte (19 January 1798 – 5 September 1857) was a French philosopher who founded the discipline of praxeology and the doctrine of positivism.

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Aureliano Oyarzún

Aureliano Oyarzún Navarro (b. 1858 – d. 1947) was a Chilean physician, who became an anthropologist through his study of early cultures in Chile, including the indigenous peoples of Tierra del Fuego.

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Austracantha

Austracantha is a genus of spider with a single species, Austracantha minax, commonly known as the jewel spider or the Christmas spider.

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Australasia

Australasia, a region of Oceania, comprises Australia, New Zealand, neighbouring islands in the Pacific Ocean and, sometimes, the island of New Guinea (which is usually considered to be part of Melanesia).

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Australian Anthropological Society

The Australian Anthropological Society (AAS) is the professional association representing anthropologists in Australia.

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Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies

The Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) is an independent Australian Government statutory authority.

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Australopithecus garhi

Australopithecus garhi is a 2.5-million-year-old gracile australopithecine species whose fossils were discovered in 1996 by a paleontologist research team led by Berhane Asfaw and Tim White.

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Ayten Aydın

Ayten Aydın, (born 1930, Konya, Turkey), civil engineer, anthropologist.

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Azande witchcraft

Witchcraft among the Azande (Zande people) is evil magic used to inflict harm on an individual and is the cause of all unusual or terrible events that take place.

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Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca

Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca (Jerez de la Frontera, 1488/1490/1492"Cabeza de Vaca, Alvar Núñez (1492?-1559?)." American Eras. Vol. 1: Early American Civilizations and Exploration to 1600. Detroit: Gale, 1997. 50-51. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Web. 10 Dec. 2014.Seville, 1557/1558/1559/1560"Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2014. Web. 08 Dec. 2014.) was a Spanish explorer of the New World, and one of four survivors of the 1527 Narváez expedition.

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Baba of Karo

Baba of Karo is a 1954 book by the anthropologist Mary F. Smith.

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Baka people (Cameroon and Gabon)

The Baka people, known in the Congo as Bayaka (Bebayaka, Bebayaga, Bibaya), are an ethnic group inhabiting the southeastern rain forests of Cameroon, northern Republic of Congo, northern Gabon, and southwestern Central African Republic.

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Bal Gopal Shrestha

Bal Gopal Shrestha is a cultural anthropologist based in the Netherlands.

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Balinese art

Balinese art is art of Hindu-Javanese origin that grew from the work of artisans of the Majapahit Kingdom, with their expansion to Bali in the late 14th century.

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Barbara Freire-Marreco

Barbara Freire-Marreco (1879–1967) was an English anthropologist and folklorist.

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Barbara Myerhoff

Barbara Myerhoff (February 16, 1935 – January 7, 1985) was an American anthropologist and filmmaker, and founder of the Center for Visual Anthropology at the University of Southern California.

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Barbara Smuts

Barbara B. Smuts is an American anthropologist and psychologist noted for her research into baboons, dolphins, and chimpanzees.

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Barbeau Peak

Barbeau Peak is a mountain in Qikiqtaaluk, Nunavut, Canada.

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Bare Bones (novel)

Bare Bones is the sixth novel by Kathy Reichs starring forensic anthropologist, Temperance Brennan.

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Barleywood Female University

Barleywood Female University was a short-lived women's college in Rochester, New York.

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Barrera

Barrera is a Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and surname, meaning "barrier".

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Barrik Van Winkle

Barrik Van Winkle is an American linguistic and legal anthropologist who has done research on the language and culture of the Washoe Nation and on gang violence in the United States.

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Barry Sautman

Barry Sautman (or Barry Victor Sautman) (born in 1949) is a professor with the Division of Social Science at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

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Bay Miwok

The Bay Miwok are a cultural and linguistic group of Miwok, a Native American people in Northern California who live in Contra Costa County.

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Beardmore Relics

The Beardmore Relics are a cache of Viking Age artifacts, said to have been unearthed near Beardmore, Ontario, Canada, in the 1930s.

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Beatrice Blackwood

Beatrice Mary Blackwood (3 May 1889 – 29 November 1975) was a British anthropologist, who ran the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford from 1938 until her retirement in 1959.

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Beatriz Góis Dantas

Beatriz Góis Dantas (b. 1 December 1941) is a Brazilian anthropologist, folklorist, sociologist, writer, and professor emeritus of Anthropology at the Federal University of Sergipe.

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Beaune

Beaune is the wine capital of Burgundy in the Côte d'Or department in eastern France.

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Bechukotai

Bechukotai, Bechukosai, or B'hukkothai (— Hebrew for "by my decrees," the second word, and the first distinctive word, in the parashah) is the 33rd weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the 10th and last in the Book of Leviticus.

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Behnam Abu alsoof

Behnam Nasser Nuaman Abu alsouf (بهنام أبو الصوف) (born 1931 in Mosul Iraq-2012) Iraqi archaeologist, anthropologist, historian and writer, he born in Mosul to Christian Syriac family, He completed his elementary and junior high in the city of Mosul, He earned a BA in Archaeology and civilization of the Faculty of Arts, University of Baghdad in 1955, he completed graduate studies at the University of Cambridge, England, and received his doctorate degree in Archaeology and the nucleus of civilization and anthropology in the autumn of 1966, he was at the point scientifically rescue excavations on a wide basin in the Hemrin Dam (in Diyala province), and Mosul Dam on the Tigris River in the late seventies to mid-eighties of the last century, He revealed several archaeological sites in Iraq, including Tel sewan in Samarra in Salahuddin province This site was from the Stone Age, Also he led his work at the site of Qainj Agha near Erbil Castle settlers to detect a wide range of Uruk period, with two temples serve those in charge amid a residential neighborhood on the bench of Adobe constitute the beginnings of ziggurats (towers included) in Mesopotamia.

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Belief

Belief is the state of mind in which a person thinks something to be the case with or without there being empirical evidence to prove that something is the case with factual certainty.

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Beloit College

Beloit College is a private liberal arts college in Beloit, Wisconsin.

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Ben Finney

Ben Rudolph Finney (October 1, 1933 – May 23, 2017) was an American anthropologist known for his expertise in the history and the cultural and social anthropology of surfing, Polynesian navigation, and canoe sailing, as well as in the cultural and social anthropology of human space colonization.

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Bengt Danielsson

Bengt Emmerik Danielsson (6 July 1921 – 4 July 1997) was a Swedish anthropologist and a crew member on the ''Kon-Tiki'' raft expedition from South America to French Polynesia in 1947.

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Benton Johnson

Benton Johnson (born 1928) is an American sociologist and professor emeritus of the University of Oregon's Department of Sociology.

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Beothuk

The Beothuk (or; also spelled Beothuck) were an indigenous people based on the island of Newfoundland.

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Beothuk language

The Beothuk language, also called Beothukan, was spoken by the indigenous Beothuk people of Newfoundland.

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Berava (people)

Berava are a social group or caste amongst the Sinhalese of Sri Lanka.

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Bernard Bernier

Bernard Bernier (born 1942) is a Canadian anthropologist and Full Professor at the University of Montreal, where he has been working since January 1970.

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Bernard Sahlins

Bernard "Bernie" Sahlins (August 20, 1922 – June 16, 2013) was an American writer, director and comedian best known as a founder of The Second City improvisational comedy troupe with Paul Sills and Howard Alk in 1959.

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Bernardino de Sahagún

Bernardino de Sahagún (c. 1499 – October 23, 1590) was a Franciscan friar, missionary priest and pioneering ethnographer who participated in the Catholic evangelization of colonial New Spain (now Mexico).

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Bernardo Arriaza

Dr.

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Bernhard Helander

Bernhard Helander (born 1958, death 2001) was an anthropologist and well known Scholar on Somalia.

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Bertha Marian Skeat

Bertha Marian Skeat or Bertha Skeat (30 December 1861 – 2 December 1948) was a British writer and schoolmistress.

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Berthold Laufer

Berthold Laufer (October 11, 1874 – September 13, 1934) was an anthropologist and historical geographer with an expertise in East Asian languages.

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Bertil Lundman

Bertil J. Lundman (September 28, 1899, Malmö – November 5, 1993) was a Swedish anthropologist.

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Bettina Hauge

Bettina Hauge (born 1964) is a Danish anthropologist whose work is concerned with the social implications of natural phenomena such as wind, water and above all light.

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Betty Meehan

Betty Francis Meehan (born 1933) is an Australian archaeologist and anthropologist who has worked extensively with Aboriginal tribes in Arnhem Land.

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Bill Maurer

Bill Maurer is a legal and economic anthropologist.

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Biloxi people

The Biloxi tribe are Native Americans of the Siouan language family.

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Bindibu expedition

The Bindibu expedition was a series of three field trips mounted by anthropologist Donald Thomson to meet with and learn from Pintupi Indigenous Australians between 1957 and 1965.

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Bing Xin

Xie Wanying (October 5, 1900 – February 28, 1999), better known by her pen name Bing Xin or Xie Bingxin, was one of the most prolific Chinese writers of the 20th Century.

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Birchgrove, New South Wales

Birchgrove is a suburb in the Inner West of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia.

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Birgit Zotz

Birgit Zotz (born 7 August 1979) is an Austrian writer, cultural anthropologist and an expert on the subject of hospitality management studies.

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Birutė Galdikas

Birutė Marija Filomena Galdikas, OC (born 10 May 1946), is a Lithuanian-Canadian anthropologist, primatologist, conservationist, ethologist, and author.

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Bjørn Thomassen

Bjørn Thomassen (born 1968, Denmark) is an anthropologist and social scientist.

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Black flight

Black flight is a term applied to the out-migration of African Americans from predominantly black or mixed inner-city areas in the United States to suburbs and outlying edge cities of newer home construction.

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Black Hebrew Israelites

Black Hebrew Israelites (also called Black Hebrews, African Hebrew Israelites, and Hebrew Israelites) are groups of Black Americans who believe that they are descendants of the ancient Israelites.

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Blackfoot Confederacy

The Blackfoot Confederacy, Niitsitapi or Siksikaitsitapi (ᖹᐟᒧᐧᒣᑯ, meaning "the people" or "Blackfoot-speaking real people"Compare to Ojibwe: Anishinaabeg and Quinnipiac: Eansketambawg) is a historic collective name for the four bands that make up the Blackfoot or Blackfeet people: three First Nation band governments in the provinces of Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia, and one federally recognized Native American tribe in Montana, United States.

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Božina Ivanović

Božina M. Ivanović (Serbian Cyrillic: Божина М. Ивановић) (31 December 1931 – 10 October 2002) was a Montenegrin anthropologist and politician.

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Bolivar Trask

Bolivar Trask is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

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Bone Clones

Bone Clones, Inc. manufactures, distributes, and sells osteological reproductions of human and animal bones.

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Bonnie McCay

Bonnie McCay is an anthropologist and Board of Governors Distinguished Service Professor Emerita at Rutgers University.

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Bonnie Nardi

Bonnie Nardi is a professor in the Department of Informatics at the University of California, Irvine, where she leads the TechDec research lab in the areas of Human-Computer Interaction and computer-supported cooperative work.

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Bonno Thoden van Velzen

Prof.

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Brachygastra lecheguana

Brachygastra lecheguana (Latreille 1824), formerly known as Nectarina lecheguana,Bequaert, J.Q. (1932).

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Brackette Williams

Brackette F. Williams is an American anthropologist, and Senior Justice Advocate, Open Society Institute.

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Brain Games (National Geographic)

Brain Games is a popular science television series that explores cognitive science by focusing on illusions, psychological experiments, and counterintuitive thinking.

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Bramham, West Yorkshire

Bramham is a village in the civil parish of Bramham Oglethorpe in the City of Leeds metropolitan borough, West Yorkshire, England.

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Brazilianist

Brazilianist (also Brasilianist, Brasilianista or Brazilianista) typically is a non-Brazilian scholar, usually but not exclusively from North America, who specializes in studying, researching, teaching and publishing about Brazilian history, geography, culture, politics and/or language(s).

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Breaker Morant

Harry "Breaker" Harbord Morant (9 December 1864 – 27 February 1902) was an Anglo-Australian drover, horseman, bush poet, military officer and convicted war criminal.

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Bride price

Bride price, bridewealth, or bride token, is money, property, or other form of wealth paid by a groom or his family to the family of the woman he will be married or is just about to marry.

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Brigantine, New Jersey

Brigantine is an island city in Atlantic County, New Jersey, United States.

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Broca's Brain

Broca's Brain: Reflections on the Romance of Science is a 1979 book by astrophysicist Carl Sagan.

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Bronisław Malinowski

Bronisław Kasper Malinowski (7 April 1884 – 16 May 1942) was a Polish-British anthropologist, often considered one of the most important 20th-century anthropologists.

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Bronisław Piłsudski

Bronisław Piotr Piłsudski (Zalavas, 2 November 1866 – Paris, 17 May 1918), brother of Józef Piłsudski, was a Polish cultural anthropologist who conducted research on the indigenous people like Ainu, Oroks and Nivkhs on Sakhalin Island.

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Brooklyn Island

Brooklyn Island is an island long, lying south of Nansen Island in the eastern part of Wilhelmina Bay, off the west coast of Graham Land.

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Brownsville, Pennsylvania

Brownsville is a borough in Fayette County, Pennsylvania, United States, first settled in 1785 as the site of a trading post a few years after the pacification of the Iroquois enabled a post-Revolutionary war resumption of westward migration.

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Bruce Elliot Tapper

Bruce Elliot Tapper (born in the United States) is a Telugu anthropologist and writer.

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Bruno Beger

Bruno Beger (27 April 1911 – 12 October 2009) was a German racial anthropologist, ethnologist, and explorer who worked for the Ahnenerbe.

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Buhl Woman

Buhla is the name for a skeleton of a prehistoric (Paleo-Indian) woman found in a quarry near Buhl, Idaho, United States, in January 1989.

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Burleigh B. Gardner

Burleigh Bradford Gardner (December 4, 1902 Winnetka, Illinois January 12, 1985) was an early American anthropologist, and co-founding chairman of Social Research Inc.,"" in: Chicago Tribune News, January 14, 1988 known for his pioneering work in the field of motivation research and quantitative marketing research.

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Burundi Black

"Burundi Black" is a 1971 recording credited to Burundi Steiphenson Black.

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Bush medicine

Bush medicine, also called traditional medicine, is the sum of the total knowledge, skills and practices based on the theories, beliefs and experiences indigenous to different cultures, whether explicable or not, used in the maintenance of health as well as in the prevention, diagnosis, improvement or treatment of physical and mental illness.

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Byron Khun de Prorok

"Count" Byron Khun de Prorok (1896–1954, born in Philadelphia as Francis Byron Kuhn) was a Hungarian-American amateur archaeologist, anthropologist, and author of four heroic travelogues.

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C. Hayavadana Rao

Rao Bahadur Conjeevaram Hayavadana Rao (10 July 1865 – 27 January 1946) was an Indian historian, museologist, anthropologist, economist and polyglot.

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Caldera

A caldera is a large cauldron-like depression that forms following the evacuation of a magma chamber/reservoir.

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Camberwell

Camberwell is a district of south London, England, within the London Borough of Southwark.

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Camilla Marazzi

Camilla Marazzi (26 April 1885 in Lugano, Switzerland - October 1911 in Rome) was an Italian artist who died at a young age.

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Camilla Wedgwood

Camilla Hildegarde Wedgwood (25 March 1901 - 17 May 1955) was a British anthropologist and academic administrator.

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Cannibalism in popular culture

Cannibalism in popular culture is a recurring theme, especially within the horror genre, and has featured in a range of media that includes film, television, literature, music and video games.

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Captivity narrative

Captivity narratives are usually stories of people captured by enemies whom they consider uncivilized, or whose beliefs and customs they oppose.

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Carl Henrik Langebaek

Carl Henrik Langebaek Rueda (Bogotá, 1961) is a Colombian anthropologist, archaeologist and historian.

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Carl Vilhelm Hartman

Carl Vilhelm Hartman (19 August 1862 – 19 June 1941), was a Swedish botanist and anthropologist.

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Carleton Beals

Carleton Beals (November 13, 1893 – April 4, 1979) was an American journalist, author, historian, and political activist with special interests in Latin America.

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Carlo Severi

Carlo Severi (born December 9, 1952) is an Italian anthropologist who is Professor at the (EHESS).

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Carlo Tullio Altan

Carlo Tullio Altan (30 March 1916 – 15 February 2005) was an Italian anthropologist, sociologist and philosopher.

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Carlos Navarrete Cáceres

Carlos Alberto Navarrete Cáceres (born January 29, 1931 in Quetzaltenango, Guatemala) is an anthropologist and writer.

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Carmen Bernand

Carmen Bernand (born Carmen Muñoz on 19 September 1939) is a French historian and anthropologist.

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Carol Beckwith

Carol Beckwith (born November 12, 1945) is an American photographer, author, and artist known for her photojournalism documenting the indigenous tribal cultures of Africa, most notably in partnership with Australian photographer Angela Fisher.

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Carol Palmer

Carol Palmer is a British anthropologist, environmental archaeologist and botanist.

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Carol R. Ember

Carol R. Ember (born July 7, 1943) is an American cultural anthropologist, Cross-cultural researcher and a writer of books on anthropology.

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Caroline Humphrey

Dame Caroline Humphrey, Lady Rees of Ludlow, (née Waddington; born 1 September 1943) is a British anthropologist and academic.

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Caroline Wilkinson

Caroline M. Wilkinson FRSE (born 27 October 1965) is a British anthropologist who has been a professor at the Liverpool John Moores University's School of Art and Design since 2014.

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Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban

Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban is an anthropologist (accessed 28 March 2014) and Sudanist and a co-founder and past president of the Sudan Studies Association.

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Carolyn Hamilton (historian)

Carolyn Hamilton is a South African anthropologist and historian who is a specialist in the history and uses of archives.

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Casa Malpaís

Casa Malpaís is an archaeological site of the Ancient Pueblo Peoples located near the town of Springerville, Arizona.

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Caterina Magni

Caterina Magni (born 1966) is an Italian-born French archaeologist and anthropologist, who specialises in the study of pre-Columbian cultures of Mesoamerica, and in particular the iconography, art and mythology and religion of the Olmec civilization.

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Catharine McClellan

Catharine “Kitty” McClellan (March 1, 1921 - March 3, 2009) is a cultural anthropologist who is known for her documentation of the oral history and storytelling typical of Athabascan speaking, Tlingit and Tagish peoples of the Yukon Territory.

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Catherine L. Besteman

Catherine Lowe Besteman is an anthropologist and holds the position of Francis F. Bartlett and Ruth K. Bartlett Professor of Anthropology at Colby College in Waterville, Maine.

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Catherine Lutz

Catherine Lutz is an American anthropologist and Thomas J. Watson, Jr.

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Cenozoic Research Laboratory

The Cenozoic Research Laboratory of the Geological Survey of China was established within the Peking Union Medical College in 1928 by Canadian paleoanthropologist Davidson Black and Chinese geologists Ding Wenjing and Weng Wenhao for the research and appraisal of Peking Man fossils unearthed at Zhoukoudian.

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Center for Advanced Judaic Studies

The Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies (CAJS or "the Katz Center") at the University of Pennsylvania is the world's first and only institution exclusively dedicated to post-doctoral research on Jewish Civilization.

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Center for Humans and Nature

The Center for Humans and Nature is a nonprofit, non-partisan organization with a mission to explore and promote human responsibilities in relation to nature.

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Central Philippine University

Central Philippine University (also referred to as Central or CPU) is a private research university in Iloilo City, Philippines. Established in 1905 through a grant given by the American business magnate, industrialist and philanthropist John D. Rockefeller under the auspices of the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society, it is the first Baptist founded and second American university in the Philippines and AsiaScientia et Fides: The Story of Central Philippine University by Nelson Linnea, A. and Herradura, Elma (1981) (after Silliman University (1901) in Dumaguete). It initially consisted of two separate schools: the Jaro Industrial School for boys and the Baptist Missionary Training School that trains ministers and other Christian workers.. Retrieved 4 April 2015.. Retrieved 4 April 2015.. Retrieved 4 April 2015.. Retrieved 4 April 2015.. Retrieved 4 April 2015. In 1913, women began to be admitted to the school for boys, and in 1920 the school started offering high school education. The school for boys became a junior college and started offering college degrees in 1923 and changed its name to Central Philippine College. In 1936 the junior college became a senior college and two years after it in 1938, the Baptist Missionary Training School merged with the theology department of the college.. Retrieved 7 June 2015 In 1953, the college attained university status.. Retrieved 03-18-14. Iloilo Mission Hospital, the university's hospital which was established in 1901 by the Presbyterian Americans, is the first American and Protestant founded hospital in the Philippines, predates the founding of CPU by four years.. Retrieved 4 May 2014.. Retrieved 4 May 2014 Central pioneered nursing education in the Philippines, when Presbyterian American missionaries established the Union Mission Hospital Training School for Nurses in 1906.https://www.scribd.com/doc/15885553/Pioneer-Nursing-Schools-and-Colleges-in-the-Philippines. Retrieved 12-18-13.. Retrieved 12-18-13. In the same year, the CPU Republic (Central Philippine University Republic), the university's official student governing body, was organized, making it as the first established student governing body in South East Asia.http://cpu.edu.ph/academics/studentactivities.php Central was also the first institution to pioneer the work-study program in the country that were later patterned and followed by other institutions. The university maintains to be non-sectarian and independent but affiliated with the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches and maintains fraternal ties with the International Ministries of the American Baptist Churches, known before as the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society. CPU consists of eighteen schools and colleges that provides instruction in basic education all the way up to the post-graduate levels. In the undergraduate and graduate levels, its disciplines include accountancy, agriculture, arts and sciences, business, computer studies, education, engineering, hospitality management, law, mass communication, medical laboratory science, medicine, nursing, pharmacy, lifestyle and fitness, real estate management, rehabilitative science, tourism, and theology. The Commission on Higher Education (CHED Philippines) has granted the University a full autonomous status, the same government agency that accredited some of its programs as Centers of Excellence and Centers of Development. Retrieved January-2-2016.,Effective 22 October 2001 to 21 October 2006, Central Philippine University (CPU) was full autonomous as granted by the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) through Memorandum Order No. 32, Series of 2001.. Retrieved 05-02-12 The Department of Science and Technology (Philippines) has designated the university's College of Engineering both as (DOST) Department of Science and Technology School and Center for Civil Engineering Education for Western Visayas region. Central is a registered National Historical Landmark by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines. The annual prestigious national Bombo Music Festival is hosted by the university and is held at the university's Rose Memorial Auditorium.. Retrieved.. Retrieved.. Retrieved.. Retrieved. Also, the university has been designated as a Regional Art Center (or Kaisa sa Sining Regional Art Center) by the Cultural Center of the Philippines. It has also been certified as one of the few ISO certified educational institutions in the Philippines by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). The Board of International Ministries of the American Baptist Churches likewise on the other hand, has awarded Central a School of Excellence award. International collaborations with other institutions has made CPU to offer international undergraduate, graduate and doctorate extension programs in Chinese, Korean and Vietnamese universities, especially through the overseas programs offered by the university jointly with the Thai Nguyen University (TNU) and Thai Nguyen University of Economics and Business Administration (TUEBA) both in Vietnam.. Retrieved 4 December 2014. Retrieved 08-11-13.

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Cevin Soling

Cevin Daniel Soling (pronounced "KEV-in SO-ling") (born August 5, 1966) is an American writer, filmmaker, philosopher, musician, music producer and artist.

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Chad Oliver

Symmes Chadwick Oliver (30 March 1928 – 9 August 1993) was an American anthropologist and science fiction and Western writer.

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Chambri people

Chambri (previously spelled Tchambuli) are an ethnic group in the Chambri Lakes region in the East Sepik province of Papua New Guinea.

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Chantal Boulanger

Chantal Boulanger-Maloney (January 4, 1957 – December 27, 2004) was an anthropologist who wrote widely on South India and Tamil culture, including on the myriad of ways to wrap a Sari, documenting over 100.

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Chantek

Chantek (December 17, 1977 – August 7, 2017), born at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, was a male hybrid Sumatran/Bornean orangutan who mastered the use of a number of intellectual skills, including American Sign Language (ASL), taught by American anthropologists Lyn Miles and Ann Southcombe.

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Characters of the Cthulhu Mythos

The following characters appear in H.P. Lovecraft's story cycle — the Cthulhu Mythos.

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Charles E. Dibble

Charles E. Dibble (18 August 1909 – 30 November 2002) was an American academic, anthropologist, linguist, and scholar of pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures.

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Charles F. Voegelin

Charles (Carl) Frederick Voegelin (or C. F. Voegelin) (January 14, 1906 – May 22, 1986) was an American linguist and anthropologist.

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Charles H. Fairbanks

Charles Herron Fairbanks (June 3, 1913 – July 17, 1984) was an archaeologist/anthropologist.

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Charles Harrison McNutt

Charles Harrison McNutt (born December 11, 1928 in Denver, Colorado) is an American archaeologist and a scholar of the prehistoric Southeastern United States.

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Charles Kingsley Meek

Charles Kingsley Meek FRAI FRGS (1885–1965), was a British anthropologist.

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Charles Miller Leslie

Charles Miller Leslie was an American medical anthropologist, who was an avid contributor of published works in his branch of anthropology.

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Charles P. Mountford

Charles Pearcy Mountford (8 May 189016 November 1976) was an Australian anthropologist and photographer.

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Charles Ramble

Charles Albert Edward Ramble (born 1957) is an anthropologist and former University Lecturer in Tibetan and Himalayan Studies at the Oriental Institute, Oxford University.

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Charlotte Viall Wiser

Charlotte Melina Viall Wiser (1892–1981), born Charlotte Melina Viall, was an American anthropologist, and a Presbyterian rural-missionary to North India – Uttar Pradesh.

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Chauhan

Chauhan, Chouhan, Chohan, or Chohhan, is a Rajput caste from northern and western India.

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Cheikh Anta Diop

Cheikh Anta Diop (29 December 1923 – 7 February 1986) was a Senegalese historian, anthropologist, physicist, and politician who studied the human race's origins and pre-colonial African culture.

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Cheikh Anta Diop University

Cheikh Anta Diop University (Université Cheikh Anta Diop or UCAD), also known as the University of Dakar, is a university in Dakar, Senegal.

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Chellian

In geology, and archeology, Chellian or Chellean was the name given by the French anthropologist G. de Mortillet to the first epoch of the Quaternary period when the earliest human remains were discovered.

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Cherokee

The Cherokee (translit or translit) are one of the indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands.

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Cherokee history

Cherokee history draws upon the oral traditions and written history of the Cherokee people, who are currently enrolled in the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, Cherokee Nation, and United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians, living predominantly in North Carolina and Oklahoma.

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Chiara Ottaviano

Chiara Ottaviano, (Ragusa, 1955) is an Italian historian, writer and film director.

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Chicago school (sociology)

In sociology and later criminology, the Chicago school (sometimes described as the ecological school) was the first major body of works emerging during the 1920s and 1930s specializing in urban sociology, and the research into the urban environment by combining theory and ethnographic fieldwork in Chicago, now applied elsewhere.

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Chief Culture Officer

Chief Culture Officer (2009) is the eighth book by Canadian author and anthropologist Grant McCracken.

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Children's street culture

Children's street culture refers to the cumulative culture created by young children.

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China Misperceived

China Misperceived: American Illusions and Chinese Reality is a non-fiction book by the American sinologist and cultural anthropologist Steven W. Mosher.

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Chinampa

Chinampa (chināmitl) is a type of Mesoamerican agriculture which used small, rectangular areas of fertile arable land to grow crops on the shallow lake beds in the Valley of Mexico.

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Chinookan peoples

Chinookan peoples include several groups of indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest in the United States who speak the Chinookan languages.

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Choctaw

The Choctaw (in the Choctaw language, Chahta)Common misspellings and variations in other languages include Chacta, Tchakta and Chocktaw.

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Chosen people

Throughout history, various groups of people have considered themselves to be chosen people by a deity for a purpose, such as to act as the deity's agent on earth.

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Christian Frei

Christian Frei (born 1959 in Schönenwerd, Solothurn) is a Swiss filmmaker and film producer.

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Christian Giordano

Christian Giordano (born October 27, 1945) is a Swiss anthropologist and sociologist born in Lugano, Switzerland.

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Christian Lorenz

Christian "Flake" Lorenz (born 16 November 1966) is a German musician, notable as the keyboardist for the Neue Deutsche Härte band Rammstein.

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Christian Rätsch

Christian Rätsch (born 1957) is a German anthropologist and writer on topics like ethnopharmacology, psychoactive plants and animals.

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Christianity and violence

Christians have held diverse views towards violence and non-violence through time.

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Christina Warinner

Christina Warinner is an American anthropologist best known for her research on the evolution of ancient microbiomes.

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Christoph Theodor Aeby

Christoph Theodor Aeby (25 February 1835 – 7 July 1885) was a Swiss anatomist and anthropologist, born in Phalsbourg, Lorraine, France.

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Christopher C. Fennell

Christopher C. Fennell (born c. 1964) is an American anthropologist and lawyer, an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

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Christopher Pinney

Christopher Pinney is an anthropologist and art historian, and Professor of Anthropology and Visual Culture at University College London.

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Christy G. Turner II

Christy G. Turner II (November 28, 1933, Columbia, Missouri – July 27, 2013, Tempe, Arizona) was an American anthropologist known for his research on dental anthropology, perimortem taphonomy, and his theories about the populating of the American continent in three migrating waves from Northeast Asia, which received support from genetic research.

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Chronique d'un été

Chronique d'un été ("Chronicle of a Summer") is a 1961 French documentary film shot during the summer of 1960 by sociologist Edgar Morin and anthropologist and filmmaker Jean Rouch, with the technical and aesthetic collaboration of Québécois director-cameraman Michel Brault.

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Church of Saint Francis of Assisi (Ouro Preto)

The Church of Saint Francis of Assisi is a Rococo Catholic church in Ouro Preto, Brazil.

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Clara Passafari

Professor Clara Passafari de Gutiérrez (20 March 1930 – 1994) was an Argentine ethnologist, anthropologist, writer and poet.

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Clarisa Hardy

Clarisa Rut Hardy Raskovan (Buenos Aires, December 15, 1945) is an Argentinian-born psychologist, anthropologist, writer and politician from Chile, Minister for Social Development and Planning during the first term of Michelle Bachelet.

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Claude Lévi-Strauss

Claude Lévi-Strauss (28 November 1908, Brussels – 30 October 2009, Paris) was a French anthropologist and ethnologist whose work was key in the development of the theory of structuralism and structural anthropology.

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Claude Nelson Warren

Claude Nelson Warren (born 1932) is a California Desert anthropologist and specialist in early humans in the Far West and has been instrumental in defining the San Dieguito and La Jolla cultural complexes.

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Claudia Müller-Ebeling

Claudia Müller-Ebeling (born 1956), is a German anthropologist and art historian.

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Clellan S. Ford

Clellan Stearns Ford (27 July 1909 – 4 November 1972) was an American anthropologist, best known as Professor of Anthropology at Yale University, and as co-author of the 1951 book Patterns of Sexual Behavior.

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Clifford Geertz

Clifford James Geertz (August 23, 1926 – October 30, 2006) was an American anthropologist who is remembered mostly for his strong support for and influence on the practice of symbolic anthropology, and who was considered "for three decades...the single most influential cultural anthropologist in the United States." He served until his death as professor emeritus at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton.

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Climate governance

In political ecology and environmental policy, climate governance is the diplomacy, mechanisms and response measures "aimed at steering social systems towards preventing, mitigating or adapting to the risks posed by climate change".

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Clinton, Ontario

Clinton is a community in the Canadian province of Ontario, located in the municipality of Central Huron.

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Clive Gamble

Clive S. Gamble, (born 1951) is a British archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Columbus Day

Columbus Day is a national holiday in many countries of the Americas and elsewhere which officially celebrates the anniversary of Christopher Columbus's arrival in the Americas on October 12, 1492.

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Commemorative coins of Poland: 2002

Poland has a rich selection of gold and silver commemorative coins.

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Comparative mythology

Comparative mythology is the comparison of myths from different cultures in an attempt to identify shared themes and characteristics.

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Competition

Competition is, in general, a contest or rivalry between two or more entities, organisms, animals, individuals, economic groups or social groups, etc., for territory, a niche, for scarce resources, goods, for mates, for prestige, recognition, for awards, for group or social status, or for leadership and profit.

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Compulsory sterilization

Compulsory sterilization, also known as forced or coerced sterilization, programs are government policies which force people to undergo surgical or other sterilization.

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Confirmed Dead

"Confirmed Dead" is the second episode of the fourth season of ABC's serial television drama Lost and the 74th episode overall.

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Conservation refugee

Conservation refugees are people, usually indigenous, who are displaced from their native lands when conservation areas are created, such as parks and other protected areas.

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Constanza Ceruti

María Constanza Ceruti (born 11 January 1973 in Buenos Aires, Argentina) is an Argentinian high-altitude archaeologist and anthropologist who has done more than 80 field surveys, most of them with National Geographic teams in Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru.

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Constitution

A constitution is a set of fundamental principles or established precedents according to which a state or other organization is governed.

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Contemporary Islamic philosophy

Contemporary Islamic philosophy revives some of the trends of medieval Islamic philosophy, notably the tension between Mutazilite and Asharite views of ethics in science and law, and the duty of Muslims and role of Islam in the sociology of knowledge and in forming ethical codes and legal codes, especially the fiqh (or "jurisprudence") and rules of jihad (or "just war").

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Cooking

Cooking or cookery is the art, technology, science and craft of preparing food for consumption.

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Cora Du Bois

Cora Alice Du Bois (October 26, 1903 – April 7, 1991) was an American cultural anthropologist and a key figure in culture and personality studies and in psychological anthropology more generally.

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Cornplanter Medal

The Cornplanter Medal is an award for scholastic and other contributions to the betterment of knowledge of the Iroquois people.

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COWI A/S

COWI A/S is an international consulting group, specialising in engineering, environmental science and economics, based in Lyngby, Denmark.

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Craniometry

Craniometry is measurement of the cranium (the main part of the skull), usually the human cranium.

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Criticism of science

Criticism of science addresses and refines problems within science in order to improve science as a whole and its role in society.

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Cross Bones (novel)

Cross Bones is the eighth novel by Kathy Reichs starring forensic anthropologist, Temperance Brennan.

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Cross-cultural

Cross-cultural may refer to.

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Crystal skull

The crystal skulls are human skull hardstone carvings made of clear or milky white quartz (also called "rock crystal"), claimed to be pre-Columbian Mesoamerican artifacts by their alleged finders; however, these claims have been refuted for all of the specimens made available for scientific studies.

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Cubicle

A cubicle is a partially enclosed office workspace that is separated from neighboring workspaces by partitions that are usually tall.

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Cueva de la Pileta

Cueva de la Pileta (Cave of the Pool in English) is a cave in the province of Málaga (Spain) which has cave paintings and was discovered in 1905.

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Cuisine of the United States

The cuisine of the United States reflects its history.

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Cultural translation

Cultural translation represents the practice of translation, which involves cultural differences.

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Culturally modified tree

Culturally modified tree (aka CMT) is a term which describes the modification of a tree by indigenous people as part of their tradition.

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Culture and positive psychology

Cultural differences can interact with positive psychology to create great variation, potentially impacting positive psychology interventions.

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Culture of Angola

The culture of Angola is influenced by the Portuguese.

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Culture of Denmark

The culture of Denmark has a rich intellectual and artistic heritage.

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Culture of the Marquesas Islands

The Marquesas Islands were colonized by seafaring Polynesians as early as 300 AD, thought to originate from Samoa.

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Curt Nimuendajú

Curt Unckel, also known as Curt Nimuendajú (18 April 1883 – 10 December 1945), was a German-Brazilian ethnologist, anthropologist and writer.

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Cusabo

The Cusabo or Corsaboy were a group of historic Native American tribes who lived along the coast of the Atlantic Ocean in what is now South Carolina, approximately between present-day Charleston and south to the Savannah River, at the time of European encounter.

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Cyril Belshaw

Cyril Shirley Belshaw (born December 3, 1921 in New Zealand) is an anthropologist, and was professor of anthropology at the University of British Columbia (UBC) from 1953 until his retirement in 1987.

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Da Sweet Blood of Jesus

Da Sweet Blood of Jesus is a 2014 American horror film directed by directed by Spike Lee.

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Dan Hicks (archaeologist)

Dan Hicks FSA, MCIfA (born 1972 in Durham, England) is a British archaeologist and anthropologist, and is Associate Professor and Curator at the University of Oxford.

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Dangaria Kandha

The Dangaria Kandha or Dongria Kondh people are members of the Kondhs, of the Munda ethnic group.

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Daniel Martin Varisco

Daniel Martin Varisco (born 1951 in Strongsville, Ohio), is an anthropologist and historian.

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Daniel Ortega

José Daniel Ortega Saavedra (born November 11, 1945) is a Nicaraguan politician serving as President of Nicaragua since 2007; previously he was leader of Nicaragua from 1979 to 1990, first as Coordinator of the Junta of National Reconstruction (1979–1985) and then as President (1985–1990).

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Daniel Owen Stolpe

Daniel Owen Stolpe (born November 14, 1939) is an American artist, painter, sculptor, print maker, fine art book publisher, poetry book illustrator and founder of Native Images Editions, Santa Cruz, California.

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Daphne Berdahl

Daphne Berdahl (June 14, 1964 – October 5, 2007) was an anthropologist known for her work on Eastern Germany and Post-socialist Europe.

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Darcy Ribeiro

Darcy Ribeiro (October 26, 1922 – February 17, 1997) was a Brazilian anthropologist, author and politician.

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Darrell A. Posey

Darrell Addison Posey (March 14, 1947 – March 6, 2001) was an American anthropologist and biologist who vitalized the study of traditional knowledge of indigenous and folk populations in Brazil and other countries.

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Daryll Forde

Cyril Daryll Forde (16 March 1902 – 3 May 1973) was a British anthropologist and Africanist.

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Dave Fredrickson

David Allen "Dave" Fredrickson (August 11, 1927 – August 28, 2012) was an American archaeologist, anthropologist, and folk singer.

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Davi Kopenawa Yanomami

Davi Kopenawa Yanomami, name also written Davi Kobenawä Yanomamö (born Toototobi, Brazil, c. 1956), is a Yanomami shaman and Portuguese-speaking spokesperson for the Yanomami Indians in Brazil.

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David Aberle

David F. Aberle (1918–2004) was an American born anthropologist.

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David Carrasco

Davíd Lee Carrasco (born November 21, 1944) is a Mexican-American academic historian of religion, anthropologist, and Mesoamericanist scholar.

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David Crockett Graham

David Crockett Graham (葛維漢, Ge Weihan), D.Sc., Ph.D., B.D., F.R.G.S. (21 March 1884 – 15 September 1961) was a polymath American Baptist minister and missionary, educator, author, archeologist, anthropologist, naturalist and field collector in Szechuan Province, West China from 1911 to 1948.

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David E. Stuart

David E. Stuart is an American anthropologist, and novelist, and Associate Provost Emeritus at University of New Mexico.

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David Graeber

David Rolfe Graeber (born 12 February 1961) is an American anthropologist and anarchist activist, perhaps best known for his 2011 volume Debt: The First 5000 Years.

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David Grove

David C. Grove (born 1935) is an American anthropologist, archaeologist and academic, known for his contributions and research into the Preclassic (or Formative) period cultures of Mesoamerica, in particular those of the Mexican ''altiplano'' and Gulf Coast regions.

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David J. Wineland

David Jeffrey Wineland (born February 24, 1944) is an American Nobel-laureate physicist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) physics laboratory.

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David Kertzer

David Israel Kertzer (born February 20, 1948) is an American anthropologist, historian, and academic leader specializing in the political, demographic, and religious history of Italy.

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David Maybury-Lewis

David Henry Peter Maybury-Lewis (5 May 1929 – 2 December 2007) was a British anthropologist, ethnologist of lowland South America, activist for indigenous peoples' human rights, and professor emeritus of Harvard University.

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David Prescott Barrows

David Prescott Barrows (June 27, 1873 – September 5, 1954) was an American anthropologist, explorer, and educator.

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David Price (anthropologist)

David H. Price (born 1960) is an American anthropologist.

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David R. Harris

David Russell Harris, FSA, FBA (14 December 1930 – 25 December 2013) was a British geographer, anthropologist, archaeologist and academic, well known for his detailed work on the origins of agriculture and the domestication of plants and animals.

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David Zolotarev

David Alekseevich Zolotarev (August 29, 1885 – September 10, 1935) was a Russian anthropologist and ethnographer who studied the tribal populations of the Yaroslavl region of northern Russia.

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Dawn Prince-Hughes

Dawn Prince-Hughes (born January 31, 1964 in Carbondale, Illinois) is an American anthropologist, primatologist, and ethologist who received her M.A. and PhD in interdisciplinary anthropology from the Universität Herisau in Switzerland.

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Déjà Dead

Déjà Dead is the first novel by Kathy Reichs starring forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan.

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De Loys' Ape

De Loys' Ape, given the proposed scientific names Ameranthropoides loysi and Ateles loysi, is an alleged large primate reported by Swiss geological explorer François de Loys in South America.

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Deadly Decisions

Deadly Décisions is the third novel by Kathy Reichs starring forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan.

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Death Cafe

A Death Cafe is a scheduled non-profit get-together (called "social franchises" by the organizers) for the purpose of talking about death over food and drink, usually tea and cake.

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Death du Jour

Death du Jour is the second novel by Kathy Reichs starring forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan.

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Deben Bhattacharya

Deben Bhattacharya (1921–2001) was a Bengali radio producer, record producer, ethnomusicologist, anthropologist, documentary filmmaker, photographer, translator, poet, writer, broadcaster, lecturer, and folk music consultant.

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Debt: The First 5000 Years

Debt: The First 5,000 Years is a book by anthropologist David Graeber published in 2011.

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Declared death in absentia

A person may be legally declared death in absentia or legal presumption of death despite the absence of direct proof of the person's death, such as the finding of remains (e.g., a corpse or skeleton) attributable to that person.

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Dehumanization

Dehumanization or an act thereof can describe a behavior or process that undermines individuality of and in others.

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Delby, New South Wales

Delby is a bounded rural locality, and cadastral parish, 100 kilometers south of Nyngan, New South Wales.

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Dell Hymes

Dell Hathaway Hymes (June 7, 1927 in Portland, OregonNovember 13, 2009 in Charlottesville, Virginia) was a linguist, sociolinguist, anthropologist, and folklorist who established disciplinary foundations for the comparative, ethnographic study of language use.

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Delwar Hussain

Delwar Hussain (দেলাওয়ার হুসেইন) is an English writer, anthropologist and correspondent for The Guardian.

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Demalagattara

Demalagattara are a social group or caste amongst the Sinhalese of Sri Lanka.

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Democratic Labour Party (Brazil)

The Democratic Labour Party (Partido Democrático Trabalhista, PDT) is a social democratic political party in Brazil.

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Denis Blondin

Denis Blondin (born 1947 in Plessisville, Quebec) is a Canadian (Quebec) anthropologist and writer.

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Denny Moore

Denny Moore (born 1944) is an American linguist, and anthropologist.

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Dentalium shell

The word dentalium, as commonly used by Native American artists and anthropologists, refers to tooth shells or tusk shells used in indigenous jewelry, adornment, and commerce in western Canada and the United States.

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Derek Freeman

John Derek Freeman (15 August 1916 – 6 July 2001) was a New Zealand anthropologist knownTuzin, page 1013.

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Detlev Ploog

Detlev Ploog (29 November 1920 – 7 December 2005) was a German clinical psychiatrist, primate behavior researcher and anthropologist.

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Diane Barwick

Diane Elizabeth McEachern Barwick (29 April 1938 – 4 April 1986) was a Canadian-born anthropologist, historian, and Aboriginal-rights activist.

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Diane Bell

Diane Robin (Di) Bell (born 11 June 1943) is an Australian feminist anthropologist, author and activist.

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Diane Gifford-Gonzalez

Diane Gifford-Gonzalez is an American archaeologist who specializes in the field of zooarchaeology.

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Diane Zaino Chase

Diane Zaino Chase (born 1953) is an American anthropologist and archaeologist who specializes in the study of the Ancient Maya.

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Diderot effect

The Diderot effect is a social phenomenon related to consumer goods that comprises two ideas.

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Didier Raoult

Didier Raoult (born March 13, 1952) is a French biologist.

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Diffusion of innovations

Diffusion of innovations is a theory that seeks to explain how, why, and at what rate new ideas and technology spread.

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Digraphia

In sociolinguistics, digraphia refers to the use of more than one writing system for the same language.

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Dimosthenis Kourtovik

Dimosthenis Kourtovik (Δημοσθένης Κούρτοβικ; born 1948) is a Greek writer, literary critic and anthropologist.

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Disappearance of Lauren Spierer

Lauren Spierer (born January 17, 1991) is an American woman who is presumed dead after she disappeared on June 3, 2011, following an evening at a bar in Bloomington, Indiana.

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Disordered Minds

Disordered Minds (2003) is a crime novel by English writer Minette Walters.

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Dmitry Anuchin

Dmitry Nikolayevich Anuchin (1843–1923) was a Russian anthropologist, ethnographist, archaeologist, and geographer.

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Don Brothwell

Donald Reginald "Don" Brothwell, (1933 – 26 September 2016) was a British archaeologist, anthropologist, and academic, who specialised in human palaeoecology and environmental archaeology.

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Don Kalb

Donatus “Don” Pius Kalb (15 October 1959) is a Dutch anthropologist, full professor of social anthropology at the University of Bergen, and an assistant professor of social sciences and cultural anthropology at Universiteit Utrecht.

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Donald A. Swan

Donald A. Swan (March 28, 1935 – June 1981) was an American anthropologist.

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Donald Cole (anthropologist)

Donald Powell Cole (March 21, 1941 in Bryan, Texas) is a noted anthropologist at the American University in Cairo.

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Donald Symons

Donald Symons (born 1942) is an American anthropologist best known as one of the founders of evolutionary psychology, and for pioneering the study of human sexuality from an evolutionary perspective.

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Donald Thomson

Donald Finlay Fergusson Thomson, OBE (26 June 1901 – 12 May 1970) was an Australian anthropologist and ornithologist who was largely responsible for turning the Caledon Bay crisis into a "decisive moment in the history of Aboriginal-European relations".

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Donat Savoie

Donat Savoie (born in Montreal, Quebec) is a Canadian anthropologist, was the interim Executive Director of Canada's Inuit Relations Secretariat and chief federal negotiator for Nunavik self-government before his retirement in 2006.

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Dong Tichen

Dong Tichen or Ti-Chen Tung (1931 - 2 September 1966) was a Chinese anthropologist and educator.

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Dor Bahadur Bista

Dor Bahadur Bista (Nepali: डोर बहादुर बिस्ट) (born ca. 1924-1926) is a Nepalese anthropologist, social scientist and activist.

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Dorothea Bleek

Dorothea Frances Bleek (later Dorothy F. Bleek; born 26 March 1873, Mowbray, Cape Town – died 27 June 1948, Newlands, Cape Town) was a South African-born German anthropologist and philologist known for her research on the Bushmen (the San people) of southern Africa.

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Dorothy D. Lee

Dorothy Demetracopolou Lee (1905–1975) was an American anthropologist, author and philosopher of cultural anthropology.

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Double bind

A double bind is an emotionally distressing dilemma in communication in which an individual (or group) receives two or more conflicting messages, and one message negates the other.

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Douglas R. White

Douglas R. White (born 1942) is an American complexity researcher, social anthropologist, sociologist, and social network researcher at the University of California, Irvine.

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Dounia Bouzar

Dounia Bouzar, also Dominique Bouzar, (born 1964) is a French anthropologist, writer and educator who has worked towards better acceptance of Muslims, especially Muslim women, in France.

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Dr Challoner's Grammar School

Dr Challoner's Grammar School (also known as DCGS, Challoner's Boys or simply Challoner's) is a selective grammar school for boys, with a co-educational Sixth Form, in Amersham, Buckinghamshire, England.

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Dragon

A dragon is a large, serpent-like legendary creature that appears in the folklore of many cultures around the world.

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Drua

Drua, also known as Na Drua, N'drua, Ndrua or Waqa Tabu ("sacred canoe"), is a double-hull sailing boat that originated in the south-western Pacific islands.

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Dunham (surname)

Dunham is a toponymic surname of Anglo-Saxon origination, deriving from several places named Dunham (dun- hill, -ham home) In 1630 Deacon John Dunham emigrated from England to the American Continent and became a deputy in the Legislative Assembly elected to represent the Plymouth Colony.

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Dunno

Dunno, or Know-Nothing or Ignoramus (Незнайка, Neznayka that is Don'tknowka (ka - the Russian suffix here for drawing up the whole name in a cheerful form); from the Russian phrase "не знаю" ("ne znayu"), don't know) is a character created by Soviet children's writer Nikolay Nosov.

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E. E. Speight

Ernest Edwin Speight (6 December 1871 – 17 September 1949), usually known as E E Speight, was a Yorkshireman who travelled in Japan and India and was a professor of English for twenty years at the Imperial University, Tokyo, Japan and also at the Fourth Higher School, Kanazawa, then for a further twenty years at the Osmania University, Hyderabad, India.

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E. Lloyd Du Brul

E.

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E. O. James

Edwin Oliver James (1888 – 1972) was an anthropologist in the field of comparative religion.

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Early Kurdish nationalism

The nationalist movement among the Kurdish people first emerged in the late 19th century with an uprising in 1880 led by Sheik Ubeydullah.

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EcoHealth Alliance

EcoHealth Alliance is a non-governmental organization which employs a 'One Health' approach to protecting the health of people, animals, and the environment from emerging infectious diseases.

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Edgar Lee Hewett

Edgar Lee Hewett (November 23, 1865 – December 31, 1946) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist whose focus was the Native American communities of New Mexico and the southwestern United States.

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Edgar Thurston

Edgar Thurston CIE (1855– 12 October 1935) was a superintendent at the Madras Government Museum who contributed to studies in the zoology, ethnology and botany of India and published works related to his work at the museum.

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Edith Turner (anthropologist)

Edith Turner (June 17, 1921 – June 18, 2016) was an English-American anthropologist, poet, and post-secondary educator.

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Edmund Snow Carpenter

Edmund "Ted" Snow Carpenter (September 2, 1922 – July 1, 2011) was an American anthropologist best known for his work on tribal art and visual media.

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Edna Ahgeak MacLean

Edna Ahgeak MacLean or Paniattaaq (born November 5, 1944) is an Iñupiaq linguist, anthropologist and educator from Alaska, who has specialized in the preservation and revitalization of the Iñupiat language.

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Edogawa Ranpo

, better known by the pseudonym, also romanized as Edogawa Rampo, was a Japanese author and critic who played a major role in the development of Japanese mystery fiction.

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Eduard Seler

Eduard Georg Seler (December 5, 1849 – November 23, 1922) was a prominent German anthropologist, ethnohistorian, linguist, epigrapher, academic and Americanist scholar, who made extensive contributions in these fields towards the study of pre-Columbian era cultures in the Americas.

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Eduardo Mondlane

Eduardo Chivambo Mondlane (20 June 1920 – 3 February 1969) served as the founding President of the Mozambican Liberation Front (FRELIMO) from 1962, the year that FRELIMO was founded in Tanzania, until his assassination in 1969.

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Eduardo P. Archetti

Eduardo P. Archetti or more affectionately Lali Archetti (Santiago del Estero, April 12, 1943 – Oslo, June 6, 2005) was an Argentine anthropologist and sociologist, essayist and educator, considered one of the most original social scientists in Latin America.

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Eduardo Viveiros de Castro

Eduardo Batalha Viveiros de Castro (born 1951) is a Brazilian anthropologist and a professor at the National Museum of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.

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Edward Barna Kurjack

Edward Barna Kurjack (born 1938; died 2014) was a Mayan anthropologist who was known for his contributions to the study of Mayan settlement patterns and society.

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Edward Bruner

Edward M. Bruner (born 1924) is an American anthropologist known for his contributions to the anthropology of tourism, particularly his constructivist, processual approach that centers on experience and narrative in and beyond tourist settings.

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Edward Burnett Tylor

Sir Edward Burnett Tylor (2 October 1832 – 2 January 1917) was an English anthropologist, the founder of cultural anthropology.

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Edward Dozier

Edward Pasqual Dozier (born Eduardo de Pascua Dozier, 1916 in Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico – 1971 in Tucson, Arizona) was a Pueblo Native American anthropologist and linguist who studied Native Americans and the peoples of northern Luzon in the Philippines.

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Edward H. Spicer

Edward Holland "Ned" Spicer (1906–1983) was an American anthropologist who specialized in studying American Indian tribes of the American Southwest as a participant-observer.

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Edward Sapir

Edward Sapir (January 26, 1884 – February 4, 1939) was a German anthropologist-linguist, who is widely considered to be one of the most important figures in the early development of the discipline of linguistics.

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El Infiernito

El Infiernito (Spanish for "The Little Hell"), is a pre-Columbian archaeoastronomical site located on the Altiplano Cundiboyacense in the outskirts of Villa de Leyva, Boyacá, Colombia.

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Eleanor Leacock

Eleanor Burke Leacock (July 2, 1922 – April 2, 1987) was an anthropologist and social theorist who made major contributions to the study of egalitarian societies, the de/evolution of the status of women in society, Algonkian ethnohistory,Eleanor Burke Leacock.

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Eliécer Silva Celis

Eliécer Silva Celis (Floresta, Colombia, 20 January 1914 - Sogamoso, 4 July 2007) was a Colombian anthropologist, archaeologist, professor and writer.

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Elinor Ochs

Elinor Ochs is an American linguistic anthropologist, and Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at University of California, Los Angeles.

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Elio Modigliani

Elio Modigliani (13 June 1860 – 6 August 1932) was an Italian anthropologist, zoologist, explorer, and plant collector.

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Elisabeth Burgos-Debray

Venezuelan anthropologist Elisabeth Burgos-Debray (born in Valencia, Venezuela, in 1941), former wife of the French philosopher Régis Debray, was the editor of Rigoberta Menchú's controversial autobiography I, Rigoberta Menchú.

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Elisabeth Croll

Elisabeth Joan "Lisa" Croll, (21 September 1944 – 3 October 2007) was a New Zealand anthropologist.

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Elizabeth Alexander (actress)

Elizabeth Alexander (sometimes credited as Liz Alexander; born 21 August 1952) is an Australian actress, director and teacher with a number of high-profile credits in film, television and theatre.

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Elizabeth Grant (anthropologist)

Elizabeth Grant (born 1963) is an Australian architectural anthropologistOwens, Michael (14 May 2014).

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Elizabeth Jacobs

Elizabeth Derr Jacobs (1903 – May 21, 1983) was an anthropologist specializing in the native cultures of the Pacific Northwest.

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Ella Cara Deloria

Ella Cara Deloria (January 31, 1889 – February 12, 1971), (Yankton Dakota), also called Aŋpétu Wašté Wiŋ (Beautiful Day Woman), was an educator, anthropologist, ethnographer, linguist, and novelist of European American and Native American (American Indian) ancestry.

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Ellen Diggs

Ellen Irene Diggs (1906–1998) was an American anthropologist.

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Elliott Skinner

Elliott Percival Skinner (June 20, 1924 – April 1, 2007) was an American anthropologist and United States Ambassador to the Republic of Upper Volta.

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Ellis R. Kerley

Ellis R. Kerley (September 1, 1924 – September 3, 1998) was an American anthropologist, and pioneer in the field of Forensic anthropology, which is a field of expertise particularly useful to criminal investigators and for the identification of human remains for humanitarian purposes.

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Ellsworth, Maine

Ellsworth is a city in and the county seat of Hancock County, Maine, United States.

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Elphin, County Roscommon

Elphin, ', is a small town in north County Roscommon, Ireland.

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Elsie Clews Parsons

Elsie Worthington Clews Parsons (November 27, 1875 – December 19, 1941) was an American anthropologist, sociologist, folklorist, and feminist who studied Native American tribes—such as the Tewa and Hopi—in Arizona, New Mexico, and Mexico.

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Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney

Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney (大貫恵美子)is a noted anthropologist and the William F. Vilas Professor of Anthropology at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

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Emil Ludwig Schmidt

Emil Ludwig Schmidt (April 7, 1837 – October 22, 1906) was a German anthropologist and ethnologist born in of Upper Eichstätt.

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Emil Torday

Emil Torday (22 June 1875 in Budapest, Hungary – 9 May 1931 in London, England), was a Hungarian anthropologist.

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Emily Martin (anthropologist)

Emily Martin (born 1944) is a sinologist, anthropologist, and feminist.

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Emma Shah

Ema Shah (ايما شاه) (born June 7, 1981) is a Kuwait singer, composer, pianist, guitarist, actress, writer, dancer, and director.

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Emmanuel de Merode

Prince Emmanuel Werner Marie Ghislain de Merode (born 5 May 1970) has been the director of the Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) since 2008.

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Emmanuel Todd

Emmanuel Todd (born 16 May 1951) is a French historian, anthropologist, demographer, sociologist and political scientist at the National Institute of Demographic Studies (INED) in Paris.

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Emor

Emor (— Hebrew for "speak," the fifth word, and the first distinctive word, in the parashah) is the 31st weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the eighth in the Book of Leviticus.

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Enjo kōsai

means "compensated dating" and is the Japanese language term for the practice of older men giving money and/or luxury gifts to attractive young women for their companionship or possibly for sexual favors.

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Enrico Hillyer Giglioli

Enrico Hillyer Giglioli (June 13, 1845 – December 16, 1909) was an Italian zoologist and anthropologist.

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Entomophagy

Entomophagy (from Greek ἔντομον éntomon, "insect", and φᾰγεῖν phagein, "to eat") is the human use of insects as food.

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Environmental psychology

Environmental psychology is an interdisciplinary field that focuses on the interplay between individuals and their surroundings.

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Eocorona

Eocorona is an extinct genus of amphiesmenopteran from the Middle Triassic of Australia.

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Eparterial bronchus

The eparterial bronchus (right superior lobar bronchus) is a branch of the right main bronchus given off about 2.5 cm from the bifurcation of the trachea.

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Epeli Hauʻofa

Epeli Hauʻofa (7 December 1939 – 11 January 2009), Libraire Ombres blanches was a Tongan and Fijian writer and anthropologist born of Tongan missionary parents in the Territory of Papua.

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Eric Dingwall

Eric John Dingwall (1890–1986) was a British anthropologist and psychical researcher.

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Eric Gans

Eric Lawrence Gans (born August 21, 1941) is an American literary scholar, philosopher of language, and cultural anthropologist.

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Eric Sunderland

Eric Sunderland, (18 March 1930 – 24 March 2010) was a Welsh anthropologist and academic.

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Eric Wolf

Eric Robert Wolf (February 1, 1923 – March 6, 1999) was an anthropologist, best known for his studies of peasants, Latin America, and his advocacy of Marxist perspectives within anthropology.

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Erica Lehrer

Erica Lehrer (born 1969) is an anthropologist, curator, and academic specializing in post-Holocaust Jewish culture, museum studies, ethnography, and public scholarship.

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Erie people

The Erie people (also Erieehronon, Eriechronon, Riquéronon, Erielhonan, Eriez, Nation du Chat) were a Native American people historically living on the south shore of Lake Erie.

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Erik Mueggler

Erik Mueggler is an American anthropologist, and Professor at the University of Michigan.

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Erminie Wheeler-Voegelin

Erminie Wheeler-Voegelin (April 2, 1903 – July 10, 1988) was an anthropologist, folklorist, and ethnohistorian.

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Ernest Bornemann

Ernst Wilhelm Julius Bornemann (April 12, 1915 – June 4, 1995) was a German crime writer, filmmaker, anthropologist, ethnomusicologist, psychoanalyst, sexologist, communist agitator, jazz musician and critic.

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Ernest Chantre

Ernest Chantre (13 January 1843, Lyon – 24 November 1924, Écully) was a prominent French archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Ernest Chinnery

Ernest William Pearson Chinnery (5 November 1887 – 17 December 1972) was an Australian anthropologist and public servant.

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Ernest Crawley

Alfred Ernest Crawley (11 July 1867 or 1869'Death of Mr A. E. Crawley. An Expert in Ball Games', The Times, 25 October 1924 – 21 October 1924) was an English schoolmaster, sexologist, anthropologist, sports journalist and exponent of ball games.

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Ernest Hamy

Ernest-Théodore Hamy (22 June 1842, Boulogne-sur-Mer – 18 November 1908, Paris) was a French anthropologist and ethnologist.

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Ernest Manheim

Ernest Manheim (till 1920 Ernő, then till 1934 Ernst, in the US then Ernest) (27 January 1900 – 28 July 2002) was a US sociologist, anthropologist and composer born in Hungary, at that time part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

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Ernst Platner

Ernst Platner (11 June 1744 – 27 December 1818) was a German anthropologist, physician and RationalistFrederick Beiser, The Fate of Reason: German Philosophy from Kant to Fichte, Harvard University Press, 2009, p. 214.

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Ernst Zacharias Platner

Ernst Zacharias Platner (1 October 1773 – 14 October 1855) was a German painter and writer born in Leipzig.

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Ervin Marton

Ervin Marton (known as Marton Ervin in Hungarian; 17 June 1912 – 30 April 1968) was a Hungarian-born artist and photographer who became an integral part of the Paris art culture beginning in 1937.

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Erwan Dianteill

Erwan Dianteill (born 1967) is a French sociologist and anthropologist, graduate of the Ecole Normale Supérieure Paris-Saclay, holder of the aggregation in the Social Sciences, Doctor of Sociology and professor of Cultural and Social anthropology at the Sorbonne (Paris Descartes University).

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Erwin Bälz

Erwin Bälz (13 January 1849 – 31 August 1913) was a German internist, anthropologist, personal physician to the Japanese Imperial Family and cofounder of modern western medicine in Japan.

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Eskimo words for snow

The claim that Eskimo languages (specifically, Yupik and Inuit) have an unusually large number of words for "snow", first loosely attributed to the work of anthropologist Franz Boas, has become a cliché often used to support the controversial linguistic-relativity hypothesis: the idea that a language's structure (sound, grammar, vocabulary, etc.) shapes its speakers' view of the world.

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Esther Newton

Esther Newton (born 1940, New York City) is an American cultural anthropologist best known for her pioneering work on the ethnography of lesbian and gay communities in the United States.

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Ethel Alpenfels

Ethel Josephine Alpenfels (1907–1981) was an American anthropologist who served as professor of anthropology at New York University.

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Ethnic groups in the Philippines

The Philippines is inhabited by more than 175 ethnolinguistic nations, the majority of whose languages are Malay in origin, then Han Chinese, then European (mostly Spanish).

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Ethnobotany

Ethnobotany is the study of a region's plants and their practical uses through the traditional knowledge of a local culture and people.

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Ethnocynology

Ethnocynology, is a neologism coined by anthropologist Bryan Cummins in his book First Nations, First Dogs: Canadian Aboriginal Ethnocynology (2002).

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Etsko Schuitema

Etsko Schuitema (born 7 April 1959), is the founder and Leading Partner of Schuitema Associates, a business transformation consultancy that is based in South Africa and Pakistan.

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Etterbeek

Etterbeek (French:; Dutch) is one of the nineteen municipalities located in the Brussels-Capital Region of Belgium.

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Eucalyptus gillenii

Eucalyptus gillenii, commonly known as the Mallee red gum, Mount Lindsay mallee, Mount Lindsay gum or Mount Gillen mallee is a mallee that is native to inland Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory.

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Eugène Pittard

Eugène Pittard (1867–1962) was a Swiss anthropologist notable for his work Les Races et l'Histoire published in 1924.

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Eva Perón

Eva María Duarte de Perón (7 May 1919 – 26 July 1952) was the wife of Argentine President Juan Perón (1895–1974) and First Lady of Argentina from 1946 until her death in 1952.

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Everglades National Park

Everglades National Park is an American national park that protects the southern 20 percent of the original Everglades in Florida.

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Evolutionary game theory

Evolutionary game theory (EGT) is the application of game theory to evolving populations in biology.

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Evon Zartman Vogt Ranch House

The Evon Zartman Vogt Ranch House is a historic house in the U.S. state of New Mexico.

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Ewha Womans University

Ewha Womans University is a private women's university in Seoul, South Korea founded in 1886 by Mary F. Scranton under Emperor Gojong.

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Exchange of women

The exchange of women is an element of alliance theory - the structuralist theory of Claude Lévi-Strauss and other anthropologists who see society as based upon the patriarchal treatment of women as property, being given to other men to cement alliances.

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Expedition Africa

Expedition Africa is an eight-part reality television miniseries that originally aired from to on History.

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F. G. Bailey

Frederick George Bailey (born 1924) is a British social anthropologist.

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F.C. De Kampioenen

F.C. De Kampioenen (F.C. The Champions) is a long-running Flemish sitcom chronicling the (mis)adventures of a fictional local football team.

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F.E. Williams

Francis Edgar Williams (Malvern, 9 February 1893—Owen Stanley Range 12 May 1943) was an Australian anthropologist who worked for the government of the Territory of Papua from 1922 to 1942.

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Facing Mount Kenya

Facing Mount Kenya, first published in 1938, is an anthropological study of the people of the Kikuyu ethnicity of central Kenya.

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Faculty of Arts, Banaras Hindu University

Faculty of Arts, Banaras Hindu University is a faculty in the Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, India which offers courses in History, Culture, Philosophy, Languages, Literature along with various Professional and Vocational courses.

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Fairy tale

A fairy tale, wonder tale, magic tale, or Märchen is folklore genre that takes the form of a short story that typically features entities such as dwarfs, dragons, elves, fairies, giants, gnomes, goblins, griffins, mermaids, talking animals, trolls, unicorns, or witches, and usually magic or enchantments.

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Fakanau

A fakanau (meaning "spells") is a traditional Tuvaluan male dance, accompanied by singing and rhythmic clapping.

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Family

Every person has his/her own family.mother reproduces with husband for children.In the context of human society, a family (from familia) is a group of people related either by consanguinity (by recognized birth), affinity (by marriage or other relationship), or co-residence (as implied by the etymology of the English word "family" from Latin familia 'family servants, domestics collectively, the servants in a household,' thus also 'members of a household, the estate, property; the household, including relatives and servants,' abstract noun formed from famulus 'servant, slave ') or some combination of these.

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Family honor

Family honor (or honour) is an abstract concept involving the perceived quality of worthiness and respectability that affects the social standing and the self-evaluation of a group of related people, both corporately and individually.

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Family Life (Amish magazine)

Family Life is a magazine published by, and primarily for, the Old Order Amish.

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Fanny Colonna

Fanny Colonna (1934 - November 18, 2014) was a French-Algerian sociologist and anthropologist.

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Far-Fetched Facts

Far-fetched facts is a book by German anthropologist Richard Rottenburg published in German as Weit hergeholte Fakten in 2002; the English translation was released in 2009.

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Fatal Voyage

Fatal Voyage is the fourth novel by Kathy Reichs starring forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan.

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Félix Faustino Outes

Félix Faustino Outes (July 29, 1878 — 1939) was an Argentine anthropologist, archeologist and linguist.

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Federico Brito Figueroa

Federico Britto Figueroa (La Victoria, 2 November 1921 - Caracas, 28 April 2000) was a renowned Venezuelan Marxist historian and anthropologist.

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Fedir Vovk

Fedir Kindratovych Vovk (Ukrainian Федір Кіндратович Вовк or Russian Фёдор Кондратьевич Волков; 1847–1918) was a Ukrainian anthropologist-archaeologist, the curator of the Alexander III Museum in St. Petersburg.

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Fei Xiaotong

Fei Xiaotong or Fei Hsiao-Tung (November 2, 1910 – April 24, 2005) was a pioneering Chinese researcher and professor of sociology and anthropology; he was also noted for his studies in the study of China's ethnic groups as well as a social activist.

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Felicitas Goodman

Felicitas D. Goodman (1914–2005) was an American linguist and anthropologist.

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Felix Bryk

Felix Bryk (21 January 1882, Vienna – 13 January 1957, Stockholm) was a Swedish anthropologist, entomologist and writer.

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Female infanticide

Female infanticide is the deliberate killing of newborn female children.

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Ferdinand Karsch

Ferdinand Anton Franz Karsch or Karsch-Haack (2 September 1853 in Münster – 20 December 1936 in Berlin) was a German arachnologist, entomologist and anthropologist.

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Fernando O. Assunção

Fernando Octavio Assunção Formica (12 January 1931 in Montevideo – 3 May 2006 in São Paulo) was a Uruguayan historian, anthropologist, scholar, historian, and writer.

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Fernando Ortiz Fernández

Fernando Ortiz Fernández (Havana, 16 July 1881 – 10 April 1969) was a Cuban essayist, anthropologist, ethnomusicologist and scholar of Afro-Cuban culture.

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Fidel Nadal

Fidel Nadal (born Fidel Ernesto Nadal on October 4, 1965) is an Afro-Argentinian Reggae musician.

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Fieldwork Under Fire

Fieldwork Under Fire: Contemporary Studies of Violence and Survival is a book length collection of recorded experiences; each of which was contributed by an anthropologist who had to strategize and innovate, while directly living through the emotion, stress, and abnormal ordeal of political violence in the field, to gather ethnographic data and descriptions for their individual studies.

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Filipinos

Filipinos (Mga Pilipino) are the people who are native to, or identified with the country of the Philippines.

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Filmmakers Without Borders

Filmmakers Without Borders or FWB is a registered 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that sends filmmakers and art educators overseas to teach film, media, and technology to underserved students in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.

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Fiona Graham

Fiona Caroline Graham (born in Melbourne, Australia) is an Australian anthropologist who works as a geisha in Japan.

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Fiona Marshall

Fiona Marshall is an archaeologist at Washington University in St.

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First Universal Races Congress

The First Universal Races Congress met in 1911 for four days at the University of London as an early effort at anti-racism.

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FitzRoy Somerset, 4th Baron Raglan

Fitzroy Richard Somerset, 4th Baron Raglan (10 June 1885 – 14 September 1964) was a British soldier, author, and amateur anthropologist.

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Fixing Sex

Fixing Sex: Intersex, Medical Authority, and Lived Experience, a book by Stanford anthropologist and bioethicist Katrina Karkazis, was published in 2008.

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Flight from Death

Flight from Death (2003) is a documentary film that investigates the relationship of human violence to fear of death, as related to subconscious influences.

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Florence M. Hawley

Florence Hawley (September 17, 1906 – 1991) was one of the first anthropologists to work extensively on dendrochronology, or tree-ring dating.

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Florida Women's Hall of Fame

The Florida Women's Hall of Fame is an honor roll of women who have contributed to life for citizens of Florida.

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Floyd Lounsbury

Floyd Glenn Lounsbury (April 25, 1914 – May 14, 1998) was an American linguist, anthropologist and Mayanist scholar and epigrapher, best known for his work on linguistic and cultural systems of a variety of North and South American languages.

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Folk saint

Folk saints are dead people or other spiritually powerful entities (such as indigenous spirits) venerated as saints but not officially canonized.

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Forced conversion

Forced conversion is adoption of a different religion or irreligion under duress.

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Formosan Aboriginal Culture Village

The Formosan Aboriginal Culture Village is an amusement park in Yuchi Township, Nantou County, Taiwan which has been in operation since 1986.

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Fosco Maraini

Fosco Maraini (15 November 1912 – 8 June 2004) was an Italian photographer, anthropologist, ethnologist, writer, mountaineer and academic.

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Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology

Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology is one of a series of pamphlets published by Prickly Paradigm Press in 2004.

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François Bizot

François Bizot (born February 8, 1940 in Nancy, France), is a French anthropologist, the only Westerner to have survived imprisonment by the Khmer Rouge.

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Frances Densmore

Frances Theresa Densmore (May 21, 1867 – June 5, 1957) was an American anthropologist and ethnographer born in Red Wing, Minnesota.

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Frances J. White

Frances Joy White is a biological anthropologist, professor, and primatologist at the University of Oregon.

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Frances Toor

Frances Toor (1890–1956) was an American author, publisher, anthropologist and ethnographer who wrote mainly about Mexico and Mexican indigenous cultures.

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Francesco Remotti

Francesco Remotti (born 6 June 1943 in Pozzolo Formigaro) is an Italian anthropologist.

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Francis Clark Howell

Francis Clark Howell (November 27, 1925 – March 10, 2007), generally known as F. Clark Howell, was an American anthropologist. Born in Kansas City, Missouri, F. Clark Howell grew up in Kansas, where he became interested in natural history. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II, from 1944 to 1946 in the Pacific Theater. Howell was educated at the University of Chicago, where he received his Ph.B., A.M. and Ph.D. degrees under the tutelage of Sherwood L. Washburn. Dr. Howell died of metastatic lung cancer on March 10, 2007 at age 81 at his home in Berkeley, California.

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Francis La Flesche

Francis La Flesche (Omaha, 1857–1932) was the first professional Native American ethnologist; he worked with the Smithsonian Institution.

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Frank A. Beach

Frank Ambrose Beach, Jr. (April 13, 1911 – June 15, 1988) was an American ethologist, best known as co-author of the 1951 book Patterns of Sexual Behavior. He is often regarded as the founder of behavioral endocrinology, as his publications marked the beginnings of the field.

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Frank H. Hankins

Frank Hamilton Hankins (September 27, 1877, Wilkshire, Ohio – January 24, 1970, Franklin Lakes, New Jersey) was an American sociologist and anthropologist who was the president of the American Sociological Society in 1938.

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Frank Hamilton Cushing

Frank Hamilton Cushing (July 22, 1857 in North East Township, Erie County, Pennsylvania – April 10, 1900 in Washington DC) was an American anthropologist and ethnologist.

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Franz Boas

Franz Uri Boas (July 9, 1858December 21, 1942) was a German-American anthropologist and a pioneer of modern anthropology who has been called the "Father of American Anthropology".

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Franz Ignaz Pruner

Franz Ignaz Pruner (8 March 1808 - 29 September 1882); known as Pruner Bey during his stay in Egypt, was a German physician, ophthalmologist and anthropologist who was a native of Pfreimd, Oberpfalz.

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Franz Tappeiner

Franz Tappeiner, Edler von Tappein (7 January 1816, Laas – 20 August 1902, Meran) was an Austrian physician and anthropologist.

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Frédéric Ozanam

Blessed Professor Antoine-Frédéric Ozanam (April 23, 1813 – September 8, 1853) was a French Literary Scholar, Lawyer, Journalist, and an Equal Rights Advocate.

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Fred Eggan

Frederick Russell Eggan (September 12, 1906 in Seattle, Washington – May 7, 1991) was an American anthropologist best known for his innovative application of the principles of British social anthropology to the study of Native American tribes.

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Frederic Ward Putnam

Frederic Ward Putnam (April 16, 1839 – August 14, 1915) was an American anthropologist.

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Frederic Wood Jones

Frederic Wood Jones FRS (23 January 1879 – 29 September 1954), usually referred to as Wood Jones, was a British observational naturalist, embryologist, anatomist and anthropologist, who spent considerable time in Australia.

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Frederica de Laguna

Frederica ("Freddy") Annis Lopez de Leo de Laguna (October 3, 1906 – October 6, 2004) was an American ethnologist, anthropologist, and archaeologist influential for her work on Paleoindian and Alaska Native art and archaeology in the American northwest and Alaska.

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Frederick S. Hulse

Frederick Seymour Hulse (February 11, 1906 – May 16, 1990) was an American anthropologist.

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Frederik Jacobus Johannes Buytendijk

Frederik Jacobus Johannes Buytendijk (1887–1974) was a Dutch anthropologist, biologist and psychologist.

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Freida Pinto

Freida Selena Pinto (born 18 October 1984) is an Indian actress who has appeared mainly in American and British films.

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Friedrich Bieber

Friedrich Julius Bieber (24 February 1873 in Vienna – 3 March 1924) was an Austrian anthropologist.

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Friedrich Heinrich Ranke

Friedrich Heinrich Ranke (30 November 1798, Wiehe – 2 September, 1876 Munich) was a German Protestant theologian.

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Friedrich Nietzsche

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (15 October 1844 – 25 August 1900) was a German philosopher, cultural critic, composer, poet, philologist and a Latin and Greek scholar whose work has exerted a profound influence on Western philosophy and modern intellectual history.

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Froelich Rainey

Froelich Gladstone Rainey (June 18, 1907 – October 11, 1992) was an American anthropologist and a master of narrative prose.

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G. William Skinner

George William Skinner (February 14, 1925 – October 26, 2008) was an American anthropologist and scholar of China.

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Gabriella Coleman

Enid Gabriella Coleman (usually known as Gabriella Coleman or Biella; born 1973) is an anthropologist, academic and author whose work focuses on hacker culture and online activism, particularly Anonymous.

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Ganja & Hess

Ganja & Hess is a 1973 experimental horror film written and directed by Bill Gunn and starring Marlene Clark and Duane Jones.

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Gary Larson

Gary Larson (born August 14, 1950) is an American cartoonist.

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Gary O. Rollefson

Gary O. Rollefson (born August 2, 1942) is an American Anthropologist.

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Gayatri Reddy

Gayatri Reddy is an Indian anthropologist who has also made contributions to queer and gender studies.

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Géza Róheim

Géza Róheim (Róheim Géza; September 12, 1891 – June 7, 1953) was a Hungarian psychoanalyst and anthropologist.

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Gender inequality in China

Until 1978, China was a socialist planned economy that promoted gender equality.

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Georg Gerland

Georg Cornelius Karl Gerland (29 January 1833, in Kassel – 16 February 1919, in Strasbourg) was a German anthropologist and geophysicist.

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Georg Thilenius

Georg Christian Thilenius (4 October 1868 – 28 December 1937) was a German physician and anthropologist who was a native of Soden am Taunus.

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George Bent

George Bent, also named Ho—my-ike in Cheyenne (Cheyenne people, 1843 – May 19, 1918), was a Cheyenne who became a Confederate soldier during the American Civil War and waged war against Americans as a Cheyenne warrior afterward.

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George Bird Grinnell

George Bird Grinnell (September 20, 1849 – April 11, 1938) was an American anthropologist, historian, naturalist, and writer.

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George Carr Frison

George Carr Frison (born November 11, 1924) is an American archaeologist.

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George Clapp Vaillant

George Clapp Vaillant (April 5, 1901, – May 13, 1945) was an American anthropologist.

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George Cowgill

George L. Cowgill (born 1929) is an American anthropologist and archaeologist.

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George Grant MacCurdy

George Grant MacCurdy, A.M., Ph.D. (April 17, 1863 – November 15, 1947) was an American anthropologist, born at Warrensburg, Mo., where he graduated from the State Normal School in 1887, after which he attended Harvard (A.B., 1893; A.M., 1894); then studied in Europe at Vienna, Paris (School of Anthropology), and at Berlin (1894–98; and at Yale (Ph.D., 1905). He was employed at Yale from 1902 onwards as instructor, lecturer, curator of the anthropological collections (1902–10), and assistant professor of archæology after 1910. He was a member of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences.

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George Herzog (ethnomusicologist)

George Herzog (* December 11, 1901 in Budapest, Austria-Hungary – November 4, 1983 in Indianapolis) was an American anthropologist, folklorist, musicologist, and ethnomusicologist.

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George Horse Capture

George Paul Horse Capture (October 20, 1937 – April 16, 2013) (A'aninin) was an anthropologist, activist, and writer.

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George J. Armelagos

George J. Armelagos (May 22, 1936 – May 15, 2014) was an American anthropologist, and Goodrich C. White Professor of Anthropology at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia.

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George Murdock

George Peter ("Pete") Murdock (May 11, 1897 – March 29, 1985), also known as G. P. Murdock, was an American anthropologist.

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George Pitt-Rivers

George Henry Lane-Fox Pitt-Rivers (22 May 1890 – 17 June 1966), one of the wealthiest men in England in the interwar period, was an anthropologist and Eugenics expert, who embraced Antibolshevism and Antisemitism and was interned by the British government for two years during World War II.

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George W. Grace

George William Grace (8 September 1921 in Corinth, Mississippi – January 17, 2015) was an emeritus professor of linguistics at the University of Hawaiokinai.

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George Wynn Brereton Huntingford

George Wynn Brereton Huntingford (19 November 1901 – 19 February 1978) was an English linguist, anthropologist and historian.

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Georges Balandier

Georges Balandier (21 December 1920 – 5 October 2016) was a French sociologist, anthropologist and ethnologist noted for his research in Sub-Saharan Africa.

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Georges Condominas

Georges Louis Condominas (29 June 1921 – 17 July 2011) was a French cultural anthropologist.

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Georges Vacher de Lapouge

Count Georges Vacher de Lapouge (12 December 1854, in Neuville-de-Poitou – 20 February 1936, in Poitiers) was a French anthropologist and a theoretician of eugenics and racialism.

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Georgia Political Science Association

is the professional association for political scientists in Georgia, United States.

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Gerald Warner Brace

Gerald Warner Brace (September 24, 1901 – July 20, 1978) was an American novelist, writer, educator, sailor and boat builder.

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Gerd Koch

Gerd Koch (11 July 1922 – 19 April 2005) was a German cultural anthropologist best known for his studies on the material culture of Kiribati, Tuvalu and the Santa Cruz Islands in the Pacific.

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Germaine Dieterlen

Germaine Dieterlen (15 May 1903 in Paris – 13 November 1999 in Paris) was a French anthropologist.

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Gholamali Raisozzakerin

Gholamali Raisozzakerin Dehbani (غلامعلی رئیس الذاکرین دهبانی) better known as Raisozzakerin, is an Iranian author, anthropologist, poet and singer.

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Ghost

In folklore, a ghost (sometimes known as an apparition, haunt, phantom, poltergeist, shade, specter or spectre, spirit, spook, and wraith) is the soul or spirit of a dead person or animal that can appear to the living.

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Ghost Dance

The Ghost Dance (Caddo: Nanissáanah, also called the Ghost Dance of 1890) was a new religious movement incorporated into numerous American Indian belief systems.

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Gilberto Freyre

Gilberto de Mello Freyre (March 15, 1900 – July 18, 1987) was a Brazilian sociologist, anthropologist, historian, writer, painter, journalist and congressman, born in Recife, Northeast Brazil.

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Giovanni Battista Bronzini

Giovanni Battista Bronzini (4 September 1925 in Matera – 17 March 2002 in Bari) was an Italian anthropologist and historian of Italian folk traditions.

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Gitel Steed

Gitel (Gertrude) Poznanski Steed (May 3, 1914 – September 6, 1977) was an American cultural anthropologist known for her research in India 1950–52 (and returning in 1970) involving ethnological work in three villages to study the complex detail of their social structure.

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Giulio Angioni

Giulio Angioni (28 October 1939 – 12 January 2017) was an Italian writer and anthropologist.

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Gloria Goodwin Raheja

Gloria Goodwin Raheja is anthropologist who specializes in ethnographic history.

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Gloria Hatrick McLean

Gloria Hatrick McLean (March 10, 1918 – February 16, 1994) was an American actress and model.

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Godfrey Wilson

Godfrey Wilson (1908 – 19 May 1944) was a British anthropologist who studied social change in Africa.

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Gonzalo Correal Urrego

Gonzalo Correal Urrego (Gachalá, Colombia, 23 October 1939) is a Colombian anthropologist, palaeontologist and archaeologist.

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Gonzalo Rubio Orbe

Gonzalo Rubio Orbe (1909 – 24 October 1994) was born in Otavalo into a farming family, the second of seven children and the oldest of three sons.

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Good Eats

Good Eats is an American television cooking show, created and hosted by Alton Brown, which aired in North America on Food Network and later Cooking Channel.

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Gora dialect

The Gorani (also Goranski) or Našinski (literally meaning "our language") language is the variety of South Slavic spoken by the Gorani people in the border area between Kosovo, Albania, and Macedonia.

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Gordon Willey

Gordon Randolph Willey (7 March 1913 – 28 April 2002) was an American archaeologist who was described by colleagues as the "dean" of New World archaeology.

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Gorky Park (novel)

Gorky Park is a 1981 crime novel written by American author Martin Cruz Smith.

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Goucher College

Goucher College is a private, coeducational, liberal arts college in Towson, Maryland.

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Grahway, New South Wales

Grahway is a bounded rural locality, and cadastral parish, 100 kilometers south of Nyngan, New South Wales.

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Grand Canyon Adventure: River at Risk

Grand Canyon Adventure: River at Risk is a 2008 American documentary film directed by Greg MacGillivray and narrated by Robert Redford.

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Grant McCracken

Grant David McCracken (born 1951) is a Canadian anthropologist and author, known for his books about culture and commerce.

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Grave Secrets

Grave Secrets is the fifth novel by Kathy Reichs starring forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan.

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Great Ape Project

The Great Ape Project (GAP), founded in 1993, is an international organization of primatologists, anthropologists, ethicists, and others who advocate a United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Great Apes that would confer basic legal rights on non-human great apes: chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans.

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Greenville Goodwin

Grenville Goodwin, born Greenville Goodwin (1907–1940), is best known for his participant-observer ethnology work among the Western Apache in the 1930s in the American Southwest.

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Grimaldi Man

Grimaldi man is the name formerly given to two human skeletons of the Upper Paleolithic discovered in Italy in 1901.

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Guillermo Abadía Morales

Guillermo Abadía Morales (8 May 1912 – 21 January 2010) was a Colombian linguist, academic, anthropologist, folklore researcher and indigenous language expert.

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Gullah

The Gullah are African Americans who live in the Lowcountry region of the U.S. states of Georgia and South Carolina, in both the coastal plain and the Sea Islands (including urban Savannah and Charleston).

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Gustav Fritsch

Gustav Theodor Fritsch (5 March 1838 – 12 June 1927) was a German anatomist, anthropologist, traveller and physiologist from Cottbus.

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Gustav Klemm

Gustav Friedrich Klemm (12 November 1802, in Chemnitz – 26 August 1867, in Dresden) was a German anthropologist and librarian.

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Gustav Schwalbe

Gustav Albert Schwalbe, M.D. (1 August 1844 – 23 April 1916) was a German anatomist and anthropologist from Quedlinburg.

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Guy Mary-Rousselière

Father Guy Mary-Rousselière (Le Mans, France 1913-1994 Mittimatalik) was a French-Canadian anthropologist, missionary priest at Mittimatalik, and string figure collector.

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Gwilliam Iwan Jones

Gwilliam Iwan Jones (3 May 1904 – 25 January 1995) was a Welsh photographer and anthropologist.

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H. Otley Beyer

Henry Otley Beyer (July 13, 1883 – December 31, 1966) was an American anthropologist, who spent most of his adult life in the Philippines teaching Philippine indigenous culture.

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Haida argillite carvings

Haida argillite carvings are a sculptural tradition among the Haida indigenous nation of the Northwest Coast of North America.

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Haitian diaspora

Haiti has a sizable diaspora, present chiefly in the Dominican Republic, the United States, Canada, Cuba, the Bahamas, and France.

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Haku Shah

Haku Shah (born 1934) is a Gandhian, an eminent Indian painter belonging to the Baroda School, he is also a cultural anthropologist, an author of international repute on folk and tribal art and culture.

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Halleh Ghorashi

Halleh Ghorashi (also spelled Ghoreishi; born 30 July 1962 in Tehran) is an Iranian-born anthropologist who lives in the Netherlands.

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Hank Wesselman

Henry Barnard Wesselman (born 1941) is an American anthropologist known primarily for his Spiritwalker trilogy of spiritual memoirs.

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Hannah Morris

Hannah Morris is an American anthropologist, known for her contribution to the Rising Star Expedition as one of the six women Underground Astronauts.

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Hans Fleischhacker

Hans Fleischhacker (10 March 1912 – 30 January 1992) was a German anthropologist with the Ahnenerbe and a commander in the SS of Nazi Germany.

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Hans Peter Duerr

Hans Peter Duerr (born 6 June 1943) is a German anthropologist and author of ten books on anthropology.

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Harbhajan Singh (poet)

Harbhajan Singh (18 August 1920 – 21 October 2002) was a Punjabi poet, critic, cultural commentator, and translator.

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Harka Gurung

Dr.

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Harold A. Gould

Harold Alton Gould is an American anthropologist sepcializing in Indian society and civilization.

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Harold Courlander

Harold Courlander (September 18, 1908 – March 15, 1996) was an American novelist, folklorist, and anthropologist, an expert in the study of Haitian life.

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Harold E. Lambert

Harold E. Lambert OBE (1893–1967) was a British linguist and anthropologist in Kenya.

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Harold S. Gladwin

Harold Sterling Gladwin (1883–1983) was an American archaeologist, anthropologist, and stockbroker born in New York City.

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Harrison County, Ohio

Harrison County is a county located in the U.S. state of Ohio.

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Harry Männil

Harry Männil (May 17, 1920 – January 11, 2010), also known as Harry Mannil Laul, was an Estonian businessman, art collector, and cultural benefactor in several countries.

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Harvey Whitehouse

Harvey Whitehouse is chair of social anthropology and professorial fellow of Magdalen College at the University of Oxford.

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Hassan Wario

Hassan Gurach Wario Arero (born 24 November 1970) is a Kenyan anthropologist, politician and diplomat, who has been Kanyan Ambassador to Austria since 2018.

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Haximu massacre

The Haximu massacre, also known as the Yanomami massacre, was an armed conflict in Brazil in 1993.

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Hélène Metzger

Hélène Metzger (26 August 1889 – 7 March 1944) was a French philosopher of science and historian of science.

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Heidi Ravven

Heidi M. Ravven (born 1952) is the Bates and Benjamin Professor of Classical and Religious Studies at Hamilton College, where she has taught her specialization, Jewish Philosophy, and general Jewish Studies since 1983.

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Heinrich von Ranke

Heinrich von Ranke (8 May 1830, Rückersdorf – 13 May 1909, Munich) was a German physiologist and pediatrician.

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Helen Codere

Helen Frances Codere (September 10, 1917 – June 5, 2009) was an American cultural anthropologist who received her BA from the University of Minnesota in 1939 and her PhD in anthropology from Columbia University where she studied with Ruth Benedict.

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Helen Mack Chang

Helen Mack Chang (born 19 January 1952) is a Guatemalan businesswoman and human rights activist.

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Helena Group

Helena, Helena Group, The Helena Group, or The Helena Group Foundation is a global non-governmental organization and think-tank composed of prominent leaders from multiple generations of society.

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Helmut de Terra

Helmut de Terra (1900 in Guben, Germany - 1981 in Bern, Switzerland) was a geologist, explorer, archaeologist, author and anthropologist.

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Henning Haslund-Christensen

Henning Haslund-Christensen (31 August 1896 – 13 September 1948) was a Danish travel writer and anthropologist.

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Henri Breuil

Henri Édouard Prosper Breuil (28 February 1877 – 14 August 1961), often referred to as Abbé Breuil, was a French Catholic priest and member of the Society of Jesus, archaeologist, anthropologist, ethnologist and geologist.

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Henri Victor Vallois

Henri Victor Vallois (11 April 1889 – 27 August 1981) was a French anthropologist and paleontologist.

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Henri-Alexandre Junod

Henri-Alexandre Junod (17 May 1863 Saint-Martin, Val-de-Ruz - 22 April 1934 Geneva) was a Swiss-born South African missionary, ethnographer, anthropologist, linguist and naturalist, stationed for much of his career at Shiluvane Mission Station outside Tzaneen in Limpopo Province.

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Henry Evans Maude

Henry Evans Maude, OBE (1 October 1906 – 4 November 2006) was a British civil servant and anthropologist.

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Henry F. Dobyns

Henry Farmer Dobyns, Jr. (July 3, 1925 – June 21, 2009) was an anthropologist, author and researcher specializing in the ethnohistory and demography of native peoples in the American hemisphere.

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Henry Field (anthropologist)

Henry Field (December 15, 1902 – January 4, 1986) was an American anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Henry Fry (anthropologist)

Henry Kenneth Fry (born 25 May 1886 North Adelaide, South Australiahttp://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A140258b.htm Australian Dictionary of Biography) was a physician and anthropologist, and Medical Officer for the City of Adelaide.

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Henry Gravrand

Father Henry Gravrand (France, 1921 - Abbey of Latrun, Palestine, 11 July 2003) was a French Catholic missionary to Africa and an anthropologist who has written extensively on Serer religion and culture.

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Henry Taube

Henry Taube, Ph.D, M.Sc, B.Sc., FRSC (November 30, 1915 – November 16, 2005) was a Canadian-born American chemist noted for having been awarded the 1983 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for "his work in the mechanisms of electron-transfer reactions, especially in metal complexes." He was the second Canadian-born chemist to win the Nobel Prize, and remains the only Saskatchewanian-born Nobel laureate.

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Henry Timberlake

Henry Timberlake (1730 or 1735 – September 30, 1765) was a colonial Anglo-American officer, journalist, and cartographer.

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Henry Usher Hall

Henry Usher Hall (1876–1944) was an American anthropologist.

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Herbert Halpert

Herbert Halpert (August 23, 1911 – December 29, 2000) was an American anthropologist and folklorist, specialised in the collection and study of both folk song and narrative.

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Herbert Spencer

Herbert Spencer (27 April 1820 – 8 December 1903) was an English philosopher, biologist, anthropologist, sociologist, and prominent classical liberal political theorist of the Victorian era.

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Herman Frederik Carel ten Kate (anthropologist)

Herman F.C. ten Kate, the younger (7 February 1858 – 3 February 1931) was a Dutch anthropologist.

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Herman Frederik Carel ten Kate (artist)

Herman Frederik Carel, or Herman ten Kate, the Elder (16 February 1822 – 26 March 1891) was a Dutch artist known for his paintings, drawings, and prints.

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Hermann Heinrich Ploss

Hermann Heinrich Ploss (8 February 1819, in Leipzig – 11 December 1885, in Leipzig) was a German gynecologist and anthropologist.

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Hermann Mückler

Hermann N. Mückler (Hermann Mueckler, born 8 March 1964 in Vienna, Austria) is an Austrian anthropologist and political scientist, specialized on the Asia-Pacific region, with a focus on Oceania (Pacific Islands), especially Fiji, Melanesia, and Polynesia.

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Hermann Poppelbaum

Hermann Poppelbaum Dr.

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Hermann von Tappeiner

Hermann von Tappeiner (18 November 1847 in Meran – 12 January 1927 in Munich) was a German pharmacologist.

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Hermann Welcker

Hermann Welcker (8 April 1822 – 12 September 1897) was a German anatomist and anthropologist who was born in Giessen.

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Hermannsburg, Northern Territory

Hermannsburg is an Aboriginal community in Ljirapinta Ward of the MacDonnell Shire in the Northern Territory of Australia, 125 km km west southwest of Alice Springs.

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Hernando de Soto

Hernando de Soto (1495 – May 21, 1542) was a Spanish explorer and conquistador who led the first Spanish and European expedition deep into the territory of the modern-day United States (through Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and most likely Arkansas).

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Hero's journey

In narratology and comparative mythology, the monomyth, or the hero's journey, is the common template of a broad category of tales that involve a hero who goes on an adventure, and in a decisive crisis wins a victory, and then comes home changed or transformed.

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High-context and low-context cultures

High-context culture and low-context culture are terms used to describe cultures based on how explicit the messages exchanged are and how much the context means in certain situations.

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Hilma Granqvist

Hilma Natalia Granqvist (17 July 1890 Sipoo – 25 February 1972 Helsinki) was a Swedish-speaking Finnish anthropologist who conducted long field studies of Palestinians.

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Hinilawod

Hinilawod is an epic poem orally transmitted from early inhabitants of a place called Sulod in central Panay, Philippines.

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Historical document

Historical documents are original documents that contain important historical information about a person, place, or event and can thus serve as primary sources as important ingredients of the historical methodology.

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History of anarchism

Anarchism is a political philosophy that advocates stateless societies often defined as self-governed voluntary institutions, but that several authors have defined as more specific institutions based on non-hierarchical free associations.

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History of Asian art

The history of Asian art or Eastern art, includes a vast range of influences from various cultures and religions.

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History of Indonesia

The history of Indonesia has been shaped by its geographic position, its natural resources, a series of human migrations and contacts, wars and conquests, as well as by trade, economics and politics.

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History of Long Island

Long Island has had a long recorded history from the first European settlements in the 17th century to today.

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History of Luzon

The history of Luzon covers events that happened in the largest island of the Philippine Archipelago, Luzon.

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History of lysergic acid diethylamide

The psychedelic drug (or entheogen) lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) was first synthesized on November 16, 1938 by the Swiss chemist Albert Hofmann in the Sandoz (now Novartis) laboratories in Basel, Switzerland.

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History of materials science

Materials science has shaped the development of civilizations since the dawn of mankind.

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History of Montana

This is a broad outline history of the state of Montana in the United States.

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History of Montreal

The history of Montreal, located in Quebec, Canada, spans about 8,000 years.

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History of Native Americans in the United States

The history of Native Americans in the United States began in ancient times tens of thousands of years ago with the settlement of the Americas by the Paleo-Indians.

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History of North America

History of North America encompasses the past developments of people populating the continent of North America.

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History of Presque Isle

The History of Presque Isle Pennsylvania began when Presque Isle was created by the wave action of Lake Erie over the course of the 11,000 years that have passed since the last ice age.

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History of Sierra Leone

The history of Sierra Leone began when the land became inhabited by indigenous African peoples at least 2,500 years ago.

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History of slavery in New York

Historically, the enslavement of overwhelmingly African people in the United States, began in New York as part of the Dutch slave trade.

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History of the Americas

The prehistory of the Americas (North, South, and Central America, and the Caribbean) begins with people migrating to these areas from Asia during the height of an Ice Age.

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History of the Cherokee language

This article is a detailed History of the Cherokee Language, the Native American Indian Iroquoian language spoken by the Cherokee people.

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History of the United States

The history of the United States began with the settlement of Indigenous people before 15,000 BC.

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History of Virginia

The History of Virginia begins with documentation by the first Spanish explorers to reach the area in the 1500s, when it was occupied chiefly by Algonquian, Iroquoian, and Siouan peoples.

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Hochelaga-Maisonneuve

Hochelaga-Maisonneuve is a district of Montreal, Quebec, situated on the eastern half of the island, generally to the south and southwest of the city's Olympic Stadium.

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Hofstede's cultural dimensions theory

Hofstede's cultural dimensions theory is a framework for cross-cultural communication, developed by Geert Hofstede.

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Homeward (Star Trek: The Next Generation)

"Homeward" is the 165th episode of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation.

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Hominidae

The Hominidae, whose members are known as great apes or hominids, are a taxonomic family of primates that includes eight extant species in four genera: Pongo, the Bornean, Sumatran and Tapanuli orangutan; Gorilla, the eastern and western gorilla; Pan, the common chimpanzee and the bonobo; and Homo, which includes modern humans and its extinct relatives (e.g., the Neanderthal), and ancestors, such as Homo erectus.

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Hortense Powdermaker

Hortense Powdermaker (December 24, 1900 – June 16, 1970) was an American anthropologist best known for her ethnographic studies of African Americans in rural America and of Hollywood.

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Houma people

The Houma are a historic Native American tribe located in Louisiana on the east side of the Red River of the South.

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Howard Reid (filmmaker)

Howard Reid (born 1951) is a British documentary film maker and anthropologist.

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Howard Vyse

Major General Richard William Howard Vyse (25 July 1784 – 8 June 1853) was a British soldier, anthropologist and Egyptologist.

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Howling III

Howling III (also known as Howling III: The Marsupials and The Marsupials: The Howling III) is a 1987 Australian horror sequel to The Howling, directed by Philippe Mora and filmed on location in and around Sydney, Australia.

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Hubbard Medal

The Hubbard Medal is awarded by the National Geographic Society for distinction in exploration, discovery, and research.

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Hueyapan

Santo Domingo Hueyapan is a small town in the rural northeastern part of the Mexican state of Morelos, in the municipality of Tetela del Volcán.

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Hugh Brody

Hugh Brody is a British anthropologist, writer, director and lecturer.

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Hugh Fox

Hugh Bernard Fox Jr. (February 12, 1932 – September 4, 2011) was a writer, novelist, poet and anthropologist and one of the founders (with Ralph Ellison, Anaïs Nin, Paul Bowles, Joyce Carol Oates, Buckminster Fuller and others) of the Pushcart Prize for literature.

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Hugh Gusterson

Hugh Gusterson is an anthropologist at George Washington University,.

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Hugh Raffles

Hugh Raffles is an anthropologist whose work explores relationships among people, animals, and things.

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Hugh Trevor-Roper

Hugh Redwald Trevor-Roper, Baron Dacre of Glanton, (15 January 1914 – 26 January 2003), was a British historian of early modern Britain and Nazi Germany.

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Hugo O. Engelmann

Hugo Otto Engelmann (September 11, 1917 – February 2, 2002) was an American sociologist, anthropologist and general systems theorist.

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Hugo Obermaier

Hugo Obermaier (29 January 1877, Regensburg – 12 November 1946, Fribourg) was a distinguished prehistorian and anthropologist who taught at various European centres of learning.

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Human ecosystem

Human ecosystems are complex cybernetic systems that are increasingly being used by ecological anthropologists and other scholars to examine the ecological aspects of human communities in a way that integrates multiple factors as economics, socio-political organization, psychological factors, and physical factors related to the environment.

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Human mating strategies

In evolutionary psychology and behavioral ecology, human mating strategies are a set of behaviors used by individuals to attract, select, and retain mates.

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Human physical appearance

Human physical appearance is the outward phenotype or look of human beings.

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Humphrey Ocean

Humphrey Ocean RA (born 22 June 1951) is a contemporary British painter and Royal Academy Professor of Perspective.

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Huzurpaga

Huzurpaga is the oldest girls' high school in Pune, India.

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Hyborian Age

The Hyborian Age is the fictional period within the artificial mythology created by Robert E. Howard in which the sword and sorcery tales of Conan the Barbarian are set.

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Hypocognition

Hypocognition, in cognitive linguistics, means missing and being unable to communicate cognitive and linguistic representations because there are no words for particular concepts.

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I am a Curator

I am a Curator was a process-based exhibition project by artist Per Hüttner that took place at Chisenhale Gallery, London, UK, 5 November – 14 December 2003.

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I. H. N. Evans

Ivor Hugh Norman Evans (1886–1957) was a British anthropologist, ethnographer and archaeologist who spent most of his working life in peninsular British Malaya (now Malaysia) and in North Borneo (now Sabah, Malaysia).

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Iain R. Edgar

Iain Edgar (born 1948) is a social anthropologist at Durham University.

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Icelandic Phallological Museum

The Icelandic Phallological Museum (Hið Íslenzka Reðasafn), located in Reykjavík, Iceland, houses the world's largest display of penises and penile parts.

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Identity (social science)

In psychology, identity is the qualities, beliefs, personality, looks and/or expressions that make a person (self-identity) or group (particular social category or social group).

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Iglesia ni Cristo

Iglesia ni Cristo (abbreviated as INC English: Church of Christ) is an international church that originated in the Philippines.

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Ignacio Baleztena Ascárate

Ignacio Baleztena Ascárate (1887 - 1972) was a Navarrese folk customs expert, a Carlist politician and soldier.

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Ignacio Bernal

Ignacio Bernal (February 13, 1910 in Paris - January 24, 1992 in Mexico City) was an eminent Mexican anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Igor Gorevich

Igor Gorevich is a Russian anthropologist, the author of the three volume text O Kritike Antropologii Zhivotnikh (Towards a critique of animal anthropology), published in 1987.

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Ikland

Ikland is a 2011 documentary film about a journey into the mountains of northern Uganda near the Kenyan border and a visit with the notorious Ik people.

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Ilium (bone)

The ilium (plural ilia) is the uppermost and largest part of the hip bone, and appears in most vertebrates including mammals and birds, but not bony fish.

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Imma von Bodmershof

Imma von Bodmershof (born Emma Lilly Isolde von Ehrenfels) (August 10, 1895 – August 26, 1982) was an Austrian poet born in Graz.

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Imprinting (psychology)

In psychology and ethology, imprinting is any kind of phase-sensitive learning (learning occurring at a particular age or a particular life stage) that is rapid and apparently independent of the consequences of behaviour.

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Improving Access to Psychological Therapies

Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) is a National Health Service (England) initiative to provide more psychotherapy to the general population.

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Inalienable possessions

Inalienable possessions (or immovable property) are things such as land or objects which are symbolically identified with the groups that own them, and hence cannot be permanently severed from them.

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Inclusive capitalism

Inclusive capitalism is a term composed of two complementary meanings: (1) poverty is a significant, systemic problem in countries which have already embraced or are transitioning towards capitalistic economies, and (2) companies and non-governmental organizations can sell goods and services to low-income people, which may lead to targeted poverty alleviation strategies, including improving people’s nutrition, health care, education, employment and environment, but not their political power.

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Indian Anthropological Society

Indian Anthropological Association (IAA) is the representative body of the professional anthropologists in India.

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Indigenization

Indigenization is the act of making something more native; transformation of some service, idea, etc.

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Indigenous people of the Everglades region

The indigenous people of the Everglades region arrived in the Florida peninsula of what is now the United States approximately 14,000 to 15,000 years ago, probably following large game.

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Ineke van Wetering

Wilhelmina (Ineke) van Wetering (17 October 1934, Hilversum - 18 October 2011, Huijbergen) was a Dutch anthropologist and Surinamist.

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Inequity aversion

Inequity aversion (IA) is the preference for fairness and resistance to incidental inequalities.

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Infanticide

Infanticide (or infant homicide) is the intentional killing of infants.

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Instinct (film)

Instinct is a 1999 American psychological thriller film, directed by Jon Turteltaub and starring Anthony Hopkins, Cuba Gooding Jr., George Dzundza, Donald Sutherland, and Maura Tierney.

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Institute of Anthropology and Ethnography

The Institute of Anthropology and Ethnography or N.N. Miklukho-Maklai Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology (Институт этнологии и антропологии им.; abbreviated as ИЭА in Russian and IEA in English) is a Russian institute of research, specializing in ethnographic studies of cultural and physical anthropology.

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Intellectual Property Issues in Cultural Heritage project

The Intellectual Property Issues in Cultural Heritage (IPinCH) Project is a seven-year international research initiative based at Simon Fraser University, in British Columbia, Canada.

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Intercultural competence

U.S. Military Academy Center for Languages, Cultures, and Regional Studies.

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International Commission on Orders of Chivalry

The International Commission for Orders of Chivalry (ICOC; Italian: Commissione internazionale permanente per lo studio degli ordini cavallereschi) is a privately run, privately funded organisation composed of scholars on chivalric matters and systems of awards.

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International Congress of Americanists

The International Congress of Americanists (ICA) is an international academic conference for research in multidisciplinary studies of the Americas.

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International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs

The International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA) is an independent and non-profit international human rights-based membership organization, whose central charter is to endorse and promote the collective rights of the world's indigenous peoples.

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Interruption (speech)

An interruption is a speech event when one person breaks in to interject while another person is talking.

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Intimate relationship

An intimate relationship is an interpersonal relationship that involves physical or emotional intimacy.

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Iraq at a Distance

Iraq at a Distance: What Anthropologists Can Teach Us about the War is a book length collection of studies by six anthropologists, which provides insight into the impact of the Iraq War on Iraqi citizens since 2003.

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Irawati Karve

Irawati Karve (1905 – 11 August 1970) was an anthropologist, sociologist, educationist and writer from Maharashtra, India.

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Irina Podgorny

Irina Podgorny, Ph.D (b. 1963 Quilmes) is an Argentinie anthropologist, a historian of science at the National University of La Plata, permanent staff at CONICET, professor ad honorem and Director of the Archive of History and Photographs at the Natural Science Facility and Museum of the National University of La Plata,: Irina Podgorny and winner of the Bernardo Houssay award.

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Iroquois

The Iroquois or Haudenosaunee (People of the Longhouse) are a historically powerful northeast Native American confederacy.

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Irving Hexham

Irving Hexham (born 14 April 1943) is a Canadian academic and writer who has published twenty-three books and numerous articles, chapters, and book reviews in respected academic journals.

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Isabel Kelly

Isabel Kelly (1906–1982) was an American anthropologist known for her work with the members of the Coast Miwok tribe, members of the Chemehuevi people in the 1920s and 1930s, and her work later in life as an archaeologist working in Sinaloa, Mexico.

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Isabella Bordoni

Isabella Bordoni (born 1962 in Rimini, Italy) is an Italian poet, writer, visual and sound artist, and performer.

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Ishi

Ishi (c. 1861 – March 25, 1916) was the last known member of the Native American Yahi people from the state of California in the United States.

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Ishida Eiichirō

was a Japanese student of folklore.

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Ishmael (novel)

Ishmael is a 1992 philosophical novel by Daniel Quinn.

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Islam in Australia

Islam in Australia is a minority religious affiliation.

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Islamophobia

Islamophobia is the fear, hatred of, or prejudice against, the Islamic religion or Muslims generally, especially when seen as a geopolitical force or the source of terrorism.

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Itasca State Park

Itasca State Park is a state park of Minnesota, United States, and contains the headwaters of the Mississippi River.

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IUAES

The International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences (IUAES) is the largest world forum of anthropologists and ethnologists, with members from more than fifty countries.

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Ivan Van Sertima

Ivan Gladstone Van Sertima (26 January 1935 – 25 May 2009) was a Guyanese-born associate professor of Africana Studies at Rutgers University in the United States.

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Ivar Skarland

Ivar Skarland (September 2, 1899 – January 1, 1965) was a Norwegian anthropologist.

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J. Clyde Mitchell

James Clyde Mitchell (usually known as J. Clyde Mitchell) (21 June 1918 Pietermaritzburg – 15 November 1995) was a British sociologist and anthropologist.

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J. P. S. Uberoi

J.

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J. Philippe Rushton

John Philippe Rushton (December 3, 1943 – October 2, 2012) was a Canadian psychologist and author.

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Jaap van Velsen

Jaap van Velsen (28 September 1921 – 6 May 1990) was a Dutch-born British anthropologist.

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Jaara baby

The Jaara baby was an Aboriginal Australian child who died at some stage during the 1840s to 1860s.

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Jack Goody

Sir John Rankine Goody, (27 July 1919 – 16 July 2015) was a British social anthropologist.

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Jack Herbert Driberg

Jack Herbert Driberg (April 1888 – 5 February 1946) was a British anthropologist.

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Jack Tobin (anthropologist)

Jack Adair Tobin, Ph.D. (June 15, 1920 – June 18, 2010) was an American anthropologist who devoted much of his life to the people of the Republic of the Marshall Islands.

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Jacqueline Roumeguere-Eberhardt

Jacqueline Roumeguère-Eberhardt (27 November 1927 – 29 March 2006) was a French anthropologist (born South African), research director at the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) and Africa specialist.

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Jacques Legrand (Mongolist)

Jacques Legrand (born 29 June 1946) is a French linguist and anthropologist.

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Jacques Ruffié

Jacques Ruffié, born 22 November 1921 in Limoux, France died 1 July 2004 was a French haematologist, geneticist and Anthropologist.

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Jalpana

Jalapana is a large village and union council in the Sargodha District of Pakistani Punjab.

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James C. Faris

James C. Faris is an American anthropologist and epistemologist.

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James Deetz

James Deetz (February 8, 1930 – November 25, 2000) was an American anthropologist, often known as one of the fathers of historical archaeology.

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James Ferguson (anthropologist)

James Ferguson (born June 16, 1959) is an American anthropologist.

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James M. Freeman

James M. Freeman (born 1936) is an American anthropologist, and professor at San Jose State University.

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James Page (Australian educationist)

James Smith Page (born 1953) is an Australian educationist and anthropologist, and a recognised authority within the field of peace education.

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James Sterling Young

James Sterling Young (October 14, 1927 – August 8, 2013) was an American political scientist, winner of the Bancroft Prize, Professor of Government and Randolph P. Compton Scholar at the University of Virginia.

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James Stevenson (geologist)

Colonel Accessed 29-Mar-2013.

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Jan Czekanowski

Jan Czekanowski (October 8, 1882, Głuchów – July 20, 1965, Szczecin) was a Polish anthropologist, statistician, ethnographer, traveller, and linguist.

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Jan III Sobieski High School, Kraków

Jan III Sobieski High School in Kraków - high school in Kraków, Poland founded in 1883.

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Jan Pouwer

Jan Pouwer (21 September 1924, Dordrecht – 21 April 2010, Zwolle) was a Dutch anthropologist with a thorough grounding in his profession in terms of fieldwork and theory.

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Jane E. Buikstra

Jane Ellen Buikstra (born 1945) is an American anthropologist and bioarchaeologist.

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Jane H. Hill

Jane Hassler Hill, (born Frances Jane Hassler, October 27, 1939) is an American anthropologist and linguist who has worked extensively with Native American languages of the Uto-Aztecan language family and anthropological linguistics of North American communities.

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Jane MacLaren Walsh

Jane MacLaren Walsh is an anthropologist and researcher at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. She is known for her role in exposing faked pre-Columbian artifacts.

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Janet Carsten

Janet Carsten is an anthropologist and professor currently employed at the University of Edinburgh.

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Janet Roitman

Janet Roitman is an American anthropologist.

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Janine R. Wedel

Janine R. Wedel is an American anthropologist and university professor in the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University and a senior research fellow of the New America Foundation.

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Japanese occupation of British Borneo

Before the outbreak of World War II in the Pacific, the island of Borneo was divided into five territories.

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Jared Diamond

Jared Mason Diamond (born September 10, 1937) is an American ecologist, geographer, biologist, anthropologist and author best known for his popular science books The Third Chimpanzee (1991); Guns, Germs, and Steel (1997, awarded a Pulitzer Prize); Collapse (2005); and The World Until Yesterday (2012).

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Jaroslav Malina (anthropologist)

Jaroslav Malina (born 11 April 1945, in Dolní Bučice near Čáslav, Czech Republic) is a Czech archaeologist, anthropologist, publishing editor, head of the Department (Institute) of Anthropology of the Faculty of Science of Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic, and founder and head of Universitas (Masarykiana) Foundation.

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Jatari Indian Folk Association

The Jatari Indian Folk Association is a Hungarian musical group aims to explore and collect the folk traditions such as folk music, folk and sacral dances, national costume, folk instruments, legends, folk tales, Catholic liturgical and Gregorian tunes of Andean cultures of South America.

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Javier Melloni

Javier Melloni Ribas is an Italian-Catalan Jesuit anthropologist and theologian.

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Józef Piłsudski

Józef Klemens Piłsudski (5 December 1867 – 12 May 1935) was a Polish statesman; he was Chief of State (1918–22), "First Marshal of Poland" (from 1920), and de facto leader (1926–35) of the Second Polish Republic as the Minister of Military Affairs.

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Jean Briggs

Jean L. Briggs (May 28, 1929 – July 27, 2016) was an American-born Canadian anthropologist, ethnographer, linguist, and professor emerita at Memorial University of Newfoundland.

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Jean Rouch

Jean Rouch (31 May 1917 – 18 February 2004) was a French filmmaker and anthropologist.

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Jean-Claude Passeron

Jean-Claude Passeron (born 1930 in Nice) is a French sociologist and leader of social science studies.

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Jean-Louis Berlandier

Jean-Louis Berlandier (1803 – 1851) was a French-Mexican naturalist, physician, and anthropologist.

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Jean-Marie Brohm

Jean-Marie Brohm is a French sociologist, anthropologist and philosopher.

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Jeff Halper

Jeff Halper (ג'ף הלפר; born 1946) is an American-born anthropologist, author, lecturer, and political activist who has lived in Israel since 1973.

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Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock

Jeffrey Andrew Weinstock (born January 24, 1970) is an American literature, film, and media scholar who has been teaching in the Department of English Language and Literature at Central Michigan University since 2001.

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Jenn Lindsay

Jenn Lindsay (born October 18, 1978 in Amarillo, Texas) is an American anti-folk singer/songwriter, anthropologist, documentary filmmaker, playwright and journalist currently based in Rome, Italy.

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Jerald T. Milanich

Jerald T. Milanich is an American anthropologist and archaeologist, specializing in Native American culture in Florida.

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Jeremy Boissevain

Jeremy Fergus Boissevain (August 5, 1928 – June 26, 2015) was a Dutch anthropologist.

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Jeremy Narby

Jeremy Narby (born 1959 in Montreal, Quebec) is a Canadian anthropologist and author.

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Jesús Arango Cano

Jesús Arango Cano (La Tebaida, Colombia, 21 June 1915 - Armenia, 9 January 2015) was a Colombian economist, diplomat, anthropologist, archaeologist and writer.

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Jesse D. Jennings

Jesse David Jennings (1909–1997) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist and founding director of the Natural History Museum of Utah.

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Jesse Walter Fewkes

Jesse Walter Fewkes (November 14, 1850 – 1930) was an American anthropologist, archaeologist, writer and naturalist.

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Jimmy Hoffa

James Riddle Hoffa (February 14, 1913 – disappeared July 30, 1975) was an American labor union leader who served as the President of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT) union from 1958 until 1971.

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Joachim Burger

Joachim Burger (born 27 June 1969 in Aschaffenburg, West Germany) is a German anthropologist and population geneticist based at Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany, where he runs the at the.

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JoAllyn Archambault

JoAllyn Archambault (born 1942) is a cultural anthropologist with an expertise in Native American people.

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Joan Halifax

Joan Jiko Halifax (born July 30, 1942) is an American Zen Buddhist teacher, anthropologist, ecologist, civil rights activist, hospice caregiver, and the author of several books on Buddhism and spirituality.

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Joann Kealiinohomoku

Joann Wheeler Kealiinohomoku (also known by other orthographic variation including Keali'inohomoku) (1930–2015) was an American anthropologist and educator, co-founder of the dance research organization Cross-Cultural Dance Resources.

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João de Pina-Cabral

João de Pina-Cabral (born 1954 in Porto) is a Portuguese anthropologist and a senior researcher at the Instituto de Ciências Sociais of the University of Lisbon, where he was President of the Scientific Council (1997–2004).

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Jocelyne Dakhlia

Jocelyne Dakhlia (born 1959) is a French historian and anthropologist.

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Joe Craig

Joe Craig (born 31 December 1981 in London) is an English writer, children's novelist and musician.

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Joe Leaphorn

Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn is a fictional character created by the twentieth-century American mystery writer Tony Hillerman; he is one of two officers of the Navajo Tribal Police who are featured in a number of Hillerman's novels.

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Johan Grimonprez

Johan Grimonprez (born 1962) is a Belgian multimedia artist, filmmaker, and curator.

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Johann Friedrich Blumenbach

Johann Friedrich Blumenbach (11 May 1752 – 22 January 1840) was a German physician, naturalist, physiologist, and anthropologist.

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Johann Jakob Bachofen

Johann Jakob Bachofen (22 December 1815 – 25 November 1887) was a Swiss antiquarian, jurist, philologist, and anthropologist, professor for Roman law at the University of Basel from 1841 to 1845.

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Johannes Overbeck

Johannes Adolph Overbeck (March 27, 1826 – November 8, 1895) was a German archaeologist and art historian.

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Johannes Ranke

Johannes Ranke (23 August 1836, Thurnau – 26 July 1916, Munich) was a German physiologist and anthropologist.

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John Adair (anthropologist)

John Adair (1913 in Memphis, Tennessee – December 14, 1997 in San Francisco, California), was an American anthropologist best known for work in visual anthropology but also very much involved and interested in applied anthropology.

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John C. G. Röhl

John C. G. Röhl (born 31 May 1938) is a British historian.

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John G. Fleagle

John G. Fleagle is an American anthropologist, primatologist, and Distinguished Professor at State University of New York, Stony Brook.

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John Grattan

John Grattan (1800, Dublin -1871) was an Irish naturalist and anthropologist.

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John Hemming (explorer)

John Henry Hemming (born 5 January 1935) is a Canadian explorer and author, expert on Incas and indigenous peoples of the Amazon basin.

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John Henry Hutton

John Henry Hutton (27 June 1885 – 23 May 1968) was an English-born anthropologist and an administrator in the Indian Civil Service (ICS) during the period of the British Raj.

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John Holmes McDowell

John Holmes McDowell (born 25 September 1946) is a Professor in the Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology at Indiana University Bloomington.

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John Howard Payne

John Howard Payne (June 9, 1791 – April 10, 1852) was an American actor, poet, playwright, and author who had most of his theatrical career and success in London.

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John Howland Rowe

John Howland Rowe (June 10, 1918 – May 1, 2004) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist known for his extensive research on Peru, especially on the Inca civilization.

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John La Farge

John La Farge (March 31, 1835 – November 14, 1910) was an American painter, muralist, stained glass window maker, decorator, and writer.

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John Landers

John Maxwell Landers, (born 1952) is a British historian, anthropologist, and academic, who specialises in historical demography.

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John Marshall (filmmaker)

John Kennedy Marshall (November 12, 1932 – April 22, 2005) was an American anthropologist and acclaimed documentary filmmaker best known for his work in Namibia recording the lives of the Ju/'hoansi (also called the !Kung Bushmen).

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John Mathew

John Mathew (31 May 1849 – 11 March 1929) was an Australian Presbyterian minister and anthropologist, author of "Eaglehawk and Crow" and "Two Representative Tribes of Queensland".

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John Morris (anthropologist)

Major Charles John Morris (1895 – 13 December 1980), known as John, was a British mountaineer, anthropologist and journalist, and controller of BBC Radio's Third Programme.

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John P. Jacob

John P. Jacob (born 1957) is an American writer and curator.

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John R. Lukacs

John R. Lukacs (born March 1, 1947) is an American anthropologist.

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John R. Swanton

John Reed Swanton (February 19, 1873 – May 2, 1958) was an American anthropologist, folklorist, and linguist who worked with Native American peoples throughout the United States.

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John Shae Perring

John Shae Perring (1813–1869) was a British engineer, anthropologist and Egyptologist, most notable for his work excavating and documenting Egyptian pyramids.

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John Tooby

John Tooby is an American anthropologist, who, together with psychologist wife Leda Cosmides, helped pioneer the field of evolutionary psychology.

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John Waiko

John Dademo Waiko (born 8 August 1945) is a Papua New Guinean historian, anthropologist, playwright and politician.

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John Whiting (anthropologist)

John Wesley Mayhew Whiting (June 12, 1908 Chilmark, Massachusetts – May 13, 1999, Chilmark, Massachusetts) was an American sociologist and anthropologist, specializing in child development.

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Johnny Clegg

Jonathan "Johnny" Clegg OIS (born 7 June 1953) is a South African musician and anthropologist who has recorded and performed with his bands Juluka and Savuka, and more recently as a solo act, occasionally reuniting with his earlier band partners.

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Joliet Central High School

Joliet Central High School is a public secondary school located in Joliet, Illinois.

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Jonathan Boyarin

Jonathan Aaron Boyarin (יונתן אהרן בוירין; born September 16, 1956) is an American anthropologist whose work centers on Jewish communities and on the dynamics of Jewish culture, memory and identity.

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Jonathan Friedman

Jonathan Friedman (born April 7, 1946) is an American anthropologist.

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Joni Adamson

Joni Adamson (born 1958) is an American literary and cultural theorist.

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Jorge Gamboa Mendoza

Jorge Augusto Gamboa Mendoza (born 27 January 1970) is a Colombian anthropologist and historian.

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José Ferrer Canales

Dr.

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José Leandro Montalvo Guenard

José Leandro Montalvo Guenard (1885 – 1950) was a Puerto Rican physician, inventor, anthropologist and historian.

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José María Arguedas

José María Arguedas Altamirano (18 January 1911 – 2 December 1969) was a Peruvian novelist, poet, and anthropologist.

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Jose Migel Barandiaran

Jose Miguel Barandiaran Aierbe, known as on Joxemiel Barandiaran (31 December 1889 – 21 December 1991), was a Basque anthropologist, ethnographer, and priest.

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Josef Weninger

Josef Weninger (May 15, 1886, Salzburg - March 28, 1959, Vienna) was an Austrian anthropologist.

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Josep Pons Rosell

Josep Pons Rosell (September 20, 1918 - July 28, 2013) is an anthropologist and professor at the Anthropology Department of the Biology Faculty of the University of Barcelona (UB) from 1973 to his retirement.

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Joseph Deniker

Joseph Deniker (6 March 1852 in Astrakhan – 18 March 1918 in Paris) was a French naturalist and anthropologist, known primarily for his attempts to develop highly detailed maps of race in Europe.

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Joseph J. Sherman

Joseph Joel (Yosef Yehudah) Sherman (born 1980) is an American marketing strategist and artist.

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Joseph Orpen

Joseph Millerd Orpen (5 November 1828 – 17 December 1923) was an influential colonial administrator for the British empire in southern Africa, as well as a local member of the Cape Parliament and the Orange Free State Volksraad.

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Joseph Tonda

Joseph Tonda (born 1952) is a sociologist and anthropologist of Congolese and Gabonese background.

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Joseph Whitecotton

Joseph W. Whitecotton (born September 11, 1937) is an American academic anthropologist and ethnohistorian, a specialist in Latin American cultural anthropology and in particular of Mesoamerican cultures.

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Journal of Historical Sociology

This peer-reviewed journal is edited by an international panel of historians, anthropologists, geographers and sociologists, the Journal of Historical Sociology is both interdisciplinary in approach and innovative in content.

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Jovan Trifunovski

Jovan Trifunovski (Vrutok, 23 September 1914 — Belgrade, 2002) was a Serbian geographer and anthropologist.

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Juan de Esteyneffer

Juan de Esteyneffer (March 4, 1664 – 1716) was a Moravian German lay Jesuit missionary sent to the New World.

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Juan Francisco Salazar

Juan Francisco Salazar (born 1971) is a Chilean anthropologist and filmmaker.

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Juan Mauricio Renold

Juan Mauricio Renold (Rosario (Argentina), 1953 -) is an Argentine social anthropologist.

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Juan Vucetich

Juan Vucetich (July 20, 1858 – January 25, 1925) was a Croatian-born Argentine anthropologist and police official who pioneered the use of fingerprinting.

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Judaization of Jerusalem

Judaization of Jerusalem (تهويد القدس, tahweed il-quds; יהוד ירושלים, yehud yerushalaim) is a term used to describe the view that Israel has sought to transform the physical and demographic landscape of Jerusalem to enhance its Jewish character at the expense of its Muslim and Christian ones.

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Juke joint

Juke joint (or jook joint) is the vernacular term for an informal establishment featuring music, dancing, gambling, and drinking, primarily operated by African Americans in the southeastern United States.

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Julia Averkieva

Julia Pavlovna Petrova-Averkieva (July 24, 1907 – October 9, 1980 in Moscow) was a Soviet anthropologist and string figure collector.

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Julian Steward

Julian Haynes Steward (January 31, 1902 – February 6, 1972) was an American anthropologist best known for his role in developing "the concept and method" of cultural ecology, as well as a scientific theory of culture change.

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Julien Ries

Julien Ries (19 April 1920 – 23 February 2013) was a Belgian religious historian, titular archbishop and cardinal of the Catholic Church.

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Julien-Joseph Virey

Julien-Joseph Virey (21 December 1775, Langres – 9 March 1846) was a French naturalist and anthropologist.

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Julio Caro Baroja

Julio Caro Baroja (13 November 1914 – 18 August 1995) was a world-renowned Spanish anthropologist, historian, linguist and essayist.

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Julius Kollmann

Julius Kollmann (24 February 1834, Holzheim am Forst – 24 June 1918, Basel) was a German anatomist, zoologist and anthropologist.

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June Helm

June Helm (September 13, 1924 – February 5, 2004) was an American anthropologist, primarily known for her work with the Dene people in the Mackenzie River drainage.

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Junichiro Itani

is considered a founder of the discipline of Japanese primatology.

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K. David Harrison

K.

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Kaḻayapiṯi

Kaḻayapiṯi (also written Kaḻaya Piṯi and Kaḻaiapiṯi) is a rock hole in the Birksgate Range in northwestern South Australia.

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Kabete

Kabete is one of 12 electrolate constituencies within Kiambu County, as of 2012 but parts of it are in Nairobi County.

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Kaffir (racial term)

Kaffir (alternatively kaffer; originally cafri) is an ethnic slur used to refer to a black person.

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Kalyeserye

Kalyeserye is a soap opera parody segment that was aired live on the Filipino noontime variety show Eat Bulaga! on GMA Network in the Philippines and worldwide through GMA Pinoy TV.

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Kanesatake

Kanehsatà:ke is a Kanien'kéha:ka Mohawk settlement on the shore of the Lake of Two Mountains in southeastern Quebec, Canada, at the confluence of the Ottawa and St.

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Kapwani Kiwanga

Kapwani Kiwanga is a Canadian artist working in Paris, France.

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Karen Ho

Karen Ho is an American anthropologist.

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Karl Ernst Ranke

Karl Ernst Ranke (29 January 1870 in Munich – 9 November 1926 in Munich) was a German internist, pediatrician and pulmonologist known for his research of tuberculosis.

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Karl Joseph Hieronymus Windischmann

Karl Joseph Hieronymus Windischmann (25 August 1775, in Mainz – 23 April 1839, in Bonn) was a German philosopher and anthropologist.

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Karlsschrein

The Karlsschrein (Shrine of Charlemagne) in Aachen Cathedral was made in Aachen at the command of Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor and completed in 1215, after Frederick II's grandfather, Frederick Barbarossa had exhumed Charlemagne's bones from their resting place in the Palatine Chapel, Aachen in 1165.

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Kathleen Gough

Eleanor Kathleen Gough Aberle (16 August 1925 – 8 September 1990) was a British anthropologist and feminist who was known for her work in South Asia and South-East Asia.

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Kathryn B. H. Clancy

Kathryn Bridges Harley Clancy (also known as Kate Clancy) is an American biological anthropologist who specialises in reproductive health.

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Kay Warren (anthropologist)

Kay Barbara Warren (born 1947) is an American academic anthropologist, known for her extensive research and publications in cultural anthropology studies.

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Kayan people (Myanmar)

The Kayan are a sub-group of Red Karen (Karenni people), Tibeto-Burman ethnic minority of Myanmar (Burma).

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Kayhausen Boy

The Kayhausen Boy is a mummy, naturally preserved in a sphagnum bog in Lower Saxony, Germany.

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Kazuko Sinoto

Kazuko Sinoto (c. 1928 – August 5, 2013) was a Japanese-born American historian and immigration researcher who specialized in the history of Japanese migration to Hawaii.

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Kendra Coulter

Kendra Coulter (born 1979) is a Canadian labour studies scholar with a background in anthropology who is currently an associate professor at the Centre for Labour Studies at Brock University.

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Kenelm Burridge

Kenelm Oswald Lancelot Burridge (born October 31, 1922 in Malta) is an anthropologist.

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Kenneth A. R. Kennedy

Kenneth Adrian Raine Kennedy (June 26, 1930 – April 23, 2014) was an anthropologist who studied at the University of California, Berkeley.

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Kenneth Binmore

Kenneth George "Ken" Binmore, (born 27 September 1940) is a British mathematician, economist, and game theorist.

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Kenneth Emory

Kenneth Pike Emory (November 23, 1897 – January 2, 1992) was an American anthropologist who played a key role in shaping modern anthropology in Oceania.

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Kerala model

The Kerala model of development, is the style of development that has been practised in the southern Indian state of Kerala.

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Kevin Avruch

Kevin Avruch (born the 22 February 1950 in Brooklyn, New York) is an American anthropologist and sociologist, Dean of the School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution at George Mason University.

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Khal Torabully

Khal Torabully is a Mauritian and French poet, who has coined the concept of "coolitude." Born in Mauritius in 1956, in the capital city Port Louis, his father was a Trinidadian sailor and his mother was a descendant of migrants from India and Malaya.

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Khiara Bridges

Khiara M. Bridges is an American anthropologist specializing in the intersectionality of race, reproductive justice, and law.

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Kigango

Kigango (plural: vigango) is a carved wooden memorial statue erected by the Mijikenda peoples of the southeastern Kenya coast.

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Killing of Susanna Feldmann

Susanna Maria Feldmann, a 14-year-old German Jewish girl, went missing on 22 May 2018.

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Kim MacQuarrie

Kim MacQuarrie is an author, documentary filmmaker, anthropologist, and conservationist whose works include the best-selling The Last Days of the Incas (2007) and The Living Edens.

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Kim Yeshi

Kimberly Sciaky Yeshi (Tibetan name Pema Dolkar, born in 1956) is a French-American anthropologist.

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Kinnaraya

Kinnaraya or Kinnarayo also Kinnara are a social group or caste amongst the Sinhalese of Sri Lanka.

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Kinship terminology

Kinship terminology is the system used in languages to refer to the persons to whom an individual is related through kinship.

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Kirin Narayan

Kirin Narayan (born November 1959) is an Indian-born American anthropologist, folklorist and writer.

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Kirsten Hastrup

Kirsten Blinkenberg Hastrup (born 1948) is a Danish anthropologist and professor of anthropology at the University of Copenhagen.

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Kiss

A kiss is the touch or pressing of one's lips against another person or an object.

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Kitselas

Kitselas, Kitsalas or Gits'ilaasü are one of the 14 tribes of the Tsimshian nation of British Columbia, in northwestern Canada.

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Kittitas County, Washington

Kittitas County is a county located in the U.S. state of Washington.

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Kittitas, Washington

Kittitas is a city in Kittitas County, Washington, United States.

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Kobarweng or Where is Your Helicopter?

Kobarweng or Where is Your Helicopter? (1992) is a short documentary directed by Johan Grimonprez that deals with the history of a remote village in the highlands of New Guinea.

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Koentjaraningrat

Kanjeng Pangeran Haryo Prof.

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Konstantin Bogdanov

Konstantin Anatolevich Bogdanov is a Russian anthropologist and philologist whose areas of investigation covers Russian culture, including folklore, rhetoric, and the history of science and humanities.

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Koryaks

Koryaks (or Koriak) are an indigenous people of the Russian Far East, who live immediately north of the Kamchatka Peninsula in Kamchatka Krai and inhabit the coastlands of the Bering Sea.

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Krippendorf's Tribe

Krippendorf's Tribe is a 1998 American film adaptation of Frank Parkin's novel of the same name, directed by Todd Holland.

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Kris L. Hardin

Kris L. Hardin (March 7, 1953 – August 21, 2012), anthropologist and writer, was a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, and an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania.

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Kristen Gremillion

Kristen Johnson Gremillion (born November 17, 1958) is an American anthropologist whose areas of specialization include paleoethnobotany, origins of agriculture, the prehistory of eastern North America, human paleoecology and paleodiet, and the evolutionary theory.

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Kuboraum

Kuboraum (German: "cubic room") SSENSE is a brand of Italian-made sunglasses and optical glasses that was founded in Berlin in 2012 by Italians Livio Graziottin, a designer, and Sergio Eusebi, an anthropologist.

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Kuphar

A kuphar (also transliterated kufa, kuffah, quffa, quffah, etc.) is a type of coracle or round boat traditionally used on the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in ancient and modern Mesopotamia.

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Kurdish nationalism

Kurdish nationalism (Kurdish: Kurdayetî, کوردایەتی) holds that the Kurdish people are deserving of a sovereign nation that would be partitioned out of areas in Turkey, northern Iraq, and Syria based on the promised nation of Kurdistan under the Treaty of Sèvres.

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Kwakwaka'wakw art

Kwakwaka'wakw art describes the art of the Kwakwaka'wakw peoples of British Columbia.

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L. A. Krishna Iyer

Lakshminarayanapuram Ananthakrishna Krishna Iyer was an Indian Anthropologist and a writer of several books on the subject.

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L. K. Ananthakrishna Iyer

Diwan Bahadur Lakshminarayanapuram Krishna Ananthakrishna Iyer (1861–1937) was an anthropologist of British India, who is renowned for his work amongst the hill tribes of the western part of Madras province.

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L. P. Vidyarthi

Lalita Prasad Vidyarthi (28 February 1931 – 1985) was an Indian anthropologist.

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Ladislav Holý

Ladislav Holý (1933–1997) was a Czech anthropologist and Africanist of the British school of social anthropology.

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Langsuyar

The langsuyar, also lang suir or langsuir, is a female revenant in Malay and Indonesian mythology.

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Lapu-Lapu

Lapu-Lapu (Baybayin:, Abecedario: Lápú-Lápú) (fl. 1521) was a ruler of Mactan in the Visayas.

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Larry Nesper

Larry Nesper is an American anthropologist specializing in the Ojibwe (a.k.a. Chippewa) people of northern Wisconsin.

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Lars Krutak

Lars Krutak (Lincoln, Nebraska April 14, 1971) is an American anthropologist, photographer, and writer known for his research about tattoo and its cultural background.

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Last voyage of the Karluk

The last voyage of the Karluk, flagship of the Canadian Arctic Expedition of 1913–16, ended with the loss of the ship in the Arctic seas, and the subsequent deaths of nearly half her complement of 25.

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Laura Bohannan

Laura Bohannan (née Laura Marie Altman Smith), (1922–2002) pen name Elenore Smith Bowen, was an American cultural anthropologist best known for her 1961 article, "Shakespeare in the Bush." Bohannan also wrote two books during the 1960s, Tiv Economy, with her husband, and Return to Laughter, a novel.

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Lauriston Sharp

Lauriston Sharp (March 24, 1907 – December 31, 1993) was a Goldwin Smith Professor of Anthropology and Asian Studies at Cornell University.

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LaVerne Jeanne

LaVerne Masayesva Jeanne is an anthropologist and linguist at the University of Nevada at Reno, where she is an emerita associate professor.

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Lawrence Blair

Lawrence Blair, Ph.D. is an anthropologist, author, explorer and filmmaker.

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Layla AbdelRahim

Layla AbdelRahim is a Canadian comparatist anthropologist and author, whose works on narratives of civilization and wilderness have contributed to the fields of literary and cultural studies, animal studies, philosophy, sociology, anarcho-primitivst thought, epistemology, and critique of civilization and education.

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Lélia Gonzalez

Lélia Gonzalez (February 1, 1935 – July 10, 1994) was a Brazilian intellectual, politician, professor and anthropologist.

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López de Lacalle

López de Lacalle is a Spanish surname.

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Lūcija Jēruma-Krastiņa

Lūcija Jēruma-Krastiņa (12 November 1899 – 23 September 1968) was a Latvian anatomist and anthropologist, and one of the first women to be awarded a doctorate from a Latvian university.

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Lebanese people

The Lebanese people (الشعب اللبناني / ALA-LC: Lebanese Arabic pronunciation) are the people inhabiting or originating from Lebanon.

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Leda Cosmides

Leda Cosmides (born May 1957 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American psychologist, who, together with anthropologist husband John Tooby, helped develop the field of evolutionary psychology.

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Lee Ann Newsom

Lee Ann Newsom is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the Pennsylvania State University at University Park.

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Lee Henderson Watkins

Lee Henderson Watkins (1908–1972) was born in 1908.

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Lemur

Lemurs are a clade of strepsirrhine primates endemic to the island of Madagascar.

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Lenape

The Lenape, also called the Leni Lenape, Lenni Lenape and Delaware people, are an indigenous people of the Northeastern Woodlands, who live in Canada and the United States.

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Lene Hara cave

The Lena Hara cave is the main cave of a system of solutional caves in the Lautém District at the eastern tip of East Timor (Timor-Leste), close to the village of Tutuala.

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Leo Klejn

Lev Samuilovich Kleyn (born 1 July 1927), better known in English as Leo Klejn, is a Russian archaeologist, anthropologist and philologist.

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Leon Stover

Leon Eugene Stover (April 9, 1929 – November 25, 2006) was an anthropologist, a Sinologist, and a science fiction fan, who wrote both fiction and nonfiction.

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Leonard Hofstadter

Leonard Leakey Hofstadter, Ph.D., is a fictional character in the CBS television series The Big Bang Theory, in which he is portrayed by actor Johnny Galecki.

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Leopold III of Belgium

Leopold III (3 November 1901 – 25 September 1983) reigned as the fourth King of the Belgians from 1934 until 1951, when he abdicated in favour of the heir apparent, his son Baudouin.

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Lepidoblepharis buchwaldi

Lepidoblepharis buchwaldii is a species of gecko, a lizard in the family Gekkonidae.

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Leslie Spier

Leslie Spier (December 13, 1893 – December 3, 1961) was an American anthropologist best known for his ethnographic studies of American Indians.

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Lev Sternberg

Lev (Chaim-Leib) Yakovlevich Sternberg (Лев (Хаим-Лейб) Я́ковлевич Ште́рнберг) (Zhitomir, Russian Empire – August 14, 1927, Dudergof, now Mozhaisky, Soviet Union) was a Russian and Soviet ethnographer of Jewish origin who from 1889 to 1897 studied the Nivkhs (Gilyaks), Oroks, and Ainu on Sakhalin and in Siberia for the American Museum of Natural History, in New York City.

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Lewis H. Morgan

Lewis Henry Morgan (November 21, 1818 – December 17, 1881) was a pioneering American anthropologist and social theorist who worked as a railroad lawyer.

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Leyla Neyzi

Leyla Neyzi (born July 29, 1961) is a Turkish academic (anthropologist/sociologist/historian) who is currently working in Sabancı University, Istanbul.

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LGBT history

LGBT history dates back to the first recorded instances of same-sex love and sexuality of ancient civilizations, involving the history of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual, and transgender (LGBT) peoples and cultures around the world.

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LGBT in Mexico

The LGBT community has been gaining some rights in the first years of the 21st century.

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Liberation theology

Liberation theology is a synthesis of Christian theology and Marxist socio-economic analyses that emphasizes social concern for the poor and the political liberation for oppressed peoples.

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Lila Abu-Lughod

Lila Abu-Lughod (born 1952) is an American anthropologist.

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Lin Yaohua

Lin Yaohua (March 27, 1910 – November 27, 2000) was a leading Chinese sociologist and anthropologist.

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Lina Fruzzetti

Lina Fruzzetti is an American anthropologist and documentary film director.

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Lincoln School (Farley, Iowa)

Lincoln School, also known as the W.J. McGee Boyhood School, is a historic building located north of Farley, Iowa, United States.

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Lionel Tiger

Lionel Tiger (born February 5, 1937 Montreal, Quebec) is a Canadian-born, American-based anthropologist.

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Lisa Peattie

Lisa Redfield Peattie (1924) is a Professor Emerita of Urban Anthropology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a Ph.D. from University of Chicago in 1968.

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Lissant Bolton

Dr Lissant Bolton (born 1954) is an Australian anthropologist and the Keeper of the Department of Africa, Oceania and the Americas at the British Museum.

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List of African-American inventors and scientists

This list of black inventors and scientists documents many of the African Americans who have invented a multitude of items or made discoveries in the course of their lives.

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List of agnostics

Listed here are persons who have identified themselves as theologically agnostic.

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List of Alpha Kappa Alpha sisters

This list of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorors (commonly referred to as AKAs) includes initiated and honorary members of Alpha Kappa Alpha (ΑΚΑ), the first inter-collegiate Greek-letter sorority established for Black college women.

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List of alumni of Jesus College, Oxford

Jesus College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England.

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List of Archer characters

This is a list of characters on Archer, an American animated spy comedy television series created by Adam Reed for the FX network.

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List of atheist Americans

This list of atheist Americans includes atheists born in the United States, who became citizens of the United States, or have lived in the United States.

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List of atheists (miscellaneous)

This is a list of atheists.

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List of atheists (surnames A to B)

Atheists with surnames starting A and B, sortable by the field for which they are mainly known and nationality.

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List of Baptists

This list of Baptists covers those who were members of Baptist churches or raised in Baptist churches.

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List of Barnard College people

The following is a list of notable individuals associated with Barnard College through attendance as a student, service as a member of the faculty or staff, or award of the Barnard Medal of Distinction.

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List of Brigham Young University–Idaho alumni

This list of Brigham Young University alumni includes notable graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of Brigham Young University–Idaho (also known as BYU–Idaho or BYU–I), a four-year private college owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) located in Rexburg, Idaho, United States that prior to 2001 was a two-year junior college known as Ricks College.

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List of British Bangladeshis

This is a list of notable British Bangladeshi people (উল্লেখযোগ্য ব্রিটিশ বাংলাদেশী ব্যক্তিদের তালিকা).

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List of British Muslims

This is an incomplete list of notable British Muslims.

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List of Central Philippine University people

The following is a partial list of notable Central Philippine University people.

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List of Columbia College people

The following list contains only notable graduates and former students of Columbia College, the undergraduate liberal arts division of Columbia University, and its predecessor, from 1754 to 1776, King's College.

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List of Columbia University alumni and attendees

This is a partial list of notable persons who have had ties to Columbia University.

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List of Cornell University alumni

This list of Cornell University alumni includes notable graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of Cornell University, an Ivy League university located in Ithaca, New York.

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List of Danganronpa characters

The following is a list of characters from the Spike Chunsoft video game series Danganronpa.

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List of Darkwing Duck characters

This article includes a list of characters from the Disney animated series Darkwing Duck.

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List of Darkwing Duck episodes

The following is a list of episodes for Darkwing Duck, an American animated television series produced by The Walt Disney Company that first ran from 1991 to 1992 on both the syndicated programming block The Disney Afternoon and Saturday mornings on ABC.

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List of Duke University people

This list of Duke University people includes alumni, faculty, presidents, and major philanthropists of Duke University, which includes three undergraduate and ten graduate schools.

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List of feminist rhetoricians

This is a list of the major works of feminist women who have made considerable contributions to and shaped the rhetorical discourse about women.

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List of fictional anthropologists

Fictional anthropologists appear in novels, short stories, comics, movies, and radio and television series.

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List of fictional presidents of the United States (K–M)

The following is a list of fictional United States presidents, K through M.

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List of George Washington University Law School alumni

This is a list of notable alumni of The George Washington University Law School located in Washington, D.C., U.S.

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List of Harvard University people

The list of Harvard University people includes notable graduates, professors, and administrators affiliated with Harvard University.

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List of Ipswich Grammar School Old Boys

Alumni of Ipswich Grammar School in Ipswich, Queensland, Australia are known as 'Old Boys' and automatically gain membership into the schools alumni association, the IGS Old Boys Association (IGSOBA).

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List of Iyers

This is a list of Iyers.

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List of Jewish atheists and agnostics

Based on Jewish law's emphasis on matrilineal descent, even religiously conservative Orthodox Jewish authorities would accept an atheist born to a Jewish mother as fully Jewish.

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List of Lost characters

The characters from the American drama/adventure television series Lost were created by Damon Lindelof and J. J. Abrams.

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List of Louisiana Creoles

This is a list of notable Louisiana Creole people.

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List of Madhwa Brahmins

Madhwa Brahmins are a sub-caste of Brahmins; who follow Dvaita Vedanta of Madhvacharya in India.

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List of New College of Florida alumni

No description.

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List of Nicaraguan Americans

This is a list of notable Nicaraguan Americans, including both original immigrants who obtained American citizenship and their American descendants.

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List of Norwegians

This is a list of notable people from Norway.

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List of Old Carthusians

The following are notable Old Carthusians, who are former pupils of Charterhouse School (founded in 1611).

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List of Old Wykehamists

Former pupils of Winchester College are known as Old Wykehamists, in memory of the school's founder, William of Wykeham.

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List of people educated at Bedford School

This is a list of people educated at Bedford School.

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List of people from Antwerp

This is a list of notable people from Antwerp, who were either born in Antwerp, or spent part of their life there.

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List of people from Bournemouth

This is a list of people born in Bournemouth, a large coastal resort town on the south coast of England.

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List of people from Bremen

This article provides a list of people from the city of Bremen.

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List of people from Buffalo, New York

A list of people who are from or have lived in Buffalo, New York.

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List of people from Missouri

The following are people who were either born/raised or have lived for a significant period of time in Missouri.

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List of people from Montana

Montana is a state in the Western United States.

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List of people from New York City

Many notable people were either born or adopted in New York City.

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List of people from Philadelphia

The following is a list of notable residents, natives, and persons generally associated with the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the fifth-largest city in the United States.

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List of people from San Juan, Puerto Rico

This is a list of notable people who were either born in San Juan, Puerto Rico or who were not born in San Juan, but who are or were longtime residents of the city.

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List of people from Tbilisi

This is a list of famous people who have lived in Tbilisi, including both natives and residents.

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List of people from Yorkshire

This is a list of people from Yorkshire. Yorkshire is the largest historic county in both England and the United Kingdom.

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List of people in Montana history

This is a list of notable figures in the history of pre-territorial Montana, Montana Territory and the state of Montana. Individuals listed played significant roles in the exploration and settlement of the region as well as the cultural, economic, military, political, and social development of Montana.

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List of people with breast cancer

This list of notable people with breast cancer includes people who made significant contributions to their chosen field and who were diagnosed with breast cancer at some point in their lives, as confirmed by public information.

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List of Please Save My Earth characters

is a ''shōjo'' science fiction manga by Saki Hiwatari.

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List of political families in Argentina

The following is a list of political families in Argentina.

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List of Prince George's County Public Schools middle schools

This article provides details on the middle schools within the Prince George's County Public Schools system, in the U.S. State of Maryland.

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List of psychologists on postage stamps

The following is a list of psychologists and contributors to the field of psychology who have been commemorated on worldwide postage stamps.

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List of Puerto Ricans

This is a list of notable people from Puerto Rico which includes people who were born in Puerto Rico (Borinquen), people who are of full or partial Puerto Rican background.

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List of Queens College people

This is a list of notable alumni and faculty of Queens College, City University of New York.

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List of Russian explorers

The history of exploration by citizens or subjects of the Russian Federation, the Soviet Union, the Russian Empire, the Tsardom of Russia and other Russian predecessor states forms a significant part of the history of Russia as well as the history of the world.

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List of Silliman University people

Since 1901, Silliman University has produced thousands of graduates from early childhood (pre-elementary) up to the undergraduate and graduate levels.

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List of systems scientists

This is a list of systems scientists, people who made notable contributions in the field of the systems sciences.

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List of The Amazing Spiez! episodes

The Amazing Spiez! is a French/Canadian animated television that airs on TF1 in France and Teletoon in Canada.

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List of The Big Bang Theory characters

The American television sitcom The Big Bang Theory, created and executive produced by Chuck Lorre and Bill Prady, premiered on CBS on September 24, 2007.

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List of Timothy Asch films

This a list of films by the visual ethnographer Timothy Asch.

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List of University of California, Berkeley alumni in academia

This page lists notable alumni and students of the University of California, Berkeley.

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List of University of Connecticut people

This is a list of notable alumni and faculty from the University of Connecticut.

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List of University of Florida alumni

This list of University of Florida alumni includes current students, former students, and graduates of the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida.

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List of University of Florida faculty and administrators

The List of University of Florida faculty and administrators contains people currently and formerly serving the University of Florida as professors, deans, or in other educational capacities.

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List of University of Michigan alumni

There are more than 500,000 living alumni of the University of Michigan.

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List of University of Oklahoma people

The list of University of Oklahoma people includes notable alumni, faculty, and former students of the University of Oklahoma.

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List of University of Pennsylvania people

This is a partial list of notable faculty, alumni and scholars of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, United States.

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List of University of Utah people

This list of University of Utah people includes notable alumni, non-graduate former students, faculty, staff, and former university presidents.

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List of University of Washington people

This page lists notable students, alumni and faculty members of the University of Washington.

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List of University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee people

This is a list of people who attended, or taught at, the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, including those who attended Milwaukee State Normal School, Wisconsin State Teacher’s College, Wisconsin State College–Milwaukee and the University of Wisconsin-Extension Center in Milwaukee.

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List of unsolved deaths

This list of unsolved deaths includes notable cases where victims have been murdered or have died under unsolved circumstances, including murders committed by unknown serial killers.

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List of Weber State University people

The following is a partial list of notable Weber State University people.

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List of Wesleyan University people

This is a partial list of notable people affiliated with Wesleyan University.

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Literature about intersex

Intersex, in humans and other animals, describes variations in sex characteristics including chromosomes, gonads, sex hormones, or genitals that, according to the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, "do not fit typical binary notions of male or female bodies".

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Liza Dalby

Liza Crihfield Dalby (born 1950) is an American anthropologist and novelist specializing in Japanese culture.

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Lola Romanucci-Ross

Lola Romanucci-Ross is an American cultural anthropologist who has authored and co-authored a number of works on medical, social, and cultural anthropology, with fieldwork in Melanesia (Manus), rural Mexico, and her mother's home town in Italy.

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Long hair

Long hair is a hairstyle where the head hair is allowed to grow to a considerable length.

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Long Walk of the Navajo

The Long Walk of the Navajo, also called the Long Walk to Bosque Redondo (Hwéeldi), refers to the 1864 deportation and attempted ethnic cleansing of the Navajo people by the government of the United States of America.

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Longland (Holicong, Pennsylvania)

Longland, also known as the Margaret Mead Farmstead, is a historic home located near Holicong, in Buckingham Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

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Lordosis behavior

Lordosis behavior, also known as mammalian lordosis (Greek lordōsis, from lordos "bent backward") or presenting, is the naturally occurring body posture for sexual receptivity to copulation present in most mammals including rodents, elephants, and felines.

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Loren Eiseley

Loren Eiseley (September 3, 1907 – July 9, 1977) was an American anthropologist, educator, philosopher, and natural science writer, who taught and published books from the 1950s through the 1970s.

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Louis Diène Faye

Louis Diène Faye (born 13 February 1936 at Joal)Faye, Louis Diène, "Mort et Naissance, le monde sereer", Le Nouvelles Editions Africaines (1983), (biography, back cover), is a Senegalese anthropologist,The African book publishing record, Volume 10, Hans Zell Ltd., 1984, p 218, (University of California) author and scholar of Serer religion, history and culture.

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Louis Dumont

Louis Dumont (1911 – 19 November 1998) was a French anthropologist.

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Louis Dupree (professor)

Professor Louis Dupree (August 23, 1925 – March 21, 1989) was an American archaeologist, anthropologist, and scholar of Afghan culture and history.

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Louis L. Jacobs

Louis Leo Jacobs (born August 27, 1948) is an American vertebrate paleontologist who discovered Malawisaurus while on an expedition in Malawi.

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Louis Laurent Gabriel de Mortillet

Louis Laurent Gabriel de Mortillet (29 August 1821 – 25 September 1898), French archeologist and anthropologist, was born at Meylan, Isère.

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Louis R. Sullivan

Louis Robert Sullivan (1892–1925) was an American anthropologist.

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Louise Burkhart

Louise M. Burkhart (born 1958) is an American academic ethnohistorian and anthropologist, noted as a scholar of early colonial Mesoamerican literature.

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Louise Leakey

Princess Louise de Merode (née: Leakey, born 21 March 1972) is a Kenyan paleontologist and anthropologist.

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Luís Cristóvão dos Santos

Luíz Cristóvão dos Santos was born in Pesqueira, Brazil on 25 December 1916.

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Luís da Câmara Cascudo

Luís da Câmara Cascudo (December 30, 1898 – July 30, 1986) was a Brazilian anthropologist, folklorist, journalist, historian, lawyer, and lexicographer.

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Lubor Niederle

Lubor Niederle (September 20, 1865 – June 14, 1944) was a Czech archeologist, anthropologist and ethnographer.

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Lucien Castaing-Taylor

Lucien Castaing-Taylor (born 1966, Liverpool, United Kingdom) is an anthropologist and artist who works in film, video, and photography.

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Lucy (Australopithecus)

Lucy is the common name of AL 288-1, several hundred pieces of bone fossils representing 40 percent of the skeleton of a female of the hominin species Australopithecus afarensis.

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Lucy Suchman

Lucy Suchman is a Professor of Anthropology of Science and Technology in the Department of Sociology at Lancaster University, in the United Kingdom.

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Ludwig Feuerbach

Ludwig Andreas von Feuerbach (28 July 1804 – 13 September 1872) was a German philosopher and anthropologist best known for his book The Essence of Christianity, which provided a critique of Christianity which strongly influenced generations of later thinkers, including Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Richard Wagner, and Friedrich Nietzsche.

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Ludwig Woltmann

Ludwig Woltmann (born 18 February 1871 in Solingen; died 30 January 1907) was a German anthropologist, zoologist and Marxist theoretician.

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Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan

General (Ret.) Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan (born September 28, 1947) is an Indonesian politician and former military officer.

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Luhya people

The Luhya (also known as Abaluyia or Luyia) are a Bantu ethnic group in Kenya.

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Luis Díaz Viana

Luis Nicanor Pablo Díaz González-Viana, (Zamora, June 1951), is a Spanish anthropologist, philologist and writer.

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Luis Eduardo Luna

Luis Eduardo Luna is an anthropologist and noted ayahuasca researcher.

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Luis Kemnitzer

Luis Stowell, page 69; retrieved December 11, 2016 Kemnitzer (November 13, 1928 in Pasadena, California, by Marianne Costantinou, at the San Francisco Chronicle; published February 22, 2006; retrieved April 30, 2014– February 17, 2006) was an American anthropologist known for his social and political activism.

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Luisa Accati

Luisa Accati Levi (born in 1942) is an Italian historian, anthropologist and feminist public intellectual.

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Luiz Mott

Luiz Roberto de Barros Mott or Luiz Mott (6 May 1946 in São Paulo, Brazil), is a researcher and an anthropologist, a historian and one of the most notable gay civil rights activists in Brazil.

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Lumbee

The Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina is a state-recognized tribe of obscure tribal origins numbering approximately 60,000 enrolled members, most of them living in Robeson and the adjacent counties in south-central North Carolina.

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Lyall Watson

Lyall Watson (12 April 1939 – 25 June 2008) was a South African botanist, zoologist, biologist, anthropologist, ethologist, and author of many books, among the most popular of which is the best seller Supernature.

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Lydia T. Black

Lydia T. Black (December 16, 1925 – March 12, 2007) was an American anthropologist.

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Lyman Belding

Lyman Belding (12 June 1829 - 22 November 1917) was a prominent American ornithologist.

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Lyn Miles

H.

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Lynn Emanuel

Lynn Collins Emanuel (born March 14, 1949) is an American poet.

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Maasai people

Maasai are a Nilotic ethnic group inhabiting central and southern Kenya and northern Tanzania.

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Mabel Cook Cole

Mabel Cook Cole (1846–1923) was a writer and anthropologist.

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Madeleine Pelletier

Madeleine Pelletier (18 May 1874 – 29 December 1939) was a French physician, psychiatrist, first-wave feminist, and socialist activist.

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Madeline Kneberg Lewis

Madeline Kneberg Lewis (1903–1996) was an American archaeologist and professor of anthropology at the University of Tennessee.

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Mage Parab

Mage Parab is the principal festival celebrated among the Ho people of eastern India, and is also celebrated by the Munda people, though followers of Birsa Dharam, a new religion based on traditional Munda spirituality and religion, do not celebrate Mage Parab, despite the fact that they celebrate other traditional Munda festivals.

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Mai Yamani

Mai Yamani (مي يماني; born 1956) is an independent scholar, author and anthropologist.

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Mailu Island

Mailu Island is a small, 1.8 km long, island in Central Province, Papua New Guinea.

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Makassan contact with Australia

Makassan trepangers from the southwest corner of Sulawesi, Indonesia began visiting the coast of northern Australia sometime around the middle of the 1700s, first in the Kimberley region, and some decades later in Arnhem Land, to collect and process trepang (also known as sea cucumber), a marine invertebrate sea cucumber prized for its culinary value generally and for its medicinal properties in Chinese markets.

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Malakula

Malakula Island (coordinates), also spelled Malekula, is the second-largest island in the nation of Vanuatu, in the Pacific Ocean region of Melanesia.

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Malcolm Carr Collier

Malcolm Carr Collier (née, Malcolm Carr; 1908-1983) was an American anthropologist remembered for her work with the Navajo.

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Male and Female (book)

Male and Female is a 1949 comparative study of tribal men and women on seven Pacific islands and men and women in the contemporary (late 1940s) United States by anthropologist Margaret Mead.

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Malek Chebel

Malek Chebel (1953 – 12 November 2016) was a renowned Algerian philosopher and anthropologist of religions.

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Maliseet

The Wolastoqiyik, or Maliseet (also spelled Malecite), are an Algonquian-speaking First Nation of the Wabanaki Confederacy.

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Man cave

A man cave or manspace, and less commonly a manland or mantuary is a male retreat or sanctuary in a home, such as a specially equipped garage, spare bedroom, media room, den, or basement.

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Man's First Word

Man's First Word is a children's book illustrated by Carl Chaiet and written by Lynn Kearcher which was published in 2007.

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Manahoac

The Manahoac, also recorded as Mahock, were a small group of Siouan-language American Indians in northern Virginia at the time of European contact.

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Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nation

The Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nation (MHA Nation), also known as the Three Affiliated Tribes, is a Native American Nation resulting from the alliance of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara peoples, whose native lands ranged across the Missouri River basin extending from present day North Dakota Through western Montana and Wyoming.

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Mannadiyar

Mannadiyar (or Mannadiar) is a Malayalam language speaking Hindu forward nair caste from region Palakkad of Kerala state.

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Manning Nash

Manning Nash (1924 – December 12, 2001) was an anthropologist and ethnographer, professor of anthropology at the University of Chicago until his retirement in 1994, and a specialist in the study of the modernization of developing nations in Latin America and Asia.

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Manuel Arturo Izquierdo Peña

Manuel Arturo Izquierdo Peña is a Colombian anthropologist who has contributed to the knowledge of the Muisca and other pre-Columbian cultures, among others San Agustín, Colombia.

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Manuel Delgado Ruiz

Manuel Delgado Ruiz (b. Barcelona, 1956) is a Catalan anthropologist.

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Manuel João Ramos

Manuel João Mendes Silva Ramos (born 1960) is a Portuguese anthropologist, artist and civil rights advocate.

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Manuel Zapata Olivella

Manuel Zapata Olivella (Santa Cruz of Lorica, Córdoba, 17 March 1920 – Bogota, 19 November 2004) was a doctor, anthropologist and Colombian writer.

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Maqam (shrine)

A Maqām (مقام) is a tomb of Muslim saints.

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María Rostworowski

María Rostworowski Tovar de Diez Canseco (8 August 1915 – 6 March 2016) was a Peruvian historian known for her extensive and detailed publications about Peruvian Ancient Cultures and the Inca Empire.

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Marc Augé

Marc Augé (born September 2, 1935 in Poitiers) is a French anthropologist.

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Marc Meyer

Marc R. Meyer is an archaeologist and anthropologist who is notable for his excavation of, and research into, the remains of fossil hominids such as Australopithecines and early genus Homo.

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Marc-Adélard Tremblay

Marc-Adélard Tremblay, (24 April 1922 – 20 March 2014) was a Canadian anthropologist.

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Margaret B. Blackman

Margaret B. Blackman (born 1944) is an anthropologist known for her work with the Haida First Nation of the Queen Charlotte Islands of British Columbia, Canada, beginning in the 1970s.

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Margaret Jolly

Margaret Anne Jolly (born 12 April 1949), born in Sydney, Australia is an historical Anthropologist recognized as a world expert on gender in Oceania.

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Margaret Lantis

Margaret Lantis (September 1, 1906 – September 8, 2006) was an American anthropologist, Eskimologist, and author.

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Margaret Mead

Margaret Mead (December 16, 1901 – November 15, 1978) was an American cultural anthropologist who featured frequently as an author and speaker in the mass media during the 1960s and 1970s.

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Margarita Nolasco Armas

Margarita Nolasco Armas (20 November 1932 – 23 September 2008) was a Mexican ethnologist and anthropologist, who pioneered the study of the country's varied people from a cultural rather than national perspective and founded the new facility of the National Museum of Anthropology.

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Marguerite Dupire

Marguerite Dupire (12 October 1920 – 4 March 2015) was a French ethnologist who specialises on African people, and had worked extensively on the Fulani of Niger, Cameroon, Guinea, Senegal, and then after a mission in Ivory Coast, on the Serer people of Sine (in Senegal) since 1965.

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Maria Czaplicka

Maria Antonina Czaplicka (25 October 1884 – 27 May 1921), also referred to as Marya Antonina Czaplicka and Marie Antoinette Czaplicka, was a Polish cultural anthropologist who is best known for her ethnography of Siberian shamanism.

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Marianne Cardale de Schrimpff

Professor Marianne Vere Cardale de Schrimpff is a Colombian anthropologist, archaeologist, academic and writer.

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Marianne Nøhr Larsen

Marianne Nøhr Larsen (born 1963) is a Danish anthropologist and writer who since 2002 has run the networking facility "Center for Interkulturel dialog" (Centre for Intercultural Dialogue) in Copenhagen.

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Marie Brenner

Marie Brenner (born December 15, 1949) is an American author, investigative journalist and writer-at-large for Vanity Fair.

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Marie Margaret Keesing

Marie Margaret Keesing (née Martin) (December 1, 1904 – July 13, 1961) was an anthropologist and educator with strong ties to the Pacific.

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Marie-Claude Mattéi-Müller

Marie-Claude Mattéi-Müller is a Franco-Venezuelan anthropologist and ethnolinguist, professor of the Central University of Venezuela.

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Marija Gimbutas

Marija Gimbutas (Marija Gimbutienė; January 23, 1921 – February 2, 1994) was a Lithuanian-American archaeologist and anthropologist known for her research into the Neolithic and Bronze Age cultures of "Old Europe" and for her Kurgan hypothesis, which located the Proto-Indo-European homeland in the Pontic Steppe.

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Marimba Ani

Marimba Ani (born Dona Richards) is an anthropologist and African Studies scholar best known for her work Yurugu, a comprehensive critique of European thought and culture, and her coining of the term "Maafa" for the African holocaust.

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Mariza Corrêa

Mariza Corrêa (1 December 1945 – 27 December 2016) was a Brazilian anthropologist and sociologist.

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Marjorie F. Lambert

Marjorie Ferguson Lambert (1908-2006) was an American anthropologist and archaeologist, who primarily studied Native American and Hispanic cultures in the American Southwest.

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Marjorie Halpin

Marjorie Halpin (February 11, 1937 – August 30, 2000) was a U.S.-Canadian anthropologist best known for her work on Northwest Coast art and culture, especially the Tsimshian and Gitksan peoples.

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Mark Nathan Cohen

Mark Nathan Cohen is an American anthropologist and a professor in the State University of New York.

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Mark Ritchie (trader)

Mark Andrew Ritchie is a Chicago Board of Trade and Chicago Mercantile Exchange commodities trader.

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Mark Turin

Mark Turin (born 1973) is a British anthropologist, linguist and broadcaster of Italo-Dutch origin who specialises in the Himalayas and the Pacific Northwest.

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Marklo

Marklo was according to the Vita Lebuini antiqua, an important source for early Saxon history, the tribal capital of the Saxons where they held an annual council to "confirm their laws, give judgment on outstanding cases, and determine by common counsel whether they would go to war or be in peace that year." After the conquest of old Saxony by Charlemagne in 782 the tribal councils of Marklo were abolished.

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Marriage

Marriage, also called matrimony or wedlock, is a socially or ritually recognised union between spouses that establishes rights and obligations between those spouses, as well as between them and any resulting biological or adopted children and affinity (in-laws and other family through marriage).

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Marshall Sahlins

Marshall David Sahlins (born December 27, 1930) is an American anthropologist best known for his ethnographic work in the Pacific and for his contributions to anthropological theory.

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Marta Turok

Marta Turok (full name Marta Turok Wallace; born 1952) is a Mexican applied anthropologist focusing on socio-economic development, and one of the foremost schools on Mexican folk art.

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Martín von Hildebrand

Dr.

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Martha Ellen Davis

Martha Ellen Davis is an emeritus professor from the University of Florida, anthropologist and ethnomusicologist known for her multifarious work on African diasporic religion and music.

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Martha Kaplan

Martha Kaplan is a cultural anthropologist who has written a number of articles and books from her research conducted in Fiji and India.

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Martial Arts Odyssey

Martial Arts Odyssey is an American web TV show with a martial arts travel theme.

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Martin Mystère

Martin Mystère is both the name and protagonist of an Italian comic book.

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Marvin Harris

Marvin Harris (August 18, 1927 – October 25, 2001) was an American anthropologist.

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Marvin Opler

Marvin Kaufmann Opler (June 13, 1914 in Buffalo, New York – January 3, 1981) was an American anthropologist and social psychiatrist.

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Mary Butler Lewis

Mary Butler Lewis (1903–1970) was an American anthropologist known for her work with local historical sites in Pennsylvania, her studies of Mesoamerican pottery, and for being the first woman to receive an anthropology degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

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Mary Catherine Bateson

Mary Catherine Bateson (born December 8, 1939) is an American writer and cultural anthropologist.

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Mary Douglas

Dame Mary Douglas, (25 March 1921 – 16 May 2007) was a British anthropologist, known for her writings on human culture and symbolism, whose area of speciality was social anthropology.

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Mary Howitt

Mary Howitt (12 March 1799 – 30 January 1888) was an English poet, and author of the famous poem The Spider and the Fly.

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Mary-Ann Ochota

Mary-Ann Ochota (O-hot-ah; born 8 May 1981) is a British broadcaster and anthropologist specialising in anthropology, archaeology, social history and adventure factual television.

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Mass-Observation

Mass-Observation was a United Kingdom social research organisation founded in 1937.

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Matthew Kapell

Matthew Wilhelm Kapell is a historian and anthropologist, with Master's Degrees in each discipline, who has a Ph.D. in American Studies.

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Maurice Bloch

Maurice Bloch (born 1939 in Caen, Calvados, France) is a British anthropologist.

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Mauro Campagnoli

Mauro Campagnoli (born 1975 in Turin in Piedmont) is an Italian anthropologist, ethnomusicologist and composer.

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Mauro Guillén

Mauro F. Guillén (born 1964) is a Spanish/American sociologist, political economist, management educator, Professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, Director of the Joseph H. Lauder Institute of Management and International Studies, and Director of the Penn Lauder Center for International Business Education and Research (CIBER).

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Mayan languages

The Mayan languagesIn linguistics, it is conventional to use Mayan when referring to the languages, or an aspect of a language.

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Mércio Pereira Gomes

Mércio Pereira Gomes (born November 10, 1950) is a Brazilian anthropologist who presently (April 2015) teaches at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.

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McKim Marriott

McKim Marriott is an American anthropologist.

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Mediated

Mediated: How the Media Shapes Your World and the Way You Live in It is a non-fiction book by anthropologist Thomas de Zengotita published in 2005 by Bloomsbury about the effect of the media in the Western world.

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Melanesia

Melanesia is a subregion of Oceania extending from New Guinea island in the southwestern Pacific Ocean to the Arafura Sea, and eastward to Fiji.

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Melungeon

Melungeon is a term traditionally applied to one of numerous "tri-racial isolate" groups of the Southeastern United States.

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Melville Jacobs

Melville Jacobs (July 3, 1902 – July 31, 1971) was an American anthropologist known for his extensive fieldwork on cultures of the Pacific Northwest.

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Menstruation

Menstruation, also known as a period or monthly, is the regular discharge of blood and mucosal tissue (known as menses) from the inner lining of the uterus through the vagina.

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Mentifact

Mentifact (sometimes called a "psychofact") is a term coined by Julian Huxley, used together with the related terms "sociofact" and "artifact" to describe how cultural traits, such as "beliefs, values, ideas", take on a life of their own spanning over generations, and are conceivable as objects in themselves.

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Metoac

Metoac was a term erroneously used to describe Native Americans on Long Island in New York state, in the belief that various bands on the island comprised distinct tribes.

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Meyer Fortes

Meyer Fortes (April 25, 1906 – January 27, 1983) was a South African-born anthropologist, best known for his work among the Tallensi and Ashanti in Ghana.

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Mezcala culture

The Mezcala culture (sometimes referred to as the Balsas culture) is the name given to a Mesoamerican culture that was based in the Guerrero state of southwestern Mexico,Coe and Koontz 1962, 2002, p.55.

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Micaela Portilla

Micaela Portilla (1922–2005) was a Spanish anthropologist.

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Michael Asch

Michael I. Asch is an anthropologist and ethnomusicologist in Canada.

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Michael Carrithers

Michael Barnes Carrithers, FBA (born 1945) is an anthropologist and academic.

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Michael D. Coe

Michael D. Coe (born 1929) is an American archaeologist, anthropologist, epigrapher and author.

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Michael Feinstein

Michael Jay Feinstein (born September 7, 1956) is an American singer, pianist, and music revivalist.

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Michael Katakis

Michael Katakis (born 1952), is a writer, photographer, Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and manager of Ernest Hemingway's literary estate.

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Michael Rockefeller

Michael Clark Rockefeller (May 18, 1938 – presumed to have died November 19, 1961) was the fifth child of New York Governor (later Vice President) Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller, and a fourth-generation member of the Rockefeller family.

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Michal Josephy

Michal Josephy, Ph.D. (born 1977) is an anthropologist, traveller, adventurer, humanitarian and street photographer, travel and science journalist and external lecturer at Faculty of Humanities, Charles University, Prague.

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Michel Boivin

Michel Boivin is a French historian and anthropologist who specializes in the Muslim world.

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Michelle Rosaldo

Michelle "Shelly" Zimbalist Rosaldo (1944 in New York City – 1981 in Philippines) was a social, linguistic, and psychological anthropologist famous for her studies of the Ilongot people in the Philippines and for her pioneering role in women's studies and the anthropology of gender.

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Middletown studies

Middletown studies were sociological case studies of the white residents of City of Muncie in Indiana conducted by Robert Staughton Lynd and Helen Merrell Lynd, husband-and-wife sociologists.

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Miguel León-Portilla

Miguel León-Portilla (born February 22, 1926 in Mexico City) is a Mexican anthropologist and historian, and a prime authority on Nahuatl thought and literature.

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Miguel Vale de Almeida

Miguel Vale de Almeida (born August 21, 1960 in Lisbon, Portugal) is a Portuguese, anthropologist, LGBT activist, and professor at the Instituto Superior de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa (ISCTE) in Lisbon.

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Mike Davis (boat builder)

Mike Davis (December 6, 1939 – November 3, 2008) was a boat builder who was a hands-on advocate for making recreational boat usage available on the Hudson River from New York City and New Jersey.

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Mikhail Mikhaylovich Gerasimov

Mikhail Mikhaylovich Gerasimov (Михаи́л Миха́йлович Гера́симов) (2 September 1907 – 21 July 1970) was a renowned Soviet archaeologist and anthropologist who discovered the Mal'ta–Buret' culture and developed the first technique of forensic sculpture based on findings of anthropology, archaeology, paleontology, and forensic science.

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Milton Singer

Milton Borah Singer (July 5, 1912 – 1994) was a leading Polish anthropologist and expert on Indian studies.

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Mimesis

Mimesis (μίμησις (mīmēsis), from μιμεῖσθαι (mīmeisthai), "to imitate", from μῖμος (mimos), "imitator, actor") is a critical and philosophical term that carries a wide range of meanings, which include imitation, representation, mimicry, imitatio, receptivity, nonsensuous similarity, the act of resembling, the act of expression, and the presentation of the self.

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Mireya Mayor

Mireya Mayor (born 1973) is an American scientist, explorer, inspirational speaker, anthropologist and wildlife correspondent for the National Geographic.

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Miriam Tildesley

Miriam Louise Tildesley (1 July 1883 – 31 January 1979) was an English anthropologist.

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Miriam Van Waters

Miriam Van Waters (October 4, 1887 – January 17, 1974) was an American prison reformer of the early to mid-20th century whose methods owed much to her upbringing as an Episcopalian involved in the Social Gospel movement.

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Missing Link (Space: 1999)

"Missing Link" is the seventh episode of the first series of Space: 1999.

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Mistress of the Apes

Mistress of the Apes is a 1979 film from Larry Buchanan.

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Mists of Dawn

Mists of Dawn is a juvenile science fiction novel by science fiction writer and anthropologist Chad Oliver first published in 1952 by John C. Winston, Co.

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Miwok

The Miwok (also spelled Miwuk, Mi-Wuk, or Me-Wuk) are members of four linguistically related Native American groups indigenous to what is now Northern California, who traditionally spoke one of the Miwok languages in the Utian family.

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Miyamoto-cho, Tokyo

Miyamoto-cho is a pseudonymous neighborhood in Tokyo, the subject of an ethnographic study of urban life in the late 1970s and early 1980s undertaken by the anthropologist Theodore C. Bestor in his book and film, both titled Neighborhood Tokyo.

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Moana (2016 film)

Moana is a 2016 American 3D computer-animated musical adventure film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures.

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Model of hierarchical complexity

The model of hierarchical complexity is a framework for scoring how complex a behavior is, such as verbal reasoning or other cognitive tasks.

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Modern dance

Modern dance is a broad genre of western concert or theatrical dance, primarily arising out of Germany and the United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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Modern dance in the United States

Closely related to the development of American music in the early 20th century was the emergence of a new, and distinctively American, art form -- modern dance.

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Mohammad Reza Ale Ebrahim

Mohammad Reza Ale Ebrahim (born 24 October 1951 in Estahban) is an Iranian writer, researcher and anthropologist.

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Mohegan

The Mohegan are an American Indian people historically based in present-day Connecticut; the majority are associated with the Mohegan Indian Tribe, a federally recognized tribe living on a reservation in the eastern upper Thames River valley of south-central Connecticut. It is one of two federally recognized tribes in the state, the other being the Mashantucket Pequot whose reservation is in Ledyard, Connecticut. There are also three state-recognized tribes: Schaghticoke, Paugusett, and Eastern Pequot. At the time of European contact, the Mohegan and Pequot were a unified tribal entity living in the southeastern Connecticut region, but the Mohegan gradually became independent as the hegemonic Pequot lost control over their trading empire and tributary groups. The name Pequot was given to the Mohegan by other tribes throughout the northeast and was eventually adopted by themselves. In 1637, English Puritan colonists destroyed a principal fortified village at Mistick with the help of Uncas, Wequash, and the Narragansetts during the Pequot War. This ended with the death of Uncas' cousin Sassacus at the hands of the Mohawk, an Iroquois Confederacy nation from west of the Hudson River. Thereafter, the Mohegan became a separate tribal nation under the leadership of their sachem Uncas. Uncas is a variant anglicized spelling of the Algonquian name Wonkus, which translates to "fox" in English. The word Mohegan (pronounced) translates in their respective Algonquin dialects (Mohegan-Pequot language) as "People of the Wolf". Over time, the Mohegan gradually lost ownership of much of their tribal lands. In 1978, Chief Rolling Cloud Hamilton petitioned for federal recognition of the Mohegan. Descendants of his Mohegan band operate independently of the federally recognized nation. In 1994, a majority group of Mohegan gained federal recognition as the Mohegan Tribe of Indians of Connecticut (MTIC). They have been defined by the United States government as the "successor in interest to the aboriginal entity known as the Mohegan Indian Tribe.", Mohegan Nation (Connecticut) Land Claim Settlement Act (1994), Legal Information Institute, Cornell University Law School, accessed 12 January 2013 The United States took land into trust the same year, under an act of Congress to serve as a reservation for the tribe. Most of the Mohegan people in Connecticut today live on the Mohegan Reservation at near Uncasville in the Town of Montville, New London County. The MTIC operate one of two Mohegan Sun Casinos on their reservation in Uncasville.

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Monday Mourning

Monday Mourning is the seventh novel by Kathy Reichs starring forensic anthropologist, Temperance Brennan.

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Monica Connell

Monica Connell is a Northern Irish anthropologist, photographer and writer.

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Monica Heller

Monica Heller (born June 1955) is a Canadian linguistic anthropologist and Professor at the University of Toronto.

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Monique Scheer

Monique Scheer (born in 1967 in Tulsa, Oklahoma) is an American-German historical and cultural anthropologist and professor at the University of Tübingen, Germany.

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Monte Verde

Monte Verde is an archaeological site in southern Chile, located near Puerto Montt, Southern Chile, which has been dated to as early as 18,500 BP (16,500 B.C.). Until recently, the widely published date has been 14,800 years BP.

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Moritz von Leonhardi

Moritz Freiherr von Leonhardi (9 March 1856 – 27 October 1910) was a German anthropologist.

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Morris Carstairs

George Morrison 'Morris' Carstairs, (18 June 1916 – 17 April 1991) was a British psychiatrist, anthropologist, and academic.

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Morris Edward Opler

Morris Edward Opler (May 3, 1907 – May 13, 1996), American anthropologist and advocate of Japanese American civil rights, was born in Buffalo, New York.

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Morris Swadesh

Morris Swadesh (January 22, 1909 – July 20, 1967) was an American linguist who specialized in comparative and historical linguistics.

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Moses Asch

Moses Asch (December 2, 1905 – October 19, 1986), often known as Moe Asch, was a Polish-American recording engineer and record executive.

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Mossi people

The Mossi (or Mole, Mosse, sing. Moaaga) are a people in central Burkina Faso, living mostly in the villages of the Nazinon and Nakanbe (formerly Volta) River Basin. The Mossi are the largest ethnic group in Burkina Faso, constituting more than 40% of the population, or about 6.2 million people. The other 60% of Burkina Faso's population is composed of more than 60 ethnic groups, mainly the Gurunsi, Senufo, Lobi, Bobo and Fulani. The Mossi speak the Mòoré language.

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Motsoalle

Motsoalle is the term for socially acceptable, long-term relationships between Basotho women in Lesotho.

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MS Fnd in a Lbry

"MS Fnd in a Lbry" (probably intended to be understood as "Manuscript Found in a Library") is a satirical science fiction short story about the exponential growth of information, written by Hal Draper in 1961.

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Muisca Confederation

The Muisca Confederation was a loose confederation of different Muisca rulers (zaques, zipas, iraca and tundama) in the central Andean highlands of present-day Colombia before the Spanish conquest of northern South America.

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Mummy Juanita

Momia Juanita (Spanish for "Mummy Juanita"), also known as the Inca Ice Maiden and Lady of Ampato, is the well-preserved frozen body of an Inca girl who was killed as an offering to the Inca gods sometime between 1450 and 1480 when she was approximately 12–15 years old.

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Munro S. Edmonson

Munro Sterling Edmonson (May 18, 1924 – February 15, 2002) was an American linguist and anthropologist, renowned for his contributions to the study of Mesoamerican languages and Mesoamerican cultural heritage.

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Murder of David Reed

David Wellington Reed (17 January 1972 – 21 August 1985) was a 13-year-old boy in the seventh grade at Schuylkill Haven Area Middle School, who was murdered in 1985 by then 20-year-old Joseph "Joe" Geiger in Schuylkill Haven, Pennsylvania, United States over Geiger's stolen illegally grown cannabis plants.

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Museo Histórico y Antropológico Maurice van de Maele

Museo Histórico y Antropológico Maurice van de Maele or (Spanish for Historical and Anthropologic Museum Maurice van de Maele) is an anthropology and history museum in Valdivia run by Universidad Austral de Chile.

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Museology

Museology or museum studies is the study of museums.

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Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York v. Hillmon

Mutual Life Insurance Co.

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My Favorite Martian

My Favorite Martian is an American television sitcom that aired on CBS from September 29, 1963, to May 1, 1966, for 107 episodes (75 in black and white: 1963–65, 32 color: 1965–66).

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Mysteries at the Monument

Mysteries at the Monument (formerly Monumental Mysteries) is an American reality television series currently airing on the Travel Channel and is hosted by Don Wildman.

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Nair

The Nair, also known as Nayar, are a group of Indian castes, described by anthropologist Kathleen Gough as "not a unitary group but a named category of castes".

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Nair Service Society

The Nair Service Society (NSS) is an organisation created for the social advancement and welfare of the Nair community that is found primarily in the state of Kerala in South India.

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Nambikwara

The Nambikwara (also called Nambikuára) is an indigenous people of Brazil, living in the Amazon.

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Nancy Oestreich Lurie

Nancy Oestreich Lurie (January 29, 1924 in Milwaukee, WI; - May 13, 2017) was an American anthropologist who specialized in the study of North American Indian history and culture.

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Naparay

Naparay, in African anthropological study, is non-linear conception of human life held by some West African peoples such as the Yoruba.

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Napoleon Andrew Tuiteleleapaga

Napoleon A. Tuiteleleapaga (II) (May 25, 1904 – December 25, 1988) was a prominent figure of the both Western and American Samoa.

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Napoleon Chagnon

Napoleon Alphonseau Chagnon (born 27 August 1938) is an American anthropologist, professor of anthropology at the University of Missouri in Columbia and member of the National Academy of Sciences.

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Narcissism of small differences

The narcissism of small differences (der Narzissmus der kleinen Differenzen) is the thesis that it is precisely communities with adjoining territories and close relationships that engage in constant feuds and mutual ridicule because of hypersensitivity to details of differentiation.

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Narmala Shewcharan

Narmala Shewcharan is a Guyanese-born novelist and anthropologist who lives in the UK.

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Nasir Uddin (anthropologist)

Nasir Uddin (ড.নাসির উদ্দিন) is a cultural anthropologist, post-colonial theorist, and prolific writer on issues ranging from human rights, adivasi (indigenous people) issues, everyday forms of discrimination, state in people's everyday life, the representation of media, and the politics of fabrication to state-society relations in Bangladesh and South Asia.

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Nasser Fakouhi

Nasser Fakouhi (born 13 May 1956 in Tehran) (ناصر فکوهی) is an Iranian anthropologist, writer and translator.

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Nataliia Lebedeva

Nataliia Ivanova Lebedeva (July 19, 1894 – May 19, 1978) was a Russian ethnographer and anthropologist known for her studies of textiles in Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus.

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Nathalie Luca

Nathalie Luca (born 1966) is a French research director at the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), an anthropologist and a sociologist of religions.

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National Museum of Singapore

The National Museum of Singapore is the oldest museum in Singapore.

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National Sexuality Resource Center

The National Sexuality Resource Center (NSRC) is a San Francisco-based organization which advocates the positive representation of human sexuality, creates educational content, and provides training about human sexuality.

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Native American fashion

Native American fashion (also known as Indigenous American fashion) encompasses the design and creation of high-fashion clothing and fashion accessories by the Native peoples of the Americas.

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Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act

The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), Pub.

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Native Americans in the United States

Native Americans, also known as American Indians, Indians, Indigenous Americans and other terms, are the indigenous peoples of the United States.

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Navajo weaving

Navajo rugs and blankets (diyogí) are textiles produced by Navajo people of the Four Corners area of the United States.

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Nazca culture

The Nazca culture (also Nasca) was the archaeological culture that flourished from beside the arid, southern coast of Peru in the river valleys of the Rio Grande de Nazca drainage and the Ica Valley.

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Nazca Lines

The Nazca Lines are a series of large ancient geoglyphs in the Nazca Desert, in southern Peru.

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Négritude

Négritude is a framework of critique and literary theory, developed mainly by francophone intellectuals, writers, and politicians of the African diaspora during the 1930s.

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Néstor Osvaldo Perlongher

Néstor Osvaldo Perlongher (Avellaneda, 24 December 1949 - São Paulo, 26 November 1992) was an Argentine poet, and anthropologist.

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Neanderthal (novel)

Neanderthal is a bestselling novel written by John Darnton published by Random House in 1996.

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Nebraska City, Nebraska

Nebraska City is a city in, and the county seat of, Otoe County, Nebraska, United States.

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Negara: The Theatre State in Nineteenth-Century Bali

Negara: The Theatre State in Nineteenth-Century Bali is a 1980 book written by anthropologist Clifford Geertz.

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Neil L. Whitehead

Neil L. Whitehead (19 March 1956 – 22 March 2012) was an English anthropologist, who is best known for his work on the anthropology of violence, dark shamanism (and Guyanese kanaimà in particular), post-human anthropology and the historical anthropology of South America and the Caribbean.

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Nematollah Fazeli

Nematollah Fazeli (born 23 August 1964) is an Iranian anthropologist, author, and translator.

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Nettlemas

Nettlemas is an ancient Irish holiday, celebrated on the first of May.

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New Brunswick, New Jersey

New Brunswick is a city in Middlesex County, New Jersey, United States, in the New York City metropolitan area.

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Newington College

Newington College is an independent, Uniting Church, day and boarding school for boys located in Stanmore, an inner-western suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

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Newton County John Does

The Newton County John Does, also dubbed Adam and Brad, or simply as Victims A and B or Victims 3 and 4, are two young unidentified males whose remains were discovered with those of two other men on October 18, 1983 in Lake Village, Newton County, Indiana by mushroom foragers.

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Niara Sudarkasa

Niara Sudarkasa (born August 14, 1938) is an American scholar, educator, Africanist and anthropologist who holds thirteen honorary degrees, and is the recipient of nearly 100 civic and professional awards.

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Nicholas J. Saunders

Nicholas J. Saunders is a British academic archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Nicholas Miklouho-Maclay

Nicholas Miklouho-Maclay (Николай Николаевич Миклухо-Маклай; 1846–1888) was a Russian explorer, ethnologist, anthropologist and biologist who became famous as one of the earliest scientists to settle among and study a people in New Guinea who had never seen a European.

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Nicolae Lahovary

Nicolae Lahovary, 1887-1972, was a Romanian diplomat.

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Nicolas Maranda

Nicolas Maranda (born 15 November 1967 in Auckland, New Zealand) is a Canadian singer/songwriter, composer, musician and record producer based in Montreal.

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Nicolette Bethel

Nicolette Bethel is a Bahamian teacher, writer and anthropologist.

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Nigel Barley (anthropologist)

Nigel Barley (born 1947 in Kingston upon Thames, England) is an anthropologist famous for the books he has written on his experiences.

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Nikolay Kradin

Nikolay Nikolaevich Kradin (Крадин Николай Николаевич; born in Onokhoy, Buryatia, Russian SFSR on April 17, 1962) is a Russian anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Nikolay Zograf

Nikolay Yuryevich Zograf (Николай Юрьевич Зограф; 1851–1919) was a Russian zoologist and anthropologist, Chevalier of the Order of Légion d'honneur.

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Nina Jablonski

Nina G. Jablonski (born 1953) is an American anthropologist and palaeobiologist, known for her research into the evolution of skin color in humans.

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Nipmuc

The Nipmuc or Nipmuck people are descendants of the indigenous Algonquian peoples of Nippenet, 'the freshwater pond place', which corresponds to central Massachusetts and immediately adjacent portions of Connecticut and Rhode Island.

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Nirmal Kumar Bose

Nirmal Kumar Bose (22 January 1901 – 15 October 1972) was a leading Indian anthropologist, who played a formative role in "building an Indian Tradition in Anthropology".

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No más bebés

No Más Bebés is a documentary film that tells the story of immigrant women who were sterilized after going into labor.

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Noel B. Salazar

Noel B. Salazar (born 1973) is a Belgian sociocultural anthropologist known for his transdisciplinary work on mobility and travel, the local-to-global nexus, discourses and imaginaries of 'Otherness', heritage, cultural brokering and cosmopolitanism.

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Nomads of India

Nomads are known as a group of communities who travel from place to place for their livelihood.

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Nommo

The Nommo are ancestral spirits (sometimes referred to as deities) worshipped by the Dogon people of Mali.

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Norman Tindale

Norman Barnett Tindale AO (12 October 1900 – 19 November 1993) was an Australian anthropologist, archaeologist, entomologist and ethnologist.

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North Toraja Regency

North Toraja (or Toraja Utara) is a regency (kabupaten) of South Sulawesi Province of Indonesia, and the home of the Toraja ethnic group.

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Northcote W. Thomas

Northcote Whitridge Thomas (1868-1936) was a British anthropologist and psychical researcher.

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Northwestern Europe

Northwestern Europe, or Northwest Europe, is a loosely defined region of Europe, overlapping northern and western Europe.

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Northwind (comics)

Northwind is a fictional avian human hybrid published by DC Comics.

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Nova Scotia Home for Colored Children

The Nova Scotia Home for Colored Children is an orphanage in Halifax, Nova Scotia that opened on June 6, 1921.

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Oak Park and River Forest High School

Oak Park and River Forest High School, or OPRF, is a public four-year high school located in Oak Park, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, Illinois, in the United States.

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Oasisamerica

Oasisamerica is a term used by some scholars, primarily Mexican anthropologists, for the broad cultural area defining pre-Columbian southwestern North America.

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Oaxaca

Oaxaca (from Huāxyacac), officially the Free and Sovereign State of Oaxaca (Estado Libre y Soberano de Oaxaca), is one of the 31 states which, along with Mexico City, make up the 32 federative entities of Mexico.

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Obermaier

Obermaier is a family name in German speaking regions.

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Obin

Obin, real name Josephine Komara, is a textile designer from Indonesia.

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Oceania

Oceania is a geographic region comprising Melanesia, Micronesia, Polynesia and Australasia.

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Oculesics

Oculesics, a subcategory of kinesics, is the study of eye movement, eye behavior, gaze, and eye-related nonverbal communication.

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Oh No, Ross and Carrie!

Oh No, Ross and Carrie! is a skeptical podcast produced in Los Angeles and distributed by the Maximum Fun network.

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Okapi Wildlife Reserve

The Okapi Wildlife Reserve is a World Heritage Site in the Ituri Forest in the north-east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, near the borders with South Sudan and Uganda.

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Oleksa Storozhenko

Oleksa Storozhenko (24 November 1806, Lysohory, Chernihiv region, Ukraine – 6 November 1874, Berestia, Belarus) was a Ukrainian writer, anthropologist, playwright and criminalist.

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Olga Najera-Ramirez

Olga Najera-Ramírez is an American anthropologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

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Olia Lialina

Olia Lialina (May 4 1971, Moscow) is a pioneering Internet artist and theorist, an experimental film and video critic and curator.

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Oliver La Farge

Oliver Hazard Perry La Farge II (December 19, 1901 – August 2, 1963) was an American writer and anthropologist.

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On Growth and Form

On Growth and Form is a book by the Scottish mathematical biologist D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson (1860–1948).

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On the Postcolony

On the Postcolony is a collection of critical essays by Cameroonian philosopher and political theorist Achille Mbembe.

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Once Were Warriors

Once Were Warriors is New Zealand author Alan Duff's bestselling first novel, published in 1990.

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One-drop rule

The one-drop rule is a social and legal principle of racial classification that was historically prominent in the United States asserting that any person with even one ancestor of sub-Saharan African ancestry ("one drop" of black blood)Davis, F. James.

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Optometry

Optometry is a health care profession which involves examining the eyes and applicable visual systems for defects or abnormalities as well as the medical diagnosis and management of eye disease.

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Oral history

Oral history is the collection and study of historical information about individuals, families, important events, or everyday life using audiotapes, videotapes, or transcriptions of planned interviews.

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Orazak Ismagulov

Orazak Ismagulov (born 1930) is an internationally known anthropologist, doctor of historical sciences (1984), corresponding member of the Kazakhstan National Academy of Sciences (1994).

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Origin of language

The evolutionary emergence of language in the human species has been a subject of speculation for several centuries.

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Osbert Lancaster

Sir Osbert Lancaster, CBE (4 August 1908 – 27 July 1986) was an English cartoonist, architectural historian, stage designer and author.

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Oscar Kawagley

Angayuqaq Oscar Kawagley (November 8, 1934 - April 27, 2011), best known as Oscar Kawagley, was a Yup'ik anthropologist, teacher and actor from Alaska.

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Oscar Lewis

Oscar Lewis, born Lefkowitz (December 25, 1914 – December 16, 1970) was an American anthropologist.

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Oscar Peschel

Oscar Ferdinand Peschel (17 March 1826, Dresden – 13 August 1875, Leipzig) was a German geographer and anthropologist.

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Osman Hill's mangabey

The Osman Hill's mangabey (Lophocebus osmani), also known as the rusty-mantled mangabey, is a species of crested mangabey in the family Cercopithecidae with a restricted distribution in West Africa.

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Osteoporosis

Osteoporosis is a disease where increased bone weakness increases the risk of a broken bone.

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Oswestry

Oswestry (Croesoswallt) is a large market town and civil parish in Shropshire, England, close to the Welsh border.

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Oton Župančič

Oton Župančič (January 23, 1878 – June 11, 1949, pseudonym Gojko) was a Slovene poet, translator and playwright.

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Otto Ammon

Otto Georg Ammon (December 7, 1842 in Karlsruhe, Baden – January 14, 1916 in Karlsruhe) was a German anthropologist.

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Otto Schlaginhaufen

Otto Schlaginhaufen (November 8, 1879 in St. Gallen – November 14, 1973 in Kilchberg) was a Swiss anthropologist, ethnologist and eugenicist.

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Otto von Sadovszky

Otto J. von Sadovszky (July 3, 1925 – May 12, 2004) was a Hungarian American anthropologist who worked at California State University, Fullerton in southern California for most of his career until his retirement.

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Out of Asia theory

The Out of Asia theory is a scientific theory which contended that modern humans first arose in Asia.

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Overbite

Overbite medically refers to the extent of vertical (superior-inferior) overlap of the maxillary central incisors over the mandibular central incisors, measured relative to the incisal ridges.

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Pak ganern game

Pak Ganern Game is a modern game which has gained popularity in the Philippines.

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Paleo-Indians

Paleo-Indians, Paleoindians or Paleoamericans is a classification term given to the first peoples who entered, and subsequently inhabited, the Americas during the final glacial episodes of the late Pleistocene period.

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Paleopathology

Paleopathology, also spelled palaeopathology, is the study of ancient diseases.

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Palestinians

The Palestinian people (الشعب الفلسطيني, ash-sha‘b al-Filasṭīnī), also referred to as Palestinians (الفلسطينيون, al-Filasṭīniyyūn, פָלַסְטִינִים) or Palestinian Arabs (العربي الفلسطيني, al-'arabi il-filastini), are an ethnonational group comprising the modern descendants of the peoples who have lived in Palestine over the centuries, including Jews and Samaritans, and who today are largely culturally and linguistically Arab.

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Pamunkey

The Pamunkey Indian Tribe is one of 11 Virginia Indian tribes recognized by the Commonwealth of Virginia, and the state's first federally recognized tribe, receiving its status in January 2016.

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Panchanan Mitra

Dr.

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Paolo Mantegazza

Paolo Mantegazza (31 October 1831 – 28 August 1910) was an Italian neurologist, physiologist, and anthropologist, noted for his experimental investigation of coca leaves into its effects on the human psyche.

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Paranormal

Paranormal events are phenomena described in popular culture, folk, and other non-scientific bodies of knowledge, whose existence within these contexts is described to lie beyond normal experience or scientific explanation.

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Paranthropus robustus

Paranthropus robustus (or Australopithecus robustus) is an early hominin, originally discovered in Southern Africa in 1938.

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Parapsychology

Parapsychology is the study of paranormal and psychic phenomena which include telepathy, precognition, clairvoyance, psychokinesis, near-death experiences, reincarnation, apparitional experiences, and other paranormal claims.

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Parasites Like Us

Parasites Like Us (2003) is American author Adam Johnson's debut novel.

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Parker McKenzie

Parker Paul McKenzie (November 15, 1897, near Rainy Mountain – March 5, 1999, Mountain View) was an American linguist and, at the time of his death, the oldest living Kiowa Native American.

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Pascal Boyer

Pascal Robert Boyer is a French and American anthropologist, mostly known for his work in the cognitive science of religion.

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Pascual Romero

Pascual H. Romero (born January 6,1980) is an American musician, podcaster, television and film producer from Santa Fe, New Mexico.

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Pashtuns

The Pashtuns (or; پښتانه Pax̌tānə; singular masculine: پښتون Pax̌tūn, feminine: پښتنه Pax̌tana; also Pukhtuns), historically known as ethnic Afghans (افغان, Afğān) and Pathans (Hindustani: پٹھان, पठान, Paṭhān), are an Iranic ethnic group who mainly live in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

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Pat Caplan

Ann Patricia Bailey "Pat" Caplan, FRAI (born 13 March 1942) is a retired British anthropologist and academic.

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Patawomeck

Patawomeck is a Native American tribe based in Stafford County, Virginia, along the Potomac River (Patawomeck is another spelling of Potomac).

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Patricia May

Patricia May Urzúa is a Chilean anthropologist.

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Patricia Sawin

Patricia Sawin is a folklorist and anthropologist, an Associate Professor in the Department of American Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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Patricia Seed

Patricia Seed is an American historian and professor in the University of California, Irvine's Department of History.

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Patricia Wright

Patricia Chapple Wright (born September 10, 1944) is an American primatologist, anthropologist, and conservationist.

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Patricia Zavella

Patricia Zavella is an anthropologist and professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz in the Latin American and Latino Studies department.

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Patrick Moraz

Patrick Philippe Moraz (born 24 June 1948) is a Swiss musician, film composer and songwriter, best known for his tenures as keyboardist in the rock bands Yes and The Moody Blues.

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Paul Bohannan

Paul James Bohannan (5 March 1920 – 13 July 2007) was an American anthropologist known for his research on the Tiv people of Nigeria, spheres of exchange and divorce in the United States.

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Paul Broca

Pierre Paul Broca (28 June 1824 – 9 July 1880) was a French physician, anatomist and anthropologist.

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Paul Du Chaillu

Paul Belloni Du Chaillu (July 31, 1831 (disputed)April 29, 1903) was a French-American traveler, zoologist, and anthropologist.

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Paul Farmer

Paul Edward Farmer (born October 26, 1959) is an American anthropologist and physician who is best known for his humanitarian work providing suitable health care to rural and under-resourced areas in developing countries, beginning in Haiti.

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Paul Friedrich (linguist)

Paul William Friedrich (October 22, 1927 – August 11, 2016) was an American anthropologist, linguist, poet, and Professor of Social Thought at the University of Chicago.

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Paul Gebhard

Paul Henry Gebhard (July 3, 1917 – July 9, 2015) was an American anthropologist and sexologist.

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Paul Heelas

Paul Lauchlan Faux Heelas (born 1946) is a British sociologist and anthropologist.

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Paul Jorion

Paul Jorion (born 22 July 1946 in Brussels) is by training an anthropologist, sociologist with a special interest in the cognitive sciences.

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Paul K. Benedict

Paul King Benedict (July 5, 1912 – July 21, 1997) was an American anthropologist, mental health professional, and linguist who specialized in languages of East and Southeast Asia.

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Paul Kirchhoff

Paul Kirchhoff (17 August 1900, Halle, Province of Westphalia – 9 December 1972) was a German-Mexican anthropologist, most noted for his seminal work in defining and elaborating the culture area of Mesoamerica, a term he coined.

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Paul Taçon

Paul S.C. Taçon (born 1958) is an anthropologist and archaeologist who has spent over thirty years conducting field work in destinations ranging from Australia, Botswana, Cambodia, Canada, China, India, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, South Africa and the United States.

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Paul V. Kroskrity

Paul V. Kroskrity (born February 10, 1949) is an American linguistic anthropologist known primarily for his contributions to establishing and developing language ideology as a field of research.

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Paul W Draper

Paul Draper is an anthropologist, academic, and an award winning mentalist, magician, and film maker.

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Paul Wolfowitz

Paul Dundes Wolfowitz (born December 22, 1943) is an American political scientist and diplomat who served as the 10th President of the World Bank, United States Ambassador to Indonesia, U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense, and former dean of the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University.

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Pavlova (food)

Pavlova is a meringue-based dessert named after the Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova.

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Pál Lipták

Pál Lipták (14 February 1914 in Békéscsaba – 6 July 2000 in Budapest) was a Hungarian anthropologist and member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (MTA), specialized in historical anthropology and Hungarian ethnogenesis.

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Pearl Primus

Pearl Eileen Primus (November 29, 1919 – October 29, 1994) was an American dancer, choreographer and anthropologist.

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Pedram Khosronejad

Pedram Khosronejad (پدرام خسرونژاد; born 1969 Tehran, Iran) is a socio-cultural and visual anthropologist of contemporary Iran.

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Pedro Armillas

Pedro Armillas Garcia (9 September 1914 – 11 April 1984) was Spanish academic anthropologist, archaeologist, and an influential pre-Columbian Mesoamerica scholar of the mid-20th century.

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Pedro Geoffroy Rivas

Pedro Geoffroy Rivas (September 16, 1908 in Santa Ana, El Salvador – November 10, 1979 in San Salvador, El Salvador) was an anthropologist, poet, and linguist.

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Pegi Vail

Pegi Vail (also known as Margaret Vail) is an American anthropologist, documentary filmmaker, and curator at New York University.

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Pei Wenzhong

Pei Wenzhong (January 19, 1904 – September 18, 1982), or W. C. Pei, was a Chinese paleontologist, archaeologist and anthropologist born in Fengnan.

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Pequot War

The Pequot War was an armed conflict that took place between 1636 and 1638 in New England between the Pequot tribe and an alliance of the colonists of the Massachusetts Bay, Plymouth, and Saybrook colonies and their allies from the Narragansett and Mohegan tribes.

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Pere Bosch-Gimpera

Pere Bosch-Gimpera (1891 in Barcelona, Catalonia – 1974 in Mexico) was a Spanish-born Mexican archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Periannan Senapathy

Periannan Senapathy is a molecular biologist, geneticist, author and entrepreneur.

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Peter Aaby

Peter Aaby (Danish, born 1944 in Lund, Sweden) is trained as an anthropologist but also holds a doctoral degree in medicine.

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Peter La Farge

Peter La Farge (born Oliver Albee La Farge, April 30, 1931 - October 27, 1965) was a New York-based folksinger and songwriter of the 1950s and 1960s.

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Peter Macnair

Peter Livesay Macnair, Canadian Anthropologist (1940–Present) Born in Vancouver, British Columbia, the son of Dorothy Livesay and Duncan Macnair.

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Peter N. Peregrine

Peter N. Peregrine (born November 29, 1963) is an American anthropologist, registered professional archaeologist, and academic.

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Peter Wade

Peter Wade is a British anthropologist who specializes in issues of race and ethnicity in Latin America.

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Petrus Camper

Petrus Camper (11 May 1722 – 7 April 1789), was a Dutch physician, anatomist, physiologist, midwife, zoologist, anthropologist, palaeontologist and a naturalist in the Age of Enlightenment.

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Philip Ainsworth Means

Philip Ainsworth Means (1892–1944) was an American born anthropologist and historian.

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Phillip Harold Lewis

Phillip Harold Lewis (July 31, 1922 – December 10, 2011) was an American anthropologist, museologist, and amateur photographer and artist.

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Phillip McArthur

Phillip H. McArthur is a folklorist and anthropologist.

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Phoenix of Hiroshima

The Phoenix of Hiroshima was a 50-foot, 30-ton yacht that circumnavigated the globe and was later involved in several famous protest voyages.

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Phraya Anuman Rajadhon

Phya Anuman Rajadhon (พระยาอนุมานราชธน;, also spelled Phaya Anuman Rajadhon or Phrayā Anuman Rajadhon; December 14, 1888 – July 12, 1969), was one of modern Thailand's most remarkable scholars.

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Physiographic macroregions of China

Physiographic macroregions of China is a term suggested by an American anthropologist G. William Skinner as a subdivision of China Proper into nine areas according to the drainage basins of the major rivers and other travel-constraining geomorphological features.

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Piłsudski (disambiguation)

Józef Piłsudski (1867–1935) was a Polish politician, military leader, marshal and Chief of State Bronisław Piłsudski (1866–1918) was a cultural anthropologist Pilsudski or Piłsudski may also refer to.

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Pierre Colas

Pierre Robert Colas (January 13, 1976 – August 26, 2008) was a German anthropologist, archaeologist and epigrapher.

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Pierre Teilhard de Chardin

Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (1 May 1881 – 10 April 1955) was a French idealist philosopher and Jesuit priest who trained as a paleontologist and geologist and took part in the discovery of Peking Man.

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Pierre-Roland Giot

Pierre-Roland Giot (23 September 1919 – January 2002) was a French anthropologist, archaeologist and geologist.

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Piers Vitebsky

Piers Vitebsky is an anthropologist and is the Head of Social Science at the Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge, England.

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Piled Higher and Deeper

Piled Higher and Deeper (also known as PhD Comics), is a newspaper and webcomic strip written and drawn by Jorge Cham that follows the lives of several grad students.

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Pinsk Marshes

The Pinsk Marshes (Пінскія балоты, Pinskiya baloty), also known as the Pripet Marshes (Прыпяцкія балоты, Prypiackija baloty) and the Rokitno Marshes, are a vast natural region of wetlands along the forested basin of the Pripyat River and its tributaries from Brest to the west to Mogilev to the northeast and Kiev to the southeast.

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Piscataway Indian Nation and Tayac Territory

The Piscataway Indian Nation, also called Piscatawa, is a state-recognized tribe in Maryland that claims descent from the historic Piscataway tribe.

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Piscataway people

The Piscataway or Piscatawa, also referred to as the Piscataway Indian Nation, are Native Americans, once constituting the most populous and powerful Native polities of the Chesapeake Bay region.

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Plains indigenous peoples

Plains indigenous peoples, previously called plain aborigines, are Taiwanese indigenous peoples originally residing in low land regions, as opposed to Highland indigenous peoples.

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Poles

The Poles (Polacy,; singular masculine: Polak, singular feminine: Polka), commonly referred to as the Polish people, are a nation and West Slavic ethnic group native to Poland in Central Europe who share a common ancestry, culture, history and are native speakers of the Polish language.

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Polly Schaafsma

Polly Dix Schaafsma is an American archaeologist, best known for her publications on Native American rock art.

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Popol Vuh

Popol Vuh (also Popol Wuj) is a cultural narrative that recounts the mythology and history of the K'iche' people who inhabit the Guatemalan Highlands northwest of present-day Guatemala City.

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Portrait of Michel Leiris, 1976

Portrait of Michel Leiris (sometimes Study for Portrait of Michel Leiris) is a 1976 oil on canvas panel painting by the Irish born, English artist Francis Bacon.

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Potlatch

A potlatch is a gift-giving feast practiced by indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast of Canada and the United States,Harkin, Michael E., 2001, Potlatch in Anthropology, International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences, Neil J. Smelser and Paul B. Baltes, eds., vol 17, pp.

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PPG Place

PPG Place is a complex in downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, consisting of six buildings within three city blocks and five and a half acres.

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Prehistoric Indonesia

Prehistoric Indonesia is a prehistoric period in the Indonesian archipelago that spanned from the Pleistocene period to about the 4th century CE when the Kutai people produced the earliest known stone inscriptions in Indonesia.

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Prehistory

Human prehistory is the period between the use of the first stone tools 3.3 million years ago by hominins and the invention of writing systems.

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Prehistory of West Virginia

The Prehistory of West Virginia spans ancient times until the arrival of Europeans in the early 17th century.

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Pretty Modern: Beauty, Sex, and Plastic Surgery in Brazil

Pretty Modern: Beauty, Sex, and Plastic Surgery in Brazil is a book by anthropologist Alexander Edmonds published by Duke University Press in 2010.

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Prey (TV series)

Prey is a science-fiction television series that aired for one season (13 episodes) in 1998 on ABC.

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Prince Alfred College

Prince Alfred College (also referred to as PAC, Princes, or in sporting circles, The Reds) is a private independent, day and boarding school for boys, located on Dequetteville Terrace, Kent Town – near the centre of Adelaide, South Australia.

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Professor Edward Travers

Professor Edward Travers, played by Jack Watling, is a fictional anthropologist and explorer who appears in two serials of the BBC television series Doctor Who and a spin-off TV movie.

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Professor X

Professor Charles Francis Xavier (colloquial: Professor X) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics and is the founder and leader of the X-Men.

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Pseudocerastes persicus fieldi

Pseudocerastes persicus fieldi is a venomous viper subspecies endemic to the deserts of the Middle East.

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Psychology Today

Psychology Today is a magazine published every two months in the United States since 1967.

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Pueblo

Pueblos are modern and old communities of Native Americans in the Southwestern United States.

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Pulangi River

The Pulangi River (Cebuano pronunciation IPA), also spelled Pulangui, is the longest river in Bukidnon.

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Pulpurru Davies

Pulpurru Davies is an Aboriginal artist from central Australia.

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Pwojè Pyebwa

Pwojè Pyebwa (Tree Project) is a tree-planting project in Haiti.

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Qualitative research

Qualitative research is a scientific method of observation to gather non-numerical data.

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Queens College, City University of New York

Queens College (QC) is one of the four-year colleges in the City University of New York system.

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Quesalid

Quesalid was a Kwakwaka'wakw First Nations shaman who lived on Vancouver Island, Canada.

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Quiggly hole

A quiggly hole, also known as a pit-house or simply as a quiggly or kekuli, is the remains of an earth lodge built by the First Nations people of the Interior of British Columbia and the Columbia Plateau in the U.S. The word quiggly comes from kick willy or keekwulee, the Chinook Jargon word for "beneath" or "under".

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R. Brian Ferguson

Richard Brian Ferguson (born 1951) is an American anthropologist.

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R. H. Barlow

Robert Hayward Barlow (May 18, 1918 – January 1 or 2, 1951Joshi & Schultz (2007): p. xx.) was an American author, avant-garde poet, anthropologist and historian of early Mexico, and expert in the Nahuatl language.

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R. T. Wallen

R.

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Race and ethnicity in the United States

The United States of America has a racially and ethnically diverse population.

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Race of the future

The race of the future is a theoretical composite race which will result from ongoing racial admixture.

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Racism in a Racial Democracy

Racism in a Racial Democracy: The Maintenance of White Supremacy in Brazil is a book by anthropologist France Winddance Twine published by Rutgers University Press in 1997.

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Ralph D. Winter

Ralph Dana Winter (Mon., December 8, 1924 – Wed., May 20, 2009) was an American missiologist and Presbyterian missionary who helped pioneer Theological Education by Extension, raised the debate about the role of the church and mission structures and became well known as the advocate for pioneer outreach among unreached people groups.

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Ralph Linton

Ralph Linton (27 February 1893 – 24 December 1953) was a respected American anthropologist of the mid-20th century, particularly remembered for his texts The Study of Man (1936) and The Tree of Culture (1955).

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Ralph Regenvanu

Ralph John Regenvanu (born 20 September 1970 in Suva, FijiLaef Blong Mi, Sethy Regenvanu, op.cit., p.76) is a ni-Vanuatu anthropologist, artist and politician.

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Ramón Mujica Pinilla

Ramon Elias Mujica Pinilla is a Peruvian anthropologist and served under three Presidents as Director of the National Library of Peru.

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Randa Kassis

Randa Kassis (Arabic: رندة قسيس) is a Franco-Syrian politician and a leading secular figure of the Syrian opposition.

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Randolph Stow

Julian Randolph Stow (28 November 1935 – 29 May 2010) was an Australian-born writer, novelist and poet.

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Rane Willerslev

Rane Willerslev is a Danish anthropologist who is the director of the National Museum of Denmark since 1 July 2017.

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Ranjit Kumar Gupta

Ranjit Kumar Gupta (often referred to as Ranjit Gupta) was Police Commissioner of Kolkata in the seventies and played a controversial role in tackling the Naxalite movement.

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Rank-Raglan mythotype

In narratology and comparative mythology, the Rank-Raglan mythotype (sometimes called the hero archetypes) are narrative patterns proposed by psychoanalyst Otto Rank and later on amateur anthropologist Lord Raglan that lists different cross-cultural traits often found in the accounts of heroes, including mythical heroes.

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Raoul Naroll

Raoul Naroll (September 10, 1920 – June 25, 1985) was an anthropologist who did much to promote the methodology of cross-cultural studies.

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Raphael Patai

Raphael Patai (Hebrew רפאל פטאי) (November 22, 1910 − July 20, 1996), born Ervin György Patai, was a Hungarian-Jewish ethnographer, historian, Orientalist and anthropologist.

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Ray Birdwhistell

Ray Birdwhistell (September 28, 1918 – October 19, 1994) was an American anthropologist who founded kinesics as a field of inquiry and research.

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Raymond J. DeMallie

Raymond J. DeMallie (born October 16, 1946) is an American anthropologist whose work focuses on the cultural history of the peoples of the Northern Plains, particularly the Lakota.

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Raymond Louis Wilder

Raymond Louis Wilder (3 November 1896 in Palmer, Massachusetts – 7 July 1982 in Santa Barbara, California) was an American mathematician, who specialized in topology and gradually acquired philosophical and anthropological interests.

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Redondo Peak

Redondo Peak is a conspicuous summit in the Jemez Mountains of New Mexico, in the southwestern United States.

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Reiner Protsch

Reiner Protsch (von Zieten), born 14 January 1939 in Berlin, is a German anthropologist who published allegedly erroneous carbon dating data of human fossils.

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Religion

Religion may be defined as a cultural system of designated behaviors and practices, world views, texts, sanctified places, prophecies, ethics, or organizations, that relates humanity to supernatural, transcendental, or spiritual elements.

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Religious abuse

Religious abuse is abuse administered under the guise of religion, including harassment or humiliation, which may result in psychological trauma.

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Religious aspects of Nazism

Historians, political scientists and philosophers have studied Nazism with a specific focus on its religious and pseudo-religious aspects.

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Renatus

Renatus is a first name of Latin origin which means "born again" (natus.

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René Martial

René Martial (17 October 1873 in Paris – 23 January 1955 in Vendôme) was a French anthropologist during the thirties and the Vichy era (1940–1944).

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Rhoda Bubendey Métraux

Rhoda Bubendey Metraux (18 October 1914, New York City – 26 November 2003, Barton, Vermont), was a prominent anthropologist in the area of cross-cultural studies, specializing in Haitian voodoo and the Iatmul people of the middle Sepik River in Papua New Guinea.

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Ricardo Alegría

Ricardo E. Alegría Gallardo (April 14, 1921 – July 7, 2011) was a Puerto Rican scholar, cultural anthropologist and archeologist known as the "father of modern Puerto Rican archaeology".

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Ricardo Costa (filmmaker)

Ricardo Costa (born 25 January 1940) is a Portuguese film director and producer.

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Ricardo Falla-Sánchez

Ricardo Falla-Sánchez (born 1932) is a Guatemalan Jesuit and anthropologist.

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Ricardo Pozas Arciniega

Ricardo Pozas Arciniega (May 4, 1912, Amealco de Bonfil, Querétaro – January 19, 1994, Mexico City) was a distinguished Mexican anthropologist, scientific investigator and indigenista.

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Richard Bauman

Richard Bauman is a folklorist and anthropologist, now retired from Indiana University Bloomington.

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Richard Blanton

Richard E. Blanton (born November 16, 1943) is an American anthropologist, archaeologist, and academic.

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Richard Borshay Lee

Richard Borshay Lee (born 1937) is a Canadian anthropologist.

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Richard Diehl

Richard A. Diehl (born 1940) is an American archaeologist, anthropologist and academic, noted as a scholar of pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures.

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Richard Lionel Spittel

Richard Lionel Spittel, CMG, CBE, FRCS (commonly known as Dr. R. L. Spittel) (9 December 1881 – 3 September 1969) was a Ceylonese Burgher physician and author.

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Richard Lobban

Richard A. Lobban, Jr., husband of Dr.

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Richard Stanley (director)

Richard Stanley (born 22 November 1966) is a South African film director and screenwriter.

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Richard T. Antoun

Richard "Dick" T. Antoun (March 31, 1932, in Worcester, Massachusetts – December 4, 2009, in Vestal, New York) was an American anthropologist who specialized in Islamic and Middle Eastern studies.

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Richard Thurnwald

Richard Thurnwald (September 18, 1869 – January 19, 1954) was an Austrian anthropologist and sociologist, known for his comparative studies of social institutions.

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Richard Vyse

General Richard Vyse (11 July 1746 – 30 May 1825) was a British general, and briefly a Member of Parliament for Beverley.

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Ridolfo Livi

Ridolfo Livi (Prato, 13 July 1856 – Florence, 12 April 1920) was an Italian anthropologist.

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Rita P. Wright

Rita P. Wright is an American anthropologist, and professor at New York University.

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Robert Carl Suggs

Robert Carl Suggs (born 1932) is an American archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Robert Corruccini

Robert Spencer Corruccini (born May 21, 1949) is an American anthropologist, distinguished professor, Smithsonian Institution Research Fellow, Human Biology Council Fellow (now the Human Biology Association), and the 1994 Outstanding Scholar at Southern Illinois University-Carbondale.

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Robert E. Lee Chadwick

Robert E. Lee Chadwick (March 29, 1930 – January 3, 2014) was an American anthropologist and archeologist, primarily known for his contributions to the.

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Robert F. Murphy (anthropologist)

Robert Francis Murphy (March 3, 1924 – October 8, 1990) was an American anthropologist and professor of anthropology at Columbia University in New York City, from the early 1960s to 1990.

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Robert Foley (academic)

Robert Andrew Foley, FBA (born 18 March 1953) is a British anthropologist, archaeologist, and academic, specialising in human evolution.

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Robert Gayre

George Robert Gayre (6 August 1907St. Martin's Press Staff (2001). Who Was Who 1996–2000 Volume X: A Companion to WHO'S WHO – Containing the Biographies of Those Who Died During the Period 1996–2000. Palgrave Macmillan,. Some sources give 1905 as birth year. – 10 February 1996) was a Scottish anthropologist who founded Mankind Quarterly, a peer-reviewed academic journal which has been described as a "cornerstone of the scientific racism establishment".

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Robert Hamilton Mathews

Robert Hamilton Mathews (1841–1918) was an Australian surveyor and self-taught anthropologist who studied the Aboriginal cultures of Australia, especially those of Victoria, New South Wales and southern Queensland.

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Robert Hugh Layton

Robert H. Layton (born 1944) is a British anthropologist and.

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Robert J. Pope

Robert James Pope (24 March 1865 – 12 April 1949) was a New Zealand poet, songwriter, violinist, cricketer, teacher, and headmaster.

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Robert K. Oermann

Robert K. Oermann is a Nashville-based music journalist and author who is recognized as an authority on country music.

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Robert L. Carneiro

Robert Leonard Carneiro (born in New York City on June 4, 1927) is a prominent American anthropologist and curator of the American Museum of Natural History.

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Robert L. Hall

Robert L. Hall (February 8, 1927 – March 16, 2012) was an American anthropologist.

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Robert L. McKenzie

Robert L. McKenzie, Ph.D., commonly known as Bobby McKenzie, is a domestic and foreign policy analyst, public commentator, and scholar of the Middle East and North Africa.

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Robert Lee Barker

Robert Lee Barker (born 1937) is a psychotherapist, author, editor, and professor of social work.

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Robert Lowie

Robert Harry Lowie (born Robert Heinrich Löwe; June 12, 1883 – September 21, 1957) was an Austrian-born American anthropologist.

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Robert M. Carmack

Robert M. Carmack (born 1934) is an academic anthropologist and Mesoamericanist scholar who is most noted for his studies of the history, culture and societies of contemporary Maya peoples.

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Robert McCormick Adams Jr.

Robert McCormick Adams Jr. (July 23, 1926 – January 27, 2018) was a U.S. anthropologist and Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution (1984-94).

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Robert Ripley

LeRoy Robert Ripley (December 25, 1890 – May 27, 1949) was an American cartoonist, entrepreneur, and amateur anthropologist who is known for creating the Ripley's Believe It or Not! newspaper panel series, radio show, and television show which feature odd facts from around the world.

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Robert S. Newman

Robert S. Newman (born February 12, 1943) is an anthropologist based in Marblehead, Massachusetts, USA, primarily known for his contribution to studying post-1961 Goa, India.

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Robert Sussman

Robert Wald Sussman (July 4, 1941 – June 8, 2016) was an American anthropologist and professor at Washington University in St. Louis.

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Robert Wauchope (archaeologist)

Robert Wauchope (December 10, 1909 – January 20, 1979) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist, whose academic research specialized in the prehistory and archaeology of Latin America, Mesoamerica, and the Southwestern United States.

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Robeson County, North Carolina

Robeson County is a county in the southern part of the U.S. state of North Carolina.

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Robin Fox

Robin Fox (born 1934) is an Anglo-American anthropologist who has written on the topics of incest avoidance, marriage systems, human and primate kinship systems, evolutionary anthropology, sociology and the history of ideas in the social sciences.

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Robson Bonnichsen

Robson Bonnichsen (3 December 1940 – 25 December 2004) was an anthropologist who undertook pioneering research in First American studies, popularized the field and founded the Center for the Study of Early Man at the University of Maine (Orono) in 1981.

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Rockland Community College

Rockland Community College is a community college in Ramapo, New York.

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Roderick Flanagan

Roderick Flanagan (1 April 1828 – 13 March 1862) was an Irish historian, anthropologist, poet, newspaper proprietor, and journalist.

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Roderick Sprague

Roderick Sprague III (February 18, 1933 – August 20, 2012) was an American anthropologist, ethnohistorian and historical archaeologist, and the Emeritus Director of the Laboratory of Anthropology at the University of Idaho in Moscow, where he taught for thirty years.

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Roedean School

Roedean School is an independent day and boarding school founded in 1885 in Roedean Village on the outskirts of Brighton, East Sussex, England, and governed by Royal Charter.

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Roger Bartra

Roger Bartra Murià (born Mexico City, November 7, 1942) is a Mexican sociologist and anthropologist, recognized as one of the most important contemporary social scientists of Latin America.

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Roger Blench

Roger Marsh Blench (born 1953) is a British linguist, ethnomusicologist and development anthropologist.

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Roger Pearson (anthropologist)

Roger Pearson (born 21 August 1927 in London) is a British anthropologist, soldier, businessman, eugenics advocate, political organiser for the extreme right, and publisher of political and academic journals.

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Rogue (comics)

Rogue is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, commonly in association with the X-Men.

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Roi Kwabena

Dr.

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Rollout photography

Rollout photography, a type of peripheral photography, is a process used to create a two-dimensional photographic image of a three-dimensional object.

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Ronald C. Simons

Ronald C. Simons (born June 25, 1935), MD, MA is a psychiatrist and anthropologist best known for his work on latah, a culture-bound syndrome found predominantly in Malaysia and Indonesia.

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Ronald Frankenberg

Ronald Frankenberg (20 October 1929 – 20 November 2015) was a British anthropologist, known for his study of conflict and decision-making in a Welsh village.

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Ronald Nigh

Ronald Nigh (born October 29, 1947) is an American ecological anthropologist focusing on Caribbean areas and the Maya region in Mesoamerica.

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Ronald Spores

Ronald M. Spores (born January 25, 1931) is an American academic anthropologist, archaeologist and ethnohistorian, whose research career has centered on the pre-Columbian cultures of Mesoamerica.

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Ronald Stade

Ronald Stade (born Berlin, Germany, 1953) is a Swedish anthropologist.

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Ronald Suleski

Ronald Suleski (born June 11, 1942) is a historian, anthropologist and author specializing in East Asia.

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Rosamond Spicer

Rosamond Spicer (1913, 1999) was an American anthropologist and a writer.

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Rose Mary Allen

Rose Mary Allen (born 1950) is an Curaçaoan anthropologist, who has published on the oral history of former enslaved people of the Dutch Caribbean islands.Her dissertation Di ki manera: a social history of Afro-Curaçaoans, 1863-1917 draws largely on the collected oral histories of Afro-Curaçaoans.

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Rosemary Joy Hendry

Rosemary Joy Hendry (born 1945) is a British cultural anthropologist.

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Rosemary Joyce

Rosemary Joyce (born 1956) is an American anthropologist and social archaeologist who has specialized in research in Honduras.

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Ross Hassig

Ross Hassig (born December 13, 1945) is an American historical anthropologist specializing in Mesoamerican studies, particularly the Aztec culture.

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Roswell UFO incident

In mid-1947, a United States Army Air Forces balloon crashed at a ranch near Roswell, New Mexico.

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Roy Rappaport

Roy A. Rappaport (1926–1997) was an American anthropologist known for his contributions to the anthropological study of ritual and to ecological anthropology.

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Ruby McCollum

Ruby McCollum, born Ruby Jackson (August 31, 1909 – May 23, 1992), was a wealthy married African-American woman in Live Oak, Florida arrested and convicted in 1952 for killing a prominent white doctor and state senator.

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Ruby the Galactic Gumshoe

Ruby the Galactic Gumshoe is the title character of a science fiction radio drama series by the ZBS Foundation, written by Thomas Lopez.

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Rudolf Pöch

Rudolf Pöch (17 April 1870, Tarnopol, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria – 4 March 1921, Innsbruck), was an Austrian doctor, anthropologist, and ethnologist.

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Rudolf Wagner

Rudolf Friedrich Johann Heinrich Wagner (30 July 1805 – 13 May 1864) was a German anatomist and physiologist and the co-discoverer of the germinal vesicle.

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Rugeley

Rugeley is a historic market town in the county of Staffordshire, England.

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Rui (surname)

Rui is the Mandarin pinyin romanization of the Chinese surname written in Chinese characters.

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Ruth Behar

Ruth Behar (born 1956) is a Cuban-American anthropologist and writer.

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Ruth Benedict

Ruth Fulton Benedict (June 5, 1887September 17, 1948) was an American anthropologist and folklorist.

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Ruth Cardoso

Ruth Vilaça Correia Leite Cardoso (September 19, 1930 – June 24, 2008) was a Brazilian anthropologist and a former member of the Faculty of Philosophy, Letters and Human Sciences at the University of São Paulo (FFLCH-USP).

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Ruth Hill Useem

Ruth Hill Useem (31 May 1915 – 10 September 2003) was an American sociologist and anthropologist who introduced the concept of Third Culture Kid (TCK) to describe children who spent part of their developmental years in a foreign culture due to their parents' working abroad.

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Ruth Landes

Ruth Landes (October 8, 1908, New York City – February 11, 1991, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada) was an American cultural anthropologist best known for studies on Brazilian candomblé cults and her published study on the topic, City of Women (1947).

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Ruth Mace

Ruth Mace, FBA (born 9 October 1961) is a British anthropologist, biologist, and academic.

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Ruth Tringham

Ruth Tringham (born 14 October, 1940) is an anthropologist, focusing on the archaeology of Neolithic Europe and southwest Asia.

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Ruth Underhill

Ruth Murray Underhill (August 22, 1883 – August 15, 1984) was an American anthropologist.

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Sacred natural site

A sacred natural site is a natural feature or a large area of land or water having special spiritual significance to peoples and communities.

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Sacred–profane dichotomy

The sacred–profane dichotomy is an idea posited by French sociologist Émile Durkheim, who considered it to be the central characteristic of religion: "religion is a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things, that is to say, things set apart and forbidden." In Durkheim's theory, the sacred represented the interests of the group, especially unity, which were embodied in sacred group symbols, or totems.

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Saddeka Arebi

Saddeka Mohammed Arebi (صديقة محمد عربيي, Ṣaddīqah Muḥammad `Arabī) (died July 2007) was a Libyan-American/Arab American social anthropologist and author.

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Sadegh Malek Shahmirzadi

Sadegh Malek Shahmirzadi (صادق ملک شهميرزادی) (born April 24, 1940) is an Iranian archaeologist and anthropologist.

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SAFE13 study

The Survey of Academic Field Experiences study, also known as the SAFE13 study, was a survey conducted between February and May of 2013 in order to characterize experiences of scientists working at field sites as they relate to sexual harassment and sexual assault.

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Saharan rock art

Saharan rock art is a significant area of archaeological study focusing on artwork carved or painted on the natural rocks of the central Sahara desert.

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Saint

A saint (also historically known as a hallow) is a person who is recognized as having an exceptional degree of holiness or likeness or closeness to God.

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Sajama Lines

The Sajama Lines of western Bolivia are a network of thousands (possibly tens of thousands) of nearly perfectly straight paths etched into the ground continuously for more than 3,000 years by the indigenous people living near the volcano Sajama.

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Salishan languages

The Salishan (also Salish) languages are a group of languages of the Pacific Northwest in North America (the Canadian province of British Columbia and the American states of Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana).

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Salvador Debenedetti

Salvador Santiago Lorenzo Debenedetti (March 2, 1884September 30, 1930) was an Argentine archaeologist, anthropologist and educator.

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Sambadrome Marquês de Sapucaí

The Sambadrome Marquês de Sapucaí is a purpose-built parade area built for the Rio Carnival in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

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Sambia people

The Sambia people are a tribe of mountain-dwelling, hunting and horticultural people who inhabit the fringes of the Eastern Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea, and are extensively described by the American anthropologist Gilbert Herdt.

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Sami people

The Sami people (also known as the Sámi or the Saami) are a Finno-Ugric people inhabiting Sápmi, which today encompasses large parts of Norway and Sweden, northern parts of Finland, and the Murmansk Oblast of Russia.

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Samuel Barrett

Samuel Alfred Barrett (1879 in Conway, Alaska – 1965) was an anthropologist and linguist who studied Native American peoples.

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Samuel Haven

Samuel Forster Haven (May 28, 1806 in Dedham, Massachusetts – September 5, 1881) was an American archeologist and anthropologist.

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Samuel Kirkland Lothrop

Samuel Kirkland Lothrop (1892–1965) was an archaeologist and anthropologist who specialized in Central and South American Studies.

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Samuel Thomas von Sömmerring

Samuel Thomas von Sömmerring (28 January 1755 – 2 March 1830) was a German physician, anatomist, anthropologist, paleontologist and inventor.

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San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation

The San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation, in southeastern Arizona, United States, was established in 1872 as a reservation for the Chiricahua Apache tribe as well as surrounding Yavapai and Apache bands forcibly removed from their original homelands under a strategy devised by General Crook of using an Apache to catch an Apache.

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San Diego Museum of Man

The San Diego Museum of Man is a museum of anthropology located in Balboa Park, San Diego, California and housed in the historic landmark buildings of the California Quadrangle.

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San Jose de Moro

San José de Moro is a Moche archaeological site in the Pacanga District, Chepén Province, La Libertad Region, of Northwestern Peru.

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Sandy Balls

Sandy Balls is of woods and parkland in the New Forest in Hampshire, England.

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Sanford Plummer

Sanford Plummer (Ga-yo-gwa-doke) (1905–1974) (Seneca) was a Native American narrative watercolor painter from New York state.

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Sangiran

Sangiran is an archaeological excavation site in Java in Indonesia.

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Sappony

The Sappony or Saponi are a Native American tribe historically based in the Piedmont of North Carolina and Virginia.

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Sara C. Bisel

Dr.

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Sarah Begum

Sarah Begum (সারাহ বেগম; born 5 July 1988) is an English anthropologist, journalist, explorer and documentary filmmaker.

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Sarah Franklin

Sarah Franklin (born 1960) is an American anthropologist who has substantially contributed to the fields of feminism, gender studies, cultural studies and the social study of reproductive and genetic technology.

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Satanic panic (South Africa)

The Satanic panic is a moral panic about alleged widespread Satanic ritual abuse which originated around the 1980s in the United States, peaking in the early 1990s, before waning as a result of scepticism of academics and law enforcement agencies who ultimately debunked the claims.

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Saya Woolfalk

Saya Woolfalk (born 1979, Gifu City, Japan) is a New York based artist known for her multimedia exploration of hybridity, science, race, and sex.

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Sønderborg

Sønderborg (- (German) is a Danish town of Region of Southern Denmark. It is the main town and the administrative seat of Sønderborg Municipality (Kommune). The town has a population of 27,434 (1 January 2014), in a municipality of 75,264.

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Scientific racism

Scientific racism (sometimes referred to as race biology, racial biology, or race realism) is the pseudoscientific belief that empirical evidence exists to support or justify racism (racial discrimination), racial inferiority, or racial superiority.

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Scott Atran

Scott Atran (born February 6, 1952) is a French-American anthropologist who is a Director of Research in Anthropology at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Paris, Research Professor at the University of Michigan, and cofounder of ARTIS International and of the at Oxford University.

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Scott Fisher (technologist)

Scott Fisher is the Professor and Founding Chair of the Interactive Media Division in the USC School of Cinematic Arts at the University of Southern California, and Director of the Mobile and Environmental Media Lab there.

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Second-order cybernetics

Second-order cybernetics, also known as the cybernetics of cybernetics, is the recursive application of cybernetics to itself.

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Seed Global Health

Seed Global Health, formerly known as Global Health Service Corps, is a non-profit organization started in 2011 which helps to provide nursing and medical training support in resource-limited countries.

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Self-reflection

Human self-reflection is the capacity of humans to exercise introspection and the willingness to learn more about their fundamental nature, purpose and essence.

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Selkie

Selkies (also spelt silkies, sylkies, selchies) or Selkie folk (selkie fowk) meaning "Seal Folk" are mythological beings capable of therianthropy, changing from seal to human form by shedding their skin.

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Semitic people

Semites, Semitic people or Semitic cultures (from the biblical "Shem", שם) was a term for an ethnic, cultural or racial group who speak or spoke the Semitic languages.

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Senoi

The Senoi (also spelled Sengoi and Sng'oi) are a group of Malaysian peoples classified among the Orang Asli, the indigenous peoples of Peninsular Malaysia.

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Sense of community

Sense of community (or psychological sense of community) is a concept in community psychology, social psychology, and community social work, as well as in several other research disciplines, such as urban sociology, which focuses on the experience of community rather than its structure, formation, setting, or other features.

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Sense of place

The term sense of place has been used in many different ways.

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Sentinelese

The Sentinelese (also called the Sentineli or North Sentinel Islanders) are the indigenous people of North Sentinel Island in the Andaman Islands of India.

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Sequoyah

Sequoyah (ᏍᏏᏉᏯ Ssiquoya, as he signed his name, or ᏎᏉᏯ Se-quo-ya, as is often spelled in Cherokee; named in English George Gist or George Guess) (17701843), was a Cherokee silversmith.

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Sergei Kan

Sergei A. Kan is an American anthropologist known for his research with and writings on the Tlingit people of southeast Alaska, focusing on the potlatch and on the role of the Russian Orthodox Church in Tlingit communities.

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Sergey Mstislavsky

Sergey Dmitrievich Mstislavsky (Серге′й Дми′триевич Мстисла′вский, born Maslovsky; November 4, 1876, Moscow - April 22, 1943, Irkutsk, USSR) was a Russian Soviet writer, dramatist, publicist, anthropologist, editor and political activist, close to the Left Socialist-Revolutionaries.

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Seth M. Holmes

Seth M. Holmes (born 1975) is the Martin Sisters Endowed Chair Associate Professor of Medical Anthropology and Public Health at the University of California Berkeley.

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Setha Low

Setha Low is a former president of the American Anthropological Association, a professor in environmental psychology, and the director of the Public Space Research Group at the City University of New York.

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Severin Cecile Abega

Severin Cecile Abega (1955 – March 24, 2008) was a Cameroonian author, anthropologist and researcher.

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Sex and Repression in Savage Society

Sex and Repression in Savage Society is a 1927 book by anthropologist Bronislaw Malinowski.

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Sex strike

A sex strike, sometimes called a sex boycott, is a strike, a method of non-violent resistance in which one or multiple persons refrain from sex with their partner(s) to achieve certain goals.

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Sex, Death and the Meaning of Life

Sex, Death and the Meaning of Life is a three-part television documentary presented by Richard Dawkins which explores what reason and science might offer in major events of human lives.

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Shannon Lee Dawdy

Shannon Lee Dawdy is an American historian, archeologist and anthropologist.

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Sharing This Walk

Sharing This Walk: An Ethnography of Prison Life and the PCC in Brazil is a book written by anthropologist Karina Biondi, edited and translated by John F. Collins, and published by the University of North Carolina Press in 2016.

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Sharon Claydon

Sharon Catherine Claydon (born 26 April 1964) is an Australian politician.

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Shimpei Cole Ota

Shimpei Cole Ota (太田 心平; 오타 심페이, 1975 –) is a sociocultural anthropologist, sociocultural historian, researcher of Northeast Asian studies and curator of ethnology.

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Shirley Brice Heath

Shirley Brice Heath is an American linguistic anthropologist, and Professor Emerita, Margery Bailey Professorship in English, at Stanford University.

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Shirley Fiske

Shirley Fiske is an environmental and policy anthropologist.

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Sial tribe

The Sial tribe (also written as Siyal, Syal, Sayal, Seyal) is a tribe of the Punjab region of Pakistan.

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Sider

Sider is the surname of several people.

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Sikaiana

Sikaiana (formerly called the Stewart Islands) is a small atoll NE of Malaita in Solomon Islands in the south Pacific Ocean.

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Silap Inua

In Inuit mythology, Silap Inua ('possessor of spirit', ᓯᓚᑉ ᐃᓄᐊ) or Silla ('breath, spirit', ᓯᓪᓚ) is similar to mana or ether, the primary component of everything that exists; it is also the breath of life and the method of locomotion for any movement or change.

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Silesians

Silesians (Silesian: Ślůnzoki; Silesian German: Schläsinger; Ślązacy; Slezané; Schlesier) are the inhabitants of Silesia, a historical region in Central Europe divided by the current national boundaries of Poland, Germany and the Czech Republic.

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Sima Trojanović

Sima Trojanović (Šabac, Serbia, 2 February 1862 – Belgrade, Kingdom of Yugoslavia, 21 November 1935) was a Serbian ethnologist and the first university-trained anthropologist, director of the Ethnographic Museum, Belgrade, university professor in Skopje and member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts.

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Simulacrum

A simulacrum (plural: simulacra from simulacrum, which means "likeness, similarity") is a representation or imitation of a person or thing.

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Sioux

The Sioux also known as Očhéthi Šakówiŋ, are groups of Native American tribes and First Nations peoples in North America.

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Sir Francis Knowles, 5th Baronet

Sir Francis Howe Seymour Knowles, 5th Baronet (13 January 1886 – 4 April 1953) was an English anthropologist and the fifth of the Knowles baronets.

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Skull

The skull is a bony structure that forms the head in vertebrates.

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Slapping (strike)

Slapping or smacking refers to striking a person with the open palm of the hand.

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Sleep medicine

Sleep medicine is a medical specialty or subspecialty devoted to the diagnosis and therapy of sleep disturbances and disorders.

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Smadar Lavie

Smadar Lavie (סמדר לביא) is a Mizrahi U.S.-Israeli anthropologist, author, and activist.

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Snake detection theory

The Snake Detection Theory (sometimes referred as "Snake Detection Hypothesis") suggests that snakes have contributed to the evolution of primates' visual system.

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Social class

A social class is a set of subjectively defined concepts in the social sciences and political theory centered on models of social stratification in which people are grouped into a set of hierarchical social categories, the most common being the upper, middle and lower classes.

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Social class in Tibet

There were three main social groups in Tibet prior to 1959, namely ordinary laypeople (mi ser in Tibetan), lay nobility (sger pa), and monks.

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Social inequality

Social inequality occurs when resources in a given society are distributed unevenly, typically through norms of allocation, that engender specific patterns along lines of socially defined categories of persons.

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Social position

Social position is the position of an individual in a given society and culture.

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Society for Anthropological Sciences

The Society for Anthropological Sciences (SASci) is a scholarly association formed in 2004 to promote the development of empirical theory and methods in anthropology.

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Sociobiological theories of rape

Sociobiological theories of rape explore how evolutionary adaptation influences the psychology of rapists.

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Sociobiology: The New Synthesis

Sociobiology: The New Synthesis (1975; 25th anniversary edition 2000) is a book by the biologist E. O. Wilson.

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Sociotope

A sociotope is a defined space that is uniform in its use values and social meanings (compare with biotope).

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Sohini Ray

Sohini Ray (born August 25, 1966) is a classical Manipuri dancer dance-researcher and anthropologist from India currently based in Los Angeles, United States.

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Sol Tax

Sol Tax (30 October 1907 – 4 January 1995) was an American anthropologist.

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Solkope

Solkope is a small and densely wooded island off the southern coast of Rotuma in the Fiji Islands, at the edge of the fringing coral reef.

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Solon Toothaker Kimball

Solon Toothaker Kimball (August 12, 1909 – October 12, 1982) was a noted educator and anthropologist.

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Somali Republic

The Somali Republic (Jamhuuriyadda Soomaaliyeed, Repubblica Somala, جمهورية الصومال) was the official name of Somalia after independence on July 1, 1960, following the unification of the Trust Territory of Somaliland (the former Italian Somaliland) and the State of Somaliland (the former British Somaliland).

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Somalian literature

Somali literature refers to the literary tradition of Somalia.

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Song Yoon-ah

Song Yoon-ah (Korean: 송윤아, born June 7, 1973) is a South Korean actress.

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Sonia Alconini

Sonia Alconini Mujica (born 1965) is a Bolivian anthropologist and archaeologist specializing in the socioeconomic and political development of the formative cultures of Andean civilizations in the Bolivian highlands around Lake Titicaca.

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Sonia Mary Cole

Sonia Mary Cole (née Myers) (1918 in Westminster, London – 1982) was an English geologist, archaeologist, anthropologist and author.

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Sophie Bledsoe Aberle

Sophie Bledsoe Aberle (21 July 1896 – October 1996) was a Native American anthropologist, physician and nutritionist known for her work with Pueblo people.

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Southern Illinois University Edwardsville

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, (commonly abbreviated SIUE or The "e"), is a coeducational, public Master's college and university in Edwardsville, Illinois, United States about northeast of St. Louis, Missouri.

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Southwest Museum of the American Indian

The Southwest Museum of the American Indian is a museum, library, and archive located in the Mt. Washington area of Los Angeles, California.

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Sovereign Grace Churches

Sovereign Grace Churches can refer generally to churches that hold to the electing Sovereign Grace of God in salvation often denoted by the acronym T.U.L.I.P which is a summary of the theological principles adopted at the Synod of Dordrecht in the Netherlands (1618-1619) as over and against the teachings of Arminianism.

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Species (film)

Species is a 1995 American science fiction horror film directed by Roger Donaldson and written by Dennis Feldman.

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Spencer (surname)

Spencer (also Spence, Spender, Spens, and Spenser) is a surname, representing the court title dispenser, or steward.

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Spencer MacCallum

Spencer Heath McCallum (born 1931), commonly known as Spencer MacCallum, is an American anthropologist, business consultant and author.

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Spencer Wells

Spencer Wells (born April 6, 1969) is a geneticist, anthropologist, author, entrepreneur, adjunct professor at the University of Texas at Austin, and owner of Antone's, an iconic nightclub in Austin, Texas.

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Springerville, Arizona

Springerville is a town in Apache County, Arizona, United States, within the White Mountains.

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Squamish people

The Squamish people (or in the Squamish language (Sḵwx̱wú7mesh snichim) Skwxwú7mesh, sometimes seen in English as Skwxwu7mesh (The "7" represents a glottal stop), historically transliterated as Sko-ko-mish) are an indigenous people in southwestern British Columbia, Canada.

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Squaw dress

A squaw, fiesta, Kachina, Tohono or patio dress is an American style of dress developed in Arizona.

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SS Mendi

SS Mendi was a British passenger steamship that was built in 1905 and, as a troopship, sank after collision with great loss of life in 1917.

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St. Lawrence Iroquoians

The St.

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Standard social science model

The term standard social science model (SSSM) was first introduced by John Tooby and Leda Cosmides in the 1992 edited volume The Adapted Mind.

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Stanley Pearl

Australian Stanley Keith Pearl was a sapper with the First Australian Imperial Force during World War I. His exact dates of birth and death are unclear.

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Stéphane Breton (filmmaker)

Stéphane Breton (born 1959) is a French filmmaker, photographer and anthropologist.

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Stephen D. Glazier

Stephen D. Glazier (born Mystic, Connecticut) is an American anthropologist.

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Stephen D. Houston

Stephen Douglas Houston (born November 11, 1958) is an American anthropologist, archaeologist, epigrapher and Mayanist scholar, who is particularly renowned for his research into the pre-Columbian Maya civilization of Mesoamerica.

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Stephen Plog

Stephen Plog is a notable American archaeologist and anthropologist, who specializes in the pre-Columbian cultures of the American Southwest.

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Stephen Powers

Stephen Powers (1840–1904) was an American journalist, ethnographer, and historian of Native American tribes in California.

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Stephen Smith (journalist)

Stephen William Smith is an American anthropologist, biographer, editor, historian, journalist, and writer.

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Stereotypes of Jews

Stereotypes of Jews are generalized representations of Jews, often caricatured and of a prejudiced and antisemitic nature.

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Sterkfontein

Sterkfontein (Afrikaans for Strong Spring) is a set of limestone caves of special interest to paleo-anthropologists located in Gauteng province, about 40 km (23 miles) northwest of Johannesburg, South Africa in the Muldersdrift area close to the town of Krugersdorp.

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Steven Erikson

Steven Erikson (born October 7, 1959) is the pseudonym of Steve Rune Lundin, a Canadian novelist, who was educated and trained as both an archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Steven Feld

Steven Feld (born August 20, 1949) is an American ethnomusicologist, anthropologist, and linguist, who worked for many years with the Kaluli (Bosavi) people of Papua New Guinea.

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Steven Rubenstein

Steven Lee Rubenstein (June 10, 1962 – March 8, 2012) was an American anthropologist.

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Stone carving

Stone carving is an activity where pieces of rough natural stone are shaped by the controlled removal of stone.

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Street photography

Street photography, also sometimes called candid photography, is photography conducted for art or enquiry that features unmediated chance encounters and random incidents within public places.

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String figure

A string figure is a design formed by manipulating string on, around, and using one's fingers or sometimes between the fingers of multiple people.

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Structural functionalism

Structural functionalism, or simply functionalism, is "a framework for building theory that sees society as a complex system whose parts work together to promote solidarity and stability".

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Structural Marxism

Structural Marxism was an approach to Marxist philosophy based on structuralism, primarily associated with the work of the French philosopher Louis Althusser and his students.

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Structuralism

In sociology, anthropology, and linguistics, structuralism is the methodology that implies elements of human culture must be understood by way of their relationship to a larger, overarching system or structure.

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Structuralist theory of mythology

In structural anthropology, Claude Lévi-Strauss, a French anthropologist, makes the claim that "myth is language".

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Structuration theory

The theory of structuration is a social theory of the creation and reproduction of social systems that is based in the analysis of both structure and agents (see structure and agency), without giving primacy to either.

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Stuart Struever

Stuart McKee Struever (born 1931) is an American archaeologist and anthropologist best known for his contributions to the archaeology of the Woodland Period in the US midwest and for his leadership of archaeology research & education foundations.

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Style tribe

A style tribe or fashion tribe is a group of people that dress in a distinctive style to show their membership in this group.

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Subsistence pattern

A Subsistence Pattern – alternatively known as a subsistence strategy – is the means by which a society satisfies its basic needs for survival.

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Supermodel

A supermodel (also spelled super-model and super model) is a highly paid fashion model who usually has a worldwide reputation and often a background in haute couture and commercial modeling.

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Surajit Chandra Sinha

Surajit Chandra Sinha (1926–27 February, 2002) was an Indian anthropologist who born in Durgapur Upazila, of Netrokona District, in Mymensingh Division, then in Bengal and now in Bangladesh.

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Susan Block

Susan Block, also known as Dr.

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Susan D. Gillespie

Susan D. Gillespie (born 1952) is an American academic anthropologist and archaeologist, noted for her contributions to archaeological and ethnohistorical research on pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures, in particular the Aztec, Maya and Olmec.

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Susan Price

Susan Price (born 8 July 1955) is an English author of children's and young adult novels.

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Susanne Küchler

Susanne Küchler, FBA is a German anthropologist and academic, who specialises in material culture.

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Susanne Schröter

Susanne Schröter (born 1957) is a contemporary Social Anthropologist focussing primarily on Islam, Gender and Conflict Studies.

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Suzanna W. Miles

Suzanna ('Sue') Whitelaw Miles (Mount Carroll, Illinois, June 7, 1922 – Boston, April 10, 1966) was an American ethnohistorian, anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Sven Haakanson

Sven Haakanson, Jr. (born 1967) (Alutiiq) is an American anthropologist who has specialized in documenting and preserving the language and culture of the Alutiiq.

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Sweetgrass (film)

Sweetgrass is a 2009 documentary film that follows modern-day shepherds as they lead their flocks of sheep up into Montana's Absaroka-Beartooth mountains for summer pasture.

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Sydel Silverman

Sydel Finfer Silverman Wolf (born May 20, 1933) is an American anthropologist notable for her work as a researcher, writer, and advocate for the archival preservation of anthropological research.

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Sylvia M. Broadbent

Sylvia Marguerite Broadbent (London, United Kingdom, 26 February 1932 - Arlington, California, United States, 30 July 2015) was an American anthropologist and professor, specializing in Amerindian peoples.

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T. T. Paterson

Doctor Thomas Thomson Paterson (1909–1994), archaeologist, palaeontologist, geologist, glaciologist, geographer, anthropologist, ethnologist, sociologist, and world authority on administration, was curator of the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in Cambridge from 1937 to 1948.

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Tadao Umesao

was a Japanese anthropologist.

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Tadodaho

Tadodaho was a Native American and sachem of the Onondaga nation before the Deganawidah and Hiawatha formed the Iroquois League.

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Tagalog Wikipedia

The Tagalog Wikipedia () is the Tagalog language edition of Wikipedia, which was launched on December 1, 2003.

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Taisha Abelar

Taisha Abelar, born Maryann Simko, is an American writer and anthropologist who was an associate of Carlos Castaneda.

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Taja Kramberger

Taja Kramberger (born 11 September 1970) is a poet, translator, essayist and historical anthropologist from Slovenia.

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Takie Lebra

Takie Sugiyama Lebra (February 6, 1930May 26, 2017) was a Japanese anthropologist and professor.

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Talal Asad

Talal Asad (born April 1932) is an anthropologist at the CUNY Graduate Center.

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Tammari people

The Tammari people, or Batammariba, also known as Somba, are an Oti–Volta-speaking people of the Atakora Department of Benin and neighboring areas of Togo, where they go by the name of Taberma. They are famous for their two-story fortified houses, known as Tata Somba ("Somba house"), in which the ground floor is used for housing livestock at night, internal alcoves are used for cooking, and the upper floor contains a rooftop courtyard and is used for drying grain, sleeping quarters, and granaries.

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Tamu Samaj

Tamu Samaj ("Tamu Society") is a society of Tamus (also known as Gerung), an ethnic group from Nepal.

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Tana Toraja Regency

Tana Toraja Regency (Indonesian for Torajaland or Land of the Toraja, abbreviated Tator) is a regency (kabupaten) of South Sulawesi Province of Indonesia, and home to the Toraja ethnic group.

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Tanya Luhrmann

Tanya Marie Luhrmann (born 1959), often cited as T.M. Luhrmann, is an American psychological anthropologist best known for her studies of modern-day witches, charismatic Christians, and psychiatrists.

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Tarak Chandra Das

Tarak Chandra Das (1898-1964) was an anthropologist of Calcutta University.

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Taraki Sivaram

Taraki Sivaram or Dharmeratnam Sivaram (11 August 1959 – 28 April 2005) was a popular Tamil journalist of Sri Lanka.

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Tastil

Tastil is an archaeological site near Santa Rosa de Tastil, Salta Province, Argentina.

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Technogypsie

Technogypsie (also Techno-Gypsie or Techno Gypsy) is a term for a modern-day nomadic person who balances the arts and sciences in their lifestyle.

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Ted Polhemus

Ted Polhemus (born 1947 in Neptune, New Jersey, United States) is an American anthropologist, writer, and photographer who lives and works on England's south coast.

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Teito Monogatari

is an epic historical dark fantasy/science fiction work; the debut novel of natural history researcher and polymath Hiroshi Aramata.

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Temperance "Bones" Brennan

Temperance "Bones" Brennan, Ph.D. (born Joy Keenan) is a fictional character portrayed by Emily Deschanel in the American Fox television series Bones.

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Temple (novel)

Temple is a thriller novel written by Australian author Matthew Reilly and first published in 1999.

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Tequendama

Tequendama is a preceramic and ceramic archaeological site located southeast of Soacha, Cundinamarca, Colombia, a couple of kilometers east of Tequendama Falls.

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Teresa Giménez Barbat

María Teresa Giménez Barbat (born in 1955 in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain) is a Spanish anthropologist, writer and politician.

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Thanadelthur

Thanadelthur "Thanadeltth'er" (c. 1697 – 5 February 1717) was a woman of the Chipewyan Dënesųłı̨ne nation who served as a guide and interpreter for the Hudson's Bay Company.

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The 10,000 Year Explosion

The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution is a 2009 book by anthropologists Gregory Cochran and Henry Harpending.

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The Ax Fight

The Ax Fight (1975) is an ethnographic film by anthropologist and filmmaker Tim Asch and anthropologist Napoleon Chagnon about a conflict in a Yanomami village called Mishimishimabowei-teri, in southern Venezuela.

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The Children of Sanchez (book)

The Children of Sanchez is a 1961 book by American anthropologist Oscar Lewis about a Mexican family living in the Mexico City slum of Tepito, which he studied as part of his program to develop his concept of culture of poverty.

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The Chrysanthemum and the Sword

The Chrysanthemum and the Sword: Patterns of Japanese Culture is a 1946 study of Japan by American anthropologist Ruth Benedict.

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The Chrysanthemum and the Sword (Mad Men)

"The Chrysanthemum and the Sword" is the fifth episode of the fourth season of the American television drama series Mad Men, and the 44th overall episode of the series.

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The Flying Sorcerers

The Flying Sorcerers is a humorous 1971 science fiction novel by American writers David Gerrold and Larry Niven.

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The Forest People

The Forest People (1961) is Colin Turnbull's ethnographic study of the Mbuti pygmies of the then-Belgian Congo (later Zaire and now Democratic Republic of Congo).

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The Future of Work and Death

The Future of Work and Death is a 2016 documentary by Sean Blacknell and Wayne Walsh about the growth of exponential technology.

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The God Who Wasn't There

The God Who Wasn't There is a 2005 independent documentary written and directed by Brian Flemming.

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The Hebrew Goddess

The Hebrew Goddess is a 1967 book by Jewish historian and anthropologist Raphael Patai, in which the author argues that historically, the Jewish religion had elements of polytheism, especially the worship of goddesses and a cult of the mother goddess.

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The Interpretation of Cultures

The Interpretation of Cultures: Selected Essays is a 1973 book by American anthropologist Clifford Geertz.

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The Journey of Man

The Journey of Man: A Genetic Odyssey is a 2002 book by Spencer Wells, an American geneticist and anthropologist, in which he uses techniques and theories of genetics and evolutionary biology to trace the geographical dispersal of early human migrations out of Africa.

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The Left Hand of Darkness

The Left Hand of Darkness is a science fiction novel by U.S. writer Ursula K. Le Guin, published in 1969.

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The Legend of Tarzan (TV series)

The Legend of Tarzan is an American animated television series created by Walt Disney Television, based on the Tarzan character created by Edgar Rice Burroughs and also based on Tarzan (1999 film) by Walt Disney Pictures same name.

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The Lele of the Kasai

The Lele of the Kasai (1963) was the second book by the influential British anthropologist Mary Douglas and the first under her married name.

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The Lost World (1960 film)

The Lost World is a 1960 De Luxe Color and a CinemaScope fantasy adventure film loosely based on the novel of the same name by Arthur Conan Doyle and directed by Irwin Allen.

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The Man from Earth

The Man from Earth is a 2007 American drama science fiction film written by Jerome Bixby and directed by Richard Schenkman.

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The Many-Colored Land

The Many-Colored Land is the first book of the Saga of Pliocene Exile (known as the Saga of the Exiles in the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth) by American author Julian May.

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The Mind of Primitive Man

The Mind of Primitive Man is a 1911 book by anthropologist Franz Boas which takes a critical look at the concept of primitive culture.

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The Modernist City

The Modernist City: An Anthropological Critique of Brasilia is a book by anthropologist James Holston published by the University of Chicago Press in 1989.

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The Overflow, New South Wales

The Overflow is a bounded rural locality, cadastral parish and Sheep station, 100 kilometers south of Nyngan, New South Wales.

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The Raw and the Cooked

The Raw and the Cooked (1964) is the first volume from Mythologiques, a structural study of Amerindian mythology written by French anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss.

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The Relic (film)

The Relic is a 1997 science fiction-horror film directed by Peter Hyams and based on the best-selling novel Relic by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child.

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The Seeker (film)

The Seeker (also known as The Seeker: The Dark Is Rising) is a 2007 American family drama-fantasy film adaptation of the second book in the five-book young adult fantasy series The Dark Is Rising by Susan Cooper.

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The Sentinel (TV series)

The Sentinel is a Canadian-produced television series that aired on UPN in the United States from 1996 to 1999.

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The Serpent and the Rainbow (book)

The Serpent and the Rainbow: A Harvard Scientist's Astonishing Journey into the Secret Societies of Haitian Voodoo, Zombies, and Magic is a 1985 book by anthropologist and researcher Wade Davis.

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The Snow Creature

The Snow Creature is a 1954 science fiction-horror film movie produced and directed by W. Lee Wilder for Planet Filmplays Inc., written by Myles Wilder, and starring Paul Langton.

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The Trail of Cthulhu

The Trail of Cthulhu is a series of interconnected short stories by American writer August Derleth as part of the Cthulhu Mythos genre of horror fiction.

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The Tribal World of Verrier Elwin

The Tribal World of Verrier Elwin is an autobiography of anthropologist Verrier Elwin published by Oxford University Press.

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The Utopia of Rules

The Utopia of Rules: On Technology, Stupidity, and the Secret Joys of Bureaucracy is a 2015 book by anthropologist David Graeber about how people "relate to" and are influenced by bureaucracies.

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The Vampire Tapestry

The Vampire Tapestry is a 1980 horror novel by American author Suzy McKee Charnas.

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The Word for World Is Forest

The Word for World Is Forest is a science fiction novella by American writer Ursula K. Le Guin, first published in the United States in 1972 as a part of the anthology Again, Dangerous Visions, and published as a separate book in 1976 by Berkley Books.

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The Younger Lady

The Younger Lady is the informal name given to a mummy discovered in the Egyptian Valley of the Kings, in tomb KV35 by archaeologist Victor Loret in 1898.

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Theodor Waitz

Theodor Waitz (March 17, 1821 – May 21, 1864) was a German psychologist and anthropologist.

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Theodora Kroeber

Theodora Kracaw Kroeber Quinn (March 24, 1897 – July 4, 1979) was a writer and anthropologist, best known for her accounts of Ishi, the last member of the Yahi tribe of California, and for her retelling of traditional narratives from several Native Californian cultures.

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Thick description

In the fields of anthropology, sociology, religious studies, human-centered design and organizational development, a thick description of a human behavior is one that explains not just the behavior, but its context as well, such that the behavior becomes meaningful to an outsider.

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Think of the children

"Think of the children" (also "What about the children?") is a cliché that evolved into a rhetorical tactic.

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Third culture kid

Third culture kid (TCK) refers individuals whose raised in a culture other than their parents' or the culture of the country named on their passport (where they are legally considered native) for a significant part of their early development years.

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Thomas Athol Joyce

Thomas Athol Joyce OBE (4 August 1878 – 3 January 1942) was a British anthropologist.

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Thomas Cullen Young

Thomas Cullen Young (1880–1955) was a Scottish Presbyterian anthropologist and missionary, who first started his missionary work in Malawi at the Livingstonia Mission in 1904.

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Thomas Des Jean

Thomas Des Jean is an American anthropologist who has conducted extensive field research in the American Southeast, in CRM (cultural resources management), and has worked for over twenty years with the National Park Service.

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Thomas Griffith Taylor

Thomas Griffith "Grif" Taylor (1 December 1880 – 5 November 1963) was an English geographer, anthropologist and world explorer.

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Thor Heyerdahl (ship)

Work in the rig, 2007 Thor Heyerdahl (named after Thor Heyerdahl), originally named Tinka, later Marga Henning, Silke, and Minnow, was built as a freight carrying motor ship with auxiliary sails at the shipyard Smit & Zoon in Westerbroek, Netherlands, in 1930.

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Tibesti Mountains

The Tibesti Mountains are a mountain range in the central Sahara, primarily located in the extreme north of Chad, with a small extension into southern Libya.

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Tikopia

Tikopia is a small high island in the southwestern Pacific Ocean.

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Till Lindemann

Till Lindemann (born 4 January 1963) is a German singer, songwriter, musician, actor, poet, and pyrotechnician.

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Tim Asch

Timothy Asch (July 16, 1932 – October 3, 1994) was a noted anthropologist, photographer, and ethnographic filmmaker.

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Time capsule

A time capsule is a historic cache of goods or information, usually intended as a method of communication with future people and to help future archaeologists, anthropologists, or historians.

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Timeline of İzmir

Below is a sequence of some of the events that affected the history of the city of İzmir (historically also Smyrna).

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Timeline of Polish science and technology

Education has been of prime interest to Poland's rulers since the early 12th century.

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Tivi Etok

Tivi Etok (born 1929) is a Canadian Inuit artist, illustrator, and printmaker.

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Tiwanaku

Tiwanaku (Tiahuanaco or Tiahuanacu) is a Pre-Columbian archaeological site in western Bolivia.

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Tobacco smoke enema

The tobacco smoke enema, an insufflation of tobacco smoke into the rectum by enema, was a medical treatment employed by European physicians for a range of ailments.

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Tobias Hecht

Tobias Hecht (born 18 February 1964) is an American anthropologist, ethnographer, and translator.

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Tobias Schneebaum

Tobias Schneebaum (March 25, 1922 – September 20, 2005) was an American artist, anthropologist, and AIDS activist.

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Tohunga

In the culture of the Māori of New Zealand, a tohunga is an expert practitioner of any skill or art, either religious or otherwise.

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Tom Boellstorff

Tom Boellstorff is an anthropologist based at the University of California, Irvine.

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Tom Dillehay

Tom Dillehay is an American anthropologist who is the Rebecca Webb Wilson University Distinguished Professor of Anthropology, Religion, and Culture and Professor of Anthropology at Vanderbilt University.

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Tom Gill (anthropologist)

Thomas Paramor "Tom" Gill (born 1960) is a Japan-based social anthropologist whose research has focused mainly on marginal groups in Japanese society.

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Tonawanda Reservation

The Tonawanda Indian Reservation is an Indian reservation of the Tonawanda Band of Seneca Indians located in western New York, United States.

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Toraja

The Toraja are an ethnic group indigenous to a mountainous region of South Sulawesi, Indonesia.

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Townsend, Tennessee

Townsend is a city in Blount County, Tennessee, in the southeastern United States.

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Trance

Trance denotes any state of awareness or consciousness other than normal waking consciousness.

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Trevor Hoyle

Trevor Hoyle (born 25 February 1940 in Rochdale, Lancashire, England, United Kingdom) is an English science fiction author.

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Trial of the Juntas

The Trial of the Juntas (Spanish, Juicio a las Juntas) was the judicial trial of the members of the de facto military government that ruled Argentina during the dictatorship of the Proceso de Reorganización Nacional (el proceso), which lasted from 1976 to 1983.

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Tribe (Internet)

The term tribe or digital tribe is used as a slang term for an unofficial community of people who share a common interest, and usually who are loosely affiliated with each other through social media or other Internet mechanisms.

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Tribes of Jharkhand

The tribes of Jharkhand consist of 32 tribes (8 primitive) inhabiting the Jharkhand state in India.

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Triloknath Pandit

Triloknath Pandit is an Indian anthropologist.

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Tristes Tropiques

Tristes Tropiques (the French title translates literally as "Sad Tropics") is a memoir, first published in France in 1955, by the anthropologist and structuralist Claude Lévi-Strauss.

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Tsimihety people

The Tsimihety are a Malagasy ethnic group who are found in the north-central region of Madagascar.

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Tullia Magrini

Tullia Magrini (15 April 1950 – 24 July 2005) was an Italian anthropologist, an Associate Professor of Anthropology of Music at the University of Bologna.

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Two Hearts Among the Beasts

Two Hearts Among the Beasts (Italian: Due cuori fra le belve) is a 1943 Italian comedy film directed by Giorgio Simonelli and starring Totò, Vera Carmi and Enrico Glori.

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Two-spirit

Two-Spirit (also two spirit or, occasionally, twospirited) is a modern, pan-Indian, umbrella term used by some indigenous North Americans to describe certain people in their communities who fulfill a traditional third-gender (or other gender-variant) ceremonial role in their cultures.

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Tzav (parsha)

Tzav, Tsav, Zav, Sav, or in Biblical Hebrew Ṣaw (— Hebrew for "command," the sixth word, and the first distinctive word, in the parashah) is the 25th weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the second in the Book of Leviticus.

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Uloqsaq

Uloqsaq (also Uluksuk, c. 1887 – September 24, 1929) was a Copper Inuit hunter and ceremonial person.

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Ulrich Schiefer

Ulrich Schiefer (* September 10, 1952, in Lauffen am Neckar) is a German rural and development sociologist and anthropologist.

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Umm Badr

Umm Badr (أم بادر) is a town in North Kurdufan in Sudan at an altitude of 691 meters above sea level (2270 feet).

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Uncontacted peoples

Uncontacted people, also referred to as isolated people or lost tribes, are communities who live, or have lived, either by choice (people living in voluntary isolation) or by circumstance, without significant contact with modern civilization.

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Unilineal evolution

Unilineal evolution (also referred to as classical social evolution) is a 19th-century social theory about the evolution of societies and cultures.

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University of Tsukuba

, one of the oldest national universities (established by Japanese Government) and one of the most comprehensive research universities in Japan, is in the city of Tsukuba (known as Tsukuba Science City), Ibaraki Prefecture in the Kantō region of Japan.

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Unnatural History (TV series)

Unnatural History is a Canadian-American television series produced by Warner Horizon Television for Cartoon Network and YTV.

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Unnur Birna Vilhjálmsdóttir

Unnur Birna Björnsdóttir (born Vilhjálmsdóttir 25 May 1984) is an Icelandic actress, lawyer, model and beauty queen who won Miss Iceland 2005 and later won Miss World 2005 pageant.

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Unstrange Minds

Unstrange Minds is a nonfiction book by anthropologist Roy Richard Grinker about the rise in autism diagnoses throughout the world over the last twenty years.

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Ursula Cowgill

Ursula Moser Cowgill (9 November 1927 – November 27, 2015) was a biologist and anthropologist who worked for Yale University, Dow Chemical Company and the University of Colorado during the second half of the 20th century.

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Ursula Graham Bower

Ursula Violet Graham Bower MBE (later known as U. V. G. Betts) (15 May 1914 – 12 November 1988), was one of the pioneer anthropologists in the Naga Hills between 1937–1946 and a guerrilla fighter against the Japanese in Burma from 1942–45.

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Ushinosuke Mori

Ushinosuke Mori (森 丑之助 Mori Ushinosuke, January 16, 1877 - July 4, 1926) was a Japanese anthropologist and folklorist.

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V-12 Navy College Training Program

The V-12 Navy College Training Program was designed to supplement the force of commissioned officers in the United States Navy during World War II.

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Valery Alekseyev (anthropologist)

Valery Pavlovich Alekseyev (sometimes spelled as Alexeev) (Валерий Павлович Алексеев, 22 August 1929 – 7 November 1991) was a Russian anthropologist, director of the Institute of Archaeology in Moscow (1987–1991) and member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, exceptionally without having been a member of the Communist Party.

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Vasily Nalimov

Vasiliy Vasilievich Nalimov (Васи́лий Васи́льевич Нали́мов; 4 November 1910 – 19 January 1997) was a Russian philosopher and humanist and wrote on Transpersonal Psychology.

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Vayikra (parsha)

Parshat Vayikra, VaYikra, Va-yikra, or Vayyiqra (— Hebrew for "and He called," the first word in the parashah) is the 24th weekly Torah portion (parashah) in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the first in the Book of Leviticus.

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Vedda

The Vedda (වැද්දා, வேடர் Vēdar) are a minority indigenous group of people in Sri Lanka who, among other self-identified native communities such as Coast Veddas, Anuradhapura Veddas and Bintenne Veddas, are accorded indigenous status.

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Vera D. Rubin

Dr.

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Vera Grabe

Vera Grabe Loewenherz is a Colombian anthropologist, politician, and former member of the Colombian guerrilla M-19, of which she was also a co-founder.

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Vera Mae Green

Vera Mae Green (1928 - 1982) was an anthropologist, educator, and scholar, who made major contributions in the fields of Caribbean studies, interethnic studies, black family studies and the study of poverty and the poor.

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Verne F. Ray

Verne Frederick Ray, (1905 – September 28, 2003) was anthropology professor at the University of Washington, with a B.A. and M.A. in anthropology from Washington and a Ph.D. (in 1937) from Yale.

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Vernon L. Scarborough

Vernon Lee Scarborough (born 1950) is an American academic anthropologist and archaeologist, known for his research and publications on settlement, land use and water management practices of archaic and Pre-industrial society.

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Verrier Elwin

Verrier Elwin (29 August 1902 – 22 February 1964) was a British self-trained anthropologist, ethnologist and tribal activist, who began his career in India as a Christian missionary.

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Verstehen

Verstehen (literally: "to understand") in the context of German philosophy and social sciences in general, has been used since the late 19th century – in English as in German – with the particular sense of the "interpretive or participatory" examination of social phenomena.

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Victor Wolfgang von Hagen

Victor Wolfgang von Hagen (St-Louis, Missouri, United States, February 29, 1908 – Italy, March 8, 1985) was an American explorer, archaeological historian, anthropologist, and travel writer who traveled in South America with his wife (Christine, later Silvia).

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Victoria Bricker

Victoria Bricker (born 1940) is an American anthropologist and ethnographer, known for her studies of Mesoamerican culture.

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Victoria Institute

The Victoria Institute, or Philosophical Society of Great Britain, was founded in 1865, as a response to the publication of On the Origin of Species and Essays and Reviews.

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Victus

Victus, the fall of Barcelona, is a historical novel by the Catalan anthropologist Albert Sánchez Piñol published by HarperCollins in September 2014.

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Villas-Bôas brothers

Orlando (1914–2002) and his brothers Cláudio (1916–1998) and Leonardo Villas-Bôas (1918–1961) were Brazilian activists regarding indigenous peoples.

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Vine Deloria Jr.

Vine Victor Deloria Jr. (March 26, 1933 – November 13, 2005) was a Native American author, theologian, historian, and activist.

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Virginia Gutiérrez de Pineda

Virginia Gutiérrez de Pineda (November 4, 1921, El Socorro, Santander-September 2, 1999, Bogotá) was a Colombian anthropologist who pioneered work on Colombian family and medical anthropology.

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Vittorio Tedesco Zammarano

Vittorio Tedesco Zammarano was an explorer and writer.

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Vivian Fuchs

Sir Vivian Ernest Fuchs FRS (11 February 1908 – 11 November 1999) was an English explorer whose expeditionary team completed the first overland crossing of Antarctica in 1958.

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Vsevolod Miller

Vsevolod Fyodorovich Miller (Все́волод Фёдорович Ми́ллер) (April 7 (N.S. April 19), 1848, Moscow – November 5 (N.S. November 18), 1913, Saint Petersburg) was a Russian philologist, folklorist, linguist, anthropologist, archaeologist, and academician of the Petersburg Academy of Sciences (1911).

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W. H. R. Rivers

William Halse Rivers Rivers, FRCP, FRS, (–) was an English anthropologist, neurologist, ethnologist and psychiatrist, best known for his work treating First World War officers who were suffering from shell shock.

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Walam Olum

The Walam Olum or Walum Olum, usually translated as "Red Record" or "Red Score," is purportedly a historical narrative of the Lenape (Delaware) Native American tribe.

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Walter B. Miller

Walter B. Miller (1920–2004) was an American anthropologist and was known for his study and publications on youth gangs.

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Walter Hartwig

Walter Carl Hartwig is an American anthropologist, paleontologist, anatomy professor and author in the San Francisco Bay Area.

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Walter Neves

Walter Alves Neves is a Brazilian anthropologist, archaeologist and biologist from the University of São Paulo (USP), Brazil.

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Walter Taylor (archaeologist)

Walter Willard Taylor, Jr. (1913–1997) was an American anthropologist and archaeologist most famous for his work at Coahuila in Mexico and his "Conjunctive archaeology", a method of studying the past combining elements of both the traditional archaeology of the period and the allied field of anthropology.

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Walter William Skeat

Walter William Skeat (21 November 1835 – 6 October 1912), FBA, was the pre-eminent British philologist of his time.

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Walter William Skeat (anthropologist)

Walter William Skeat (14 October 1866 – 24 July 1953) was an English anthropologist.

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Walton, New South Wales

Walton is a bounded rural locality, and cadastral parish, 100 kilometers south of Nyngan, New South Wales.

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War with the Newts

War with the Newts (Válka s mloky in the original Czech), also translated as War with the Salamanders, is a 1936 satirical science fiction novel by Czech author Karel Čapek.

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Wayne Lotter

Wayne Lotter (4 December 1965 – 16 August 2017) was a South African wildlife conservationist.

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We Charge Genocide

We Charge Genocide: The Crime of Government Against the Negro People is a paper accusing the United States government of genocide based on the UN Genocide Convention.

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Wealth in people

Wealth in people (sometimes written wealth-in-people) is a concept developed by anthropologists and historians to describe social systems in which status, power, and influence are achieved and mediated through the number of one's dependents, followers, or other social ties and affiliations.

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Wendy Orent

Wendy Orent is an American anthropologist and author with special interest in pandemics.

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Westo

The Westo were a Native American tribe encountered in the Southeastern U.S. by Europeans in the 17th century.

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Whang-od

Whang-od Oggay (First name pronunciation:; born February 17, 1917), also known as Maria Oggay, is a Filipina tattoo artist from Buscalan, Tinglayan, Kalinga, Philippines.

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White people

White people is a racial classification specifier, used mostly for people of European descent; depending on context, nationality, and point of view, the term has at times been expanded to encompass certain persons of North African, Middle Eastern, and South Asian descent, persons who are often considered non-white in other contexts.

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Wicca

Wicca, also termed Pagan Witchcraft, is a contemporary Pagan new religious movement.

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Wild man syndrome

The wild man syndrome, also known as wild pig syndrome, is a culture-bound syndrome that affects the mental health of New Guinean males in which they become hyperactive, clumsy, kleptomaniacal, and conveniently amnesic." It is known in various languages of New Guinea as guria, longlong, or lulu.

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Wilderness

Wilderness or wildland is a natural environment on Earth that has not been significantly modified by human activity.

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Wildlife

Wildlife traditionally refers to undomesticated animal species, but has come to include all plants, fungi, and other organisms that grow or live wild in an area without being introduced by humans.

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Wilfred Cantwell Smith

Wilfred Cantwell Smith (July 21, 1916 – February 7, 2000) was a Canadian professor of comparative religion who from 1964–1973 was director of Harvard University's Center for the Study of World Religions.

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Wilhelm Schmidt (linguist)

Wilhelm Schmidt SVD (February 16, 1868 – February 10, 1954) was an Austrian linguist, anthropologist, and ethnologist.

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Wilhelm Solheim

Wilhelm G. Solheim II (1924—2014) was an American anthropologist recognized as the most senior practitioner of archaeology in Southeast Asia, and as a pioneer in the study of Philippine and Southeast Asian prehistoric archaeology.

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William Bascom

__notoc__ William R. Bascom (1912–1981) was an American folklorist, anthropologist, and museum director.

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William Bent

William Wells Bent (May 23, 1809 – May 19, 1869) was primarily known as a trader, and rancher in the American West, with forts in Colorado.

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William Beynon

William Beynon (1888–1958) was a hereditary chief of the Tsimshian nation (British Columbia, Canada) and an oral historian; he served as ethnographer, translator, and linguistic consultant to many anthropologists who studied his people.

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William C. Sturtevant

William Curtis Sturtevant (1926 Morristown, New Jersey – March 2, 2007) was an anthropologist and ethnologist.

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William Duncan Strong

William Duncan Strong (1899–1962) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist noted for his application of the direct historical approach to the study of indigenous peoples of North and South America.

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William Frédéric Edwards

William Frédéric Edwards (1777–1842) was a French physiologist, of Jamaican background, who was also a pioneer anthropologist.

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William H. Durham

William H. Durham is an American biological anthropologist, and Bing Professor in Human Biology, at Stanford University.

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William H. Wiser

William Henricks Wiser (1890–1961), spelt also as William Hendricks Wiser, was an American anthropologist, and a Fourth Presbyterian Church, Chicago IL Presbyterian rural-missionary sent to North India - Uttar Pradesh.

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William Hanks

William F. Hanks is an American linguist and anthropologist who has done influential work in linguistic anthropology describing the uses of deixis and indexicality in the Yucatec Maya language.

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William Healey Dall

William Healey Dall (August 21, 1845 – March 27, 1927) was an American naturalist, a prominent malacologist, and one of the earliest scientific explorers of interior Alaska.

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William Henry Crocker

William Henry Crocker (13 January 1861 – 25 September 1937) was president of Crocker National Bank and was a prominent member of the Republican Party.

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William Henry Holmes

William Henry Holmes (December 1, 1846 – April 20, 1933) — known as W.H. Holmes — was an American explorer, anthropologist, archaeologist, artist, scientific illustrator, cartographer, mountain climber, geologist and museum curator and director.

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William Henry Scott (historian)

William Henry Scott (July 10, 1921 – October 4, 1993) was a historian of the Gran Cordillera Central and Prehispanic Philippines.

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William John McGee

William John McGee, LL.D. (April 17, 1853 – September 4, 1912) was an American inventor, geologist, anthropologist, and ethnologist, born in Farley, Iowa.

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William Montgomery McGovern

William Montgomery McGovern (September 28, 1897 – December 12, 1964) was an American adventurer, political scientist, Northwestern University professor, anthropologist and journalist.

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William Mulloy

William Thomas Mulloy, Jr. (1917–1978) was an American anthropologist.

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William Ramsay Smith

William Ramsay Smith (27 November 1859 – 28 September 1937) was a Scottish physician, naturalist, anthropologist and civil servant, active in Australia later in his career.

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William S. Laughlin

William S. Laughlin (August 26, 1919 – April 6, 2001) was an American anthropologist who carried on research and wrote about aboriginal peoples in the Aleutians and Greenland.

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William Shipley (linguist)

William F. Shipley (1921 – January 20, 2011) was a linguist and speaker of the Maidu language of Northern California.

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William T. Sanders

William Timothy Sanders (1926-2008) was an American anthropologist who specialized in the archaeology of Mesoamerica.

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William Ury

William Ury is an American author, academic, anthropologist, and negotiation expert.

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William W. Fitzhugh

William Wyvill Fitzhugh IV is an American archaeologist and anthropologist who directs the Smithsonian’s Arctic Studies Center and is a Senior Scientist at the National Museum of Natural History.

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Wolf-Dieter Storl

Wolf-Dieter Storl (born October 1, 1942) is a trained professional anthropologist, has concerned himself with shamanism and healing in traditional societies.

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Women in brewing

Women have been active in brewing since ancient times and though Western societies have for the last 150 years viewed brewing as a male dominated field, traditionally, it was an activity engaged in by women.

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Women in Ghana

The social roles of women in Ghana have varied throughout history.

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Women in the Democratic Republic of the Congo

Women in the Democratic Republic of the Congo have not attained a position of full equality with men, with their struggle continuing to this day.

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World Vision India

World Vision India is an interdependent office of World Vision International, a child-focused Christian evangelical, relief and development agency operating in India.

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Wu Dingliang

Wu Dingliang (January 1893 - 24 March 1969) (Chinese:吴定良;Woo Ting-Liang), pioneering Chinese anthropologist and educator. He can be rightfully considered the father of Chinese physical anthropology.

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Wyandot language

Wyandot (sometimes spelled Waⁿdat) is the Iroquoian language traditionally spoken by the people known variously as Wyandot or Wyandotte, descended from the Wendat (Huron).

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Yaakov Havakook

Yaakov Havakook (also Ya'acov and Habakuk; יעקב חבקוק) is an anthropologist and orientalist from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Be'er-Sheva.

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Yaliboylu Tatars

The Yalıboylu (sg.) are an ethnic group of Crimean Tatars who have traditionally lived along the southern shore (Yalı boyu) of the Crimean Peninsula, hence their name: Yalıboylu means "coastal dwellers" in the Crimean Tatar language.

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Yan Yunxiang

Yan Yunxiang is a Professor of Social Anthropology and Director of Center for Chinese Studies at UCLA.

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Yanoama

Yanoama: The Story of Helena Valero, a Girl Kidnapped by Amazonian Indians (original Italian title Yanoáma: dal racconto di una donna rapita dagli Indi) is a biography of Helena Valero, a white woman who was captured in the 1930s as a girl by the Yanomami, an indigenous tribe living in the Amazon rainforest on the border between Venezuela and Brazil.

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Yasmine Zaki Shahab

Professor Yasmine Zaki Shahab, S.S.,M.A., Ph.D. (Yāsmīn Zakī Šahāb;; born 1 December 1948) is an Indonesian anthropologist.

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Yolanda T. Moses

Yolanda Theresa Moses (born 1946) is an anthropologist and college administrator who served as the 10th president of City College of New York (1993–1999) and president of the American Association for Higher Education (2000–2003).

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Yolngu

The Yolngu or Yolŋu are an aggregation of indigenous Australian people inhabiting north-eastern Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory of Australia.

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Yoshiharu Sekino

is a Japanese surgeon, explorer, travel writer, photographer and anthropologist.

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Yoshitaka Ota

Yoshitaka Ota is a social anthropologist, specializing in indigenous fisheries, climate change risk, global ocean governance, sustainable fishing business solutions, and coastal management and research communication.

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Youssef Seddik (philosopher)

Youssef Seddik (يوسف الصديق) (born in 1943 in Tozeur) is a noted Tunisian philosopher and anthropologist specializing in Ancient Greece and the anthropology of the Qur'an.

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Yusuke Hashiba

was a Japanese archaeologist, historian and anthropologist.

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Yves Coppens

Yves Coppens (born 9 August 1934 in Vannes, Morbihan) is a French anthropologist.

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Zagorka Golubović

Zagorka Golubović (born in 1930) is a Serbian philosopher, anthropologist and sociologist.

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Zakir Naik

Zakir Abdul Karim Naik (born 18 October 1965) is an Indian Islamic preacher,Hope, Christopher.

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Zanea

Zanea or Zanya (Zanea, Zanya) is a neighborhood/village in the commune of Ciurea, Iaşi County, Romania.

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Zelia Nuttall

Zelia Maria Magdalena Nuttall (September 6, 1857 – April 12, 1933) was an American archaeologist and anthropologist.

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Zero Hunger Political Culture and Antipoverty Policy in Northeast Brazil

Zero Hunger: Political Culture and Antipoverty Policy in Northeast Brazil is a book by anthropologist Aaron Ansell published by the University of North Carolina Press in 2014.

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Zhoukoudian

Zhoukoudian or Choukoutien (周口店) is a cave system in suburban Fangshan District, Beijing.

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Zora Neale Hurston

Zora Neale Hurston (January 7, 1891 – January 28, 1960) was an influential author of African-American literature and anthropologist, who portrayed racial struggles in the early 20th century American South, and published research on Haitian voodoo.

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Zuni

The Zuni (A:shiwi; formerly spelled Zuñi) are Native American Pueblo peoples native to the Zuni River valley.

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Zuni mythology

Zuni mythology is the oral history, cosmology, and religion of the Zuni people.

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10th Mountain Division

The 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry) is a light infantry division in the United States Army based at Fort Drum, New York.

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1558 in science

The year 1558 in science and technology included a number of events, some of which are listed here.

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1752 in science

The year 1752 in science and technology involved some significant events.

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1780s in archaeology

The decade of the 1780s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1821 in France

Events from the year 1821 in France.

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1824 in France

Events from the year 1824 in France.

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1824 in science

The year 1824 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1838

No description.

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1838 in science

The year 1838 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1858 in science

The year 1858 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1859 in Ireland

Events from the year 1859 in Ireland.

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1870 in Ireland

Events from the year 1870 in Ireland.

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1880 in France

Events from the year 1880 in France.

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1880 in science

The year 1880 in science and technology included many events, some of which are listed here.

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1898 in France

Events from the year 1898 in France.

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1907 in France

Events from the year 1907 in France.

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1909 in Italy

See also: 1908 in Italy, other events of 1909, 1910 in Italy.

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1911 in France

Events from the year 1911 in France.

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1927 in Canada

Events from the year 1927 in Canada.

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1931 in science

The year 1931 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1978 in science

The year 1978 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

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1979

No description.

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1992 in philosophy

1992 in philosophy.

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1992 in science

The year 1992 in science and technology involved many significant events, some listed below.

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1996 in archaeology

The year 1996 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1996 in France

Events from the year 1996 in France.

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1998 in France

Events from the year 1998 in France.

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2 krooni

The 2 krooni banknote (2 EEK) is a denomination of the Estonian kroon, the former currency of Estonia.

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2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami

The 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake occurred at 00:58:53 UTC on 26 December with the epicentre off the west coast of Sumatra, Indonesia.

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2008 in France

Events from the year 2008 in France.

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2012 in science

The year 2012 involved many significant scientific events and discoveries, including the first orbital rendezvous by a commercial spacecraft, the discovery of a particle highly similar to the long-sought Higgs boson, and the near-eradication of guinea worm disease.

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2013 in the Philippines

2013 in the Philippines details events of note that happened in the Philippines in the year 2013.

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2065 Spicer

2065 Spicer, provisional designation, is a dark and eccentric asteroid from the middle region of the asteroid belt, approximately 17 kilometers in diameter.

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Redirects here:

Anthropologists.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthropologist

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