10 research outputs found

    From Radcliffe-Brown to sociobiology: Some aspects of the rise of primatology within physical anthropology

    Full text link
    The formation of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists some 50 years ago marked the official recognition of physical anthropology as a legitimate subfield of anthropology. Since then, with the growth of individual and institutional participation in the Association, and with the development of new research paradigms, a number of subspecializations have come to be accepted within the field. Perhaps none of these specializations, however, has grown as rapidly, or spectacularly, as has the subfield of primatology. This article details some of the rise of primatology as an accepted subdiscipline of physical anthropology and discusses the theoretical orientations which guided the first anthropological forays into the study of nonhuman primates.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/37609/1/1330560411_ftp.pd

    Serials in microform

    No full text
    Editions antérieures à 1987 étaient publiées par: University Microfilms

    A catalog of files and microfilms of the German Foreign Ministry archives, 1920-1945 /

    No full text
    "Continues and completes the work of the Catalogue of German Foreign Ministry files and microfilms, 1867-1920, which was published by the American Historical Association in 1959.""Published as a joint project of the United States Department of State and the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace."Mode of access: Internet

    Inorganic and geological materials

    No full text
    corecore