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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
441

Ribbonwork of the Great Lakes Indians : the material of acculturation /

Pannabecker, Rachel K. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
442

Anglo-Indian relations in the northern theatre of the French and Indian War, 1748-1761 /

Tootle, James R. January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
443

The emergence of a racial prejudice towards the Indians in seventeenth century New England : some notes on an explanation /

Lloyd, Peter January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
444

The Iroquois restoration : a study of Iroquois power, politics, and relations with Indians and whites, 1700-1744 /

Aquila, Richard January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
445

A new image for the American Indian : an ethnohistorical approach to curriculum development in the social studies /

Carroll, George Haworth January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
446

FIELD EXPERIMENTATION: ONE APPROACH TO CONTEMPORARY ISSUES CONCERNING THE DETERRENCE DOCTRINE

Barrow, Charles Raymond January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
447

Aboriginal burial practices in the plateau region of North America

Sprague, Roderick, 1933- January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
448

Lithic analysis and cultural inference: a Paleo-Indian case

Wilmsen, Edwin N. January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
449

BIOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS AMONG PREHISTORIC WESTERN PUEBLO INDIAN GROUPS BASED ON METRIC AND DISCRETE TRAITS OF THE SKELETON (ARIZONA).

SHIPMAN, JEFFREY HYMAN. January 1982 (has links)
Numerous postcranial discrete characters and cranial and postcranial metric traits are compared among skeletal samples derived from four east-central Arizona Western Pueblo sites that were inhabited from the 12th through the 14th centuries A.D.: Grasshopper, Kinishba, Point of Pines, and Turkey Creek. Pearson's Lambda Criterion and discriminant analysis are used to reveal patterns of morphological variation among the four groups from which their biological relationships could be inferred. It is concluded that both discrete and metric skeletal traits should be used for biologically differentiating human skeletal series. After all traits were checked for intraobserver error, preliminary data analyses were conducted to elicit appropriate traits for differentiating the groups. Based on these analyses, it is notable that (1) the discrete traits of the postcranium used in this study are relatively independent of age, sex, robusticity, and each other, (2) craniofacial metric traits are influenced little by either occipital or lambdoidal deformation, (3) several postcranial metric traits significantly differ between younger and older adults, though this is not so for cranial metric traits, and (4) correlations among postcranial metric traits are moderate to strong; among cranial metric traits they are rather weak, and very weak among cranial and postcranial metric traits. For both metric and discrete traits, biological distance results obtained from analyses of axial and appendicular skeletal data are discordant. For the axial skeleton, excluding the mandible, the four Western Pueblo groups are relatively biologically homogeneous. For the appendicular skeleton the opposite is the case. Distance results provided by metric and discrete traits, respectively, of the axial skeleton are much more consistent than are those yielded by metric and discrete traits, respectively, of the appendicular skeleton. It is suggested that the axial skeleton, omitting the mandible, is probably less plastic than is the appendicular skeleton and is the appropriate unit of analysis in studies of biological differentiation of skeletal samples.
450

Discourse practice, knowledge, and interaction in Tohono O'odham health and illness.

Dufort, Molly Elizabeth. January 1991 (has links)
This study examines problems involved in the management of chronic illness and disability in cross-cultural contexts. It specifically looks at conflicts between different belief systems and different discourse practices in cross-cultural communication between Tohono O'odham (Pagago) families of children with disabilities and non-Indian service providers. The discourse practices through which cultural knowledge is represented in face-to-face interaction, and the range of beliefs and practices which constitute cultural knowledge, are investigated sign ethnographic methods which emphasize a discourse-centered study of meaning and interaction. Utilizing information from participant observation, open-ended interviews, and naturally-occurring speech from a variety of interactional settings, the research focuses on both inter- and intra-cultural variation in knowledge and discourse. The major findings are: (1) a system of beliefs and practices about cause, prevention and treatment of serious illness exists in O'odham communities which differs significantly from the biomedical system within which medical and educational services to children with disabilities is provided; (2) intracultural variation exists in O'odham communities between language and knowledge held by specialists and lay people; and (3) the major genres used by O'odham people to provide information differ significantly from the formats routinely used by service providers to elicit information.

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