Study of prehistory and history, based on the examination of physical remains. Principal activities include preliminary field (or site) surveys, excavation (where necessary), and the classification, dating, and interpretation of finds.
A system of rules specifying a language. The term has often been used synonymously with ‘syntax’, the principles governing the construction of sentences from words.
From Bloomsbury Guide to Human Thought Economic anthropology emerged as a recognizable field in the 1950s. Its predominant aim was to integrate conventional economic issues with anthropological perspectives, to place these issues in their wider contexts of social relations, concepts and values.
From Encyclopedia of Medical Anthropology: Health and Illness in the World's Cultures
Forensic anthropology represents the application of our knowledge and techniques of physical anthropology to medico-legal problems.
From Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology ‘Medical anthropology’ is generally understood to refer to the study of social and cultural dimensions of health, ill health and medicine.
From World of Sociology, Gale A custom is a social practice, a way of doing things or a way of thinking about something in a particular society or culture.
In its most restricted form [ethnicity] refers to a group’s shared biological origins; in its broader definition it more closely resembles the concept of nationality.
At a socio-political level, a society is an extended group of individuals residing within a bounded geographic area, subject to common political authority and law, has mutual institutions, and shares a distinctive culture. At a broader level, a society is any social grouping that comes together, or is lumped together, on the basis of some shared characteristic or interest.
From Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology Biological anthropology is the study of the biology of human and other primate species from an evolutionary and comparative perspective. It is concerned with the nature of the evolutionary process and with modes of adaptation to the environment.
Slow gradual process of change from one form to another, as in the evolution of the universe from its formation to its present state, or in the evolution of life on Earth.
The adjustment of living matter to environmental conditions and to other living things either in an organism's lifetime (physiological adaptation) or in a population over many many generations (evolutionary adaptation).
From Bloomsbury Guide to Human Thought Primatology is the study of the biology of the primates, the order of mammals which includes humans and our close relatives the monkeys and apes.