156 UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
characteristics of preliterate, peasant, and civilized societies in relation to the ' 13
geography of the land in which they live. Selected societies representing each
of these types will be studied in detail. The variations in food, housing, clothing,
tools, and transportation will be related, on the one hand, to the habitat and,
on the other hand, to occupations and economic organizations, form of govern-
ment and family system, religion and art. Same as Geography 3a and 13
Sociology 3a.
10a, b FIELD WORK IN ANTHROPOLOGY. (3 ea.) II, S Staff .
This course is designed to give the student specialized training in basic excava-
tion methods, reconnaissance, field photography, recovery of skeletal material, 14(
and general ethnographic techniques. Prerequisite: Anthropology 1 and 2.
12 KENTUCKY ARCHEOLOGY. (2) II, S Woodbury
A rapid survey of the more important prehistoric cultures found in North
America and the sequence of cultures found in Kentucky to the time of the H]
white settlers. Lectures, 2 hours.
G0 PRIMITIVE INVENTIONS. (3) I Essene
Ancient and modern inventions of primitive peoples. Technology will be em-
phasized. Students will manufacture objects of stone, wood, pottery, and
fabrics. Lecture and demonstrations, 3 hours. Prerequisite: Anthropology 2.
103a-cl INDEPENDENT WORK IN ANTHROPOLOGY. (3 ea.) I, II Staff 150
107 ETHNOLOGY OF THE NEW WORLD. (3) II Essene
Cultures and physical types of the American Indians during and after White 201
settlement. (Northwestern North America is not included). Representative
Indian tribes from each major culture area will be studied.
108 DEVELOPMENT OF CULTURE. (3) II Staff
A study of the origin of human culture and of the history of human cultural
behavior. The course will contain a study of the origin and development of
primitive behavior along cultural. lines. It will not be presented as a series of
studies of static culture but rather to show the flow of culture from basic
human beginnings to present day civilization.
11021, b FIELD METHODS IN ANTHROPOLOGY. (3 ea.) S Staff
An advanced course in excavating and reporting of archeological sites, and in
cataloging and preparing specimens for analysis in the museum. Prerequisite:
Anthropology 1, 2, 10, 107 and 115. WOZ
Hllt
115 NORTH AMERICAN ARCHEOLOGY. (3) I Woodbury
A study of the origin and growth of prehistoric American Indian cultures north
of Mexico as revealed by archeological data. Lectures and selected readings L 1
for paper preparations, 3 hours. H
\\'Ol
116 BEGINNINGS OF CIVILIZATION. (3) I Snow EXE
Prehistory of the Indus Valley, Southern Turkestan, Iran, Asia Minor, and
Egypt. In this area civilization was born. Here is found the earliest evidences
of agriculture, pastoralism, pottery, smelting, writing, law codes, irrigation,
astronomy, kingship, building of stone, priesthood, temples, coined money, and km
many other important inventions. The growth and spread of each major cul’tl1Y€· for
center will be considered. Prerequisite: One course in Anthropology.
117 DIFFUSION OF CIVILIZATION. (3) II Essene Wm
Prehistoryof the Far East, Europe, and Negro Africa and ethnology of some of rect
the primitive tribes still surviving in these areas. Near Eastern cultural influ-
ences combinecl with local development produced different results in these
three areas, but a similar pattern of change may be traced. Prerequisite:
Anthropology 116 or an equivalent course on the near East.
125 ADVANCED PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY. (4) II Snow
A detailed course treating man as a biological organism. Lectures on measuring
techniques, the primates, fossil man, races, racial admixture, constitutional
anthropology, growth, dentition, and osteopathology. Lecture, 3 hours. Lab-
oratory, 2 hours. Prerequisite: Anthropology 1 or three hours in any 0th€|" m
biological science.