scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal Article

Franz Boas and Native American biological variability.

Richard L. Jantz
- 01 Jun 1995 - 
- Vol. 67, Iss: 3, pp 345-353
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The rediscovery of his anthropometric data documents the tremendous investment in time, money, and effort Boas devoted to the topic and provides the opportunity to rediscover his insights into a subject that is of continuing interest.
Abstract
The contributions to physical anthropology with which Franz Boas is usually credited are in the areas of growth, plasticity of head and body form, and biometric genetics. Such a listing of Boas's contributions overlooks the tremendous amount of research he did with biological variability of Native American populations. The rediscovery of his anthropometric data documents the tremendous investment in time, money, and effort Boas devoted to the topic and provides the opportunity to rediscover his insights into a subject that is of continuing interest. The design of his massive anthropometric survey of native North Americans reveals a concern for population analyses and a rejection of the typological framework of the time. If Boas's ideas had been adopted at the turn of the century, the development of physical anthropology in America might have been much different.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Heredity, environment, and cranial form: A reanalysis of Boas's immigrant data

TL;DR: In this paper, a reanalysis of the cranial form of Euro-Pean immigrants to the United States is presented, and the authors conclude that Boas got it right.
Journal ArticleDOI

Forced Coexistence and Economic Development: Evidence From Native American Reservations

TL;DR: The authors found that forced integration of historically autonomous sub-tribal bands in the 19th century led to large differences in economic development across Native American reservations today, which can be in part explained by the forced integration.
Book ChapterDOI

Bioarchaeological Ethics: A Historical Perspective on the Value of Human Remains

TL;DR: The rapidity of technological and cultural change in current times is forcing us to confront a myriad of moral dilemmas over issues as wide ranging as the ethics of cloning humans, the ownership of our genetic material, and the rights of animals relative to those of humans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tallest in the World: Native Americans of the Great Plains in the Nineteenth Century

TL;DR: This paper used anthropometric data originally collected by Franz Boas to show that the equestrian Plains nomads were the tallest in the world during the mid-nineteenth century, and link this extraordinary achievement to a rich and varied diet, modest disease loads other than epidemics, a remarkable facility at reorganization following demographic disasters, and egalitarian principles of operation.
Book

Political Order and Inequality: Their Foundations and their Consequences for Human Welfare

TL;DR: The fundamental question of political theory, one that precedes all other questions about the nature of political life, is why there is a state at all as mentioned in this paper, and how it comes into place and when it does, what are the consequences for the political status and economic welfare of its citizens.
References
More filters
Journal Article

Detection of differential gene flow from patterns of quantitative variation.

TL;DR: The Harpending-Ward model is extended to quantitative traits using an equal and additive effects model of inheritance and new methods for estimation of the genetic relationship matrix (R) from quantitative traits are developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow

Journal Article

Variation among North Amerindians: analysis of Boas's anthropometric data.

TL;DR: These efforts to develop a computerized database from Boas's data are described and the first systematic analysis of these data are presented, finding that anthropometric variation is strongly patterned along geographic lines.
Related Papers (5)