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The physical anthropology of the Seminole Indians of Oklahoma

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The article was published on 1935-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 5 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Biological anthropology.

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The Seminole Indians of Oklahoma: Morphology and serology

TL;DR: By both serology and morphology the Oklahoma group are most similar to Florida Seminoles, slightly less similar to other Indian groups, and still less to White and Negro populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolutionary Changes in Body Size and Head Form in American Indians

TL;DR: The most direct evidence for evolutionary changes in American Indians since they peopled the New World lies in their archeologically documented skeletal remains as discussed by the authors, and the best cases for such evolutionary changes are in those New World areas with good indications of physical and cultural continuities spanning a number of millennia, such as Eastern United States, the Pueblo area and Sacramento Valley regions of the West, the Valley of Mexico and Highland Guatemala, and portions of western South America.
Journal ArticleDOI

In the shadow of Franz Boas: the Italian Committee for the Study of Population Problems and the physical assimilation of immigrants (1938–1955)

TL;DR: The Italian Committee for the Study of Population Problems (C.I.S.P) as discussed by the authors organized a number of field expeditions in order to empirically verify the influence of the environment on the bodily changes of immigrants (Albanian and Ligurian "colonies" in Italy, and Italians in the U.S.).
Journal ArticleDOI

Anthropological characteristics in some indigenous groups in modern Indonesia

TL;DR: A complex morphological description based on a wide range of somatic features (30 characteristics) is presented for two modern indigenous ethnic groups of Indonesia: Minahasans (N = 93) and Sangirese (n = 76) as mentioned in this paper.