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Showing papers on "Biological anthropology published in 1970"




Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The functional biology of people of even out-of-the-way communities will be compared with each other and can yield general statements concerning human response to types of ecological situation including such sociocultural conditions as those of hunting-gathering tribes and urban slums.
Abstract: Physical anthropology consists of two interdependent types of study: (1) the biological history of man and (2) general biological processes in man (such as mechanisms of evolution and growth). Popular interest may focus on the former, the fascinating story of the origin of man and of specific people, but the latter affords physical anthropology potential practical value in respect to medicine, dentistry, public health, and population policy. The study of general processes is the study of human beings in particular situations, not for what we can learn about these particular populations but for the sake of generalization about mankind anywhere in comparable situations. This is, of course, the purpose of experimental science in general, but in anthropology the method is usually comparative. Long ago the study of the growth of the two sexes and of children in different countries was started on a comparative basis as was the study of the so-called secular change in adult stature. By 1911 Franz Boas had compared the changes in stature and head form of children of several different immigrant groups in the United States. There have since been comparative studies of the amount and distribution of body fat (but not yet adequate comparative measurements of the relation of tissue components to diet and to diseases). Demographic patterns, inbreeding, outbreeding, and their effects are other general problems. The Human Adaptability Project of the International Biological Program promises studies of human response to heat, cold, altitude, and other conditions on a wide international basis. If supported, these could turn physical anthropology's search in a useful direction. The functional biology of people of even out-of-the-way communities will be compared with each other. These studies can yield general statements concerning human response to types of ecological situation including such sociocultural conditions as those of hunting-gathering tribes and urban slums.

13 citations




Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: W. W. Howells, Ph.D as discussed by the authors was the first American anthropologist to receive the Viking Fund Medal for Physical Anthropology, which was presented by the American Anthropological Association.
Abstract: W. W. Howells, Ph.D., Cambridge, Massachusetts, Professor of Anthropology and Curator of Somatology, Peabody Museum, Harvard University. He was formerly Professor of Anthropology and of Integrated Liberal Studies, University of Wisconsin. In 1951, he was president of the American Anthropological Association, and from 1949 to 1954, he was editor of the American Journal of Physical Anthropology. In 1955, he received the Viking Fund Medal for Physical Anthropology, and in 1967, he

4 citations