50 / FIELDS OF INSTRUCTION thropology, social and cultural anthropology, archeology, anthropological linguistics and physical anthropology. The Master of Arts with thesis provides students with training in all fields of anthropology. A minimum of 30 semester hours (including up to six hours of ANT 6971) is required, including the following: ANT 6917 and 6038; ANT 5467 or 5546; ANT 6186 or equivalent; and one of the following: ANT 4266, 5423, .5479, 5728, 6276, 6428, or 6434. As a prerequisite to the above graduate courses, students must have taken ANT 3511 or 4586, and one of the following: ANT 2141, 3142, 3144, or an equivalent; one graduate level anthropology course in linguistics plus its prerequisites or equivalents. A written comprehensive examination is offered each semester to M.A. candidates. Knowledge of a foreign language may be required by the student's committee. Satisfactory com- pletion of a thesis is required for this degree. Students specializing in archeology are required to complete nine credits of field school before receiving the M.A. Undergraduate credit hours earned in archeological field schools may be used to fulfill all or part of this requirement. The Master of Arts degree without thesis prepares students for positions in business and education, and in public and private service agencies where anthro- pological training in combination with others skills is of practical use. The general requirements for this degree option are ANT 6917, plus at least 40 graduate semester credits with a minimum 3.0 GPA of which four credits may be earned for a supervised internship. Students may obtain expertise in two major areas of the discipline or in one major discipline and one or two related disciplinary subfields and/or minor(s) outsidethe depart- ment. Knowledge of a foreign language may be required by the student's committee. A supervised internship and an interpretive report based on the internship are also required for this degree. The Master of Arts in Teaching is designed for students who intend to teach in secondary schools or junior col- leges. The required distribution of work leading to this degree includes ANT 6917 and at least 36 graduate semester hours with a minimum GPA of 3.0. These hours must include at least six credits in a departmental intern- ship in teaching and six credits in a minor. At least three courses (which may be used as the minor) are required in social foundations of education, psychological foun- dations of education, and curriculum dealing with the junior college. Knowledge of a foreign language may be required by the student's committee. A written com- prehensive examination is also required. Students enrolled in the M.A. nonthesis option or M.A.T. program who plan to apply to the Ph.D. program in anthropology must meet the course distribution requirements of the M.A. with thesis program and take the M.A. with thesis comprehensive examination. Ad- mission to the Ph.D. program generally requires an honors pass in the comprehensive examination and a 3.5 graduate grade record. The Doctoral Degree Program. Entry into the doctoral program requires.M.A. level competence in general an- thropology. Students must pass the M.A. comprehensive examination at the University of Florida or have attained a master's degree in anthropology or in a broadly equivalent behavioral science field, either at another university or at the University of Florida, and be evaluated by the departmental comprehensive examination committee. The University of Florida requires candidates for the Ph.D. to satisfy the minimum residence requirements by completing beyond the master's degree 30 semester hours in one calendar year or 36 semester hours in no more than four semesters within a period of two calen- dar years on the Gainesville campus. Courses completed at other universities may be applied toward this degree within the limitations outlined by the Graduate School and the stipulations of the student's supervisory commit- tee. Students may not register for dissertation research (ANT 7980) until the semester in which they take the qualifying examination. In consultation with the supervisory committee, each student selects three areas of specialization around which course work and readings are arranged. A minimum of 90 semester hours beyond the B.A. is required, and a minimum GPA of 3.0 must be maintained. In most cases, students must achieve competency in a language other than their native tongues. Candidates for the Ph.D. must pass a doctoral qualifying examination and satisfactorily complete a dissertation. Students who wish departmental certification in applied cultural anthropology must include in their minimum hours: ANT 4266, 5479, 5485, 6038, 6707, and 6388; two area courses; ANT 5615 or 6619; two of the following: ANT 5477, 5717, 6708, 6719; two of the following: ANT 6428, 6447, 6478, 6725; and CAP 3800, STA 6126 and 6127 or their equivalents. Students in this program are expected to take a minimum of six courses from anywhere in the university in their area of specializa- tion (e.g., medicine, agriculture, education, architecture) and must complete an internship in consultation with the supervisory committee. Study for the Ph.D. degree in anthropology at the University of Florida by qualified master's degree re- cipients at Florida Atlantic University and Florida State University is facilitated by a cooperative arrangement in which appropriate faculty members of these universities are members of the graduate faculty of the University of Florida. ANT 5175--Historical Archeology (3) Prereq: ANT2141 or3142 or3144, or consent of instructor. An examination of the methods and theoretical foundations of historical archeology as it relates to the disciplines of anthropology, history, historic preservation, and conservation. An introduction to pertinent aspects of material culture during the historic period. ANT 5181 -Conservation of Antiquities (3) Prereq: ANT 4185 or equivalent. Treatment of artifacts from the time of excavation until permanent storage including field preservation, precaution processing, storage, and preparation for inclusion in exhibits. Course will include actual experience in treatment of fragile artifacts. ANT 5195-Zooarcheology (3) Prereq: consent of instructor. Human use of animal resources, with emphasis on prehistoric hunting and fishing practices. Origins of animal domestication. ANT 5196-Cultural Resource Management (3) Prereq: ANT 4185 or equivalent. Examines the federal, state, and local statutes that involve management of cultural resources. Investigates methods and techniques developed to provide surveys and mitigation of impact on archeological sites. ANT 5266-Economic Anthropology (3) Anthropological perspectives on economic philosophies and their behavioral bases. Studies of production, distribution, and consumption and money, savings, credit, peasant markets and development in cross-cultural context from perspectives of cultural ecology, Marxism, formalism and substantivism. ANT 5267-Anthropology and Agriculture (3) An inter- disciplinary examination of world food and population trends. Focuses on small farmers and peasants and examines their farming systems and development efforts aimed at them. ANT 5303-Women and Development (3) Influence of develop- ment on women in rural and urban areas. Women's participation in the new opportunities of modernization. ANT 5326-Peoples of Mexico and Central America (3) The settlement and early cultures of the area with an emphasis on the rise of the major culture centers. The impact of European civilization on surviving Indians.