ANTHROPOLOGY/61 precaution processing storage, and preparation for inclusion in exhibits. 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 5256-Rural Peoples in the Modern World (3) Historical background and comparative contemporary study of peasant and other rural societies. Unique characteristics, institutions, and problems of rural life stressing agriculture and rural-urban rela- tionships in cross-cultural perspective. Not open to students who have taken ANT 4255. ANT 5266-Economic Anthropology (3) Anthropological per- spectives on economic philosophies and their behavioral bases. Studies of production, distribution, and consumption; money, savings, credit, peasant markets; and development in cross- cultural context from perspectives of cultural ecology, Marxism, formalism, and substantivism. ANT 5267-Anthropology and Development (3) An examination of theories and development and their relevance to the Third World, particularly Africa or Latin America. Afterthis microanaly- sis, microlevel development will be examined with special reference to rural areas. 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 5317-The North American Indian (3) The peopling of North America. The culture areas of North America. Unique characteristics, institutions, and problems. Not open to students who have taken ANT 4312. 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 civili- zation on surviving Indians. ANT 5327-Maya and Aztec Civilizations (3) Civilizations in Mesoamerica from the beginnings of agriculture to the time ofthe coming of Europeans. Maya and Aztec civilizations as well as the Olmec, Zapotec and Teotihuacan cultures. Not open to students who have taken ANT 3325. ANT 5336-The Peoples of Brazil (3) Ethnology of Brazil. Histori- cal, geographic, and socioeconomic materials and representa- tive monographs from the various regions of Brazil as well as the contribution of the Indian, Portuguese, and African to modern Brazilian culture. ANT 5337-Peoples of the Andes (3) The area-cotradition. The Spanish Conquest and shaping and persistence of colonial cul- ture. Twentieth-century communities-their social land tenure, religious, and value systems. Modernization, cultural pluralism, and problems of integration. ANT 5338-The Tribal Peoples of Lowland South America (3) Survey of marginal and tropical forest hunters and gatherers and horticulturalists of the Amazon Basin, Central Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, and other areas of South America. Social organiza- tion, subsistence activities, ecological adaptations, and other aspects of tribal life. ANT 5339-The Inca and Their Ancestors (3) Evolution of the Inca empire traced archeologically through earlier Andean states and societies to the beginning of native civilization. Not open to students who have taken ANT 3164. ANT 5346-Caribbean Cultural Patterns (3) Investigation into cultural contact in the Caribbean and results of that contact in terms of peoples and sociocultural units produced and processes of culture change involved. ANT 5353-Peoples of Africa (3) Survey of the culture, history, and ethnographic background of the peoples of Africa. A basis for appreciation of current problems of acculturation, nationalism, and cultural survival and change among African peoples. ANT 5354-The Anthropology of Modern Africa (3) Continuity and change in contemporary African societies, with special reference to cultural and ethnic factors in modern nations. ANT 5395-Visual Anthropology (3) Prereq: basic knowledge of photographyorpermission of instructor. Photography and film as tools and products of social science. Ways of describing, analyz- ing, and presenting behavior and cultural ideas through visual means, student projects, and laboratory work with visual anthro- pology. Not open to students who have taken ANT 3390. ANT 5429-Kinship and Social Organization (3) Prereq: ANT 2402 or 2410. Property concepts, forms, and complexes. Tribal patterns of government and social control. Not open to students who have taken ANT 4426. ANT 5465-Culture and Aging (3) Prereq: two of following:ANT 2410, SOC 2000 or introductory psychology course. Cross- cultural perspectives of adult development and aging in tradi- tional and industrial society. Comparative assessment of cultur- ally mediated, life-cycle transformations into old age and health related and human service policy issues. ANT 5467-Culture and Nutrition (3) Prereq: HUN 3221. The theory, methodology, and substantive material of nutritional anthropology., Emphasis on cross-cultural bio-behavioral pat- terns. ANT 5477-Human Organization and Change (3) Theory and practice in applied anthropology. A case study approach to innovation and change in social institutions and cultural prac- tices, with emphasis upon problems of planning and administra- tion. ANT 5479-Theories of Cultural Change (3) Background, con- ditions, and nature of cultural change and.stability; cultural change theories and processes such as diffusion, acculturation, modernization, and revitalization. ANT 5485-Research Design in Anthropology (3) Examination of empirical and logical basis of anthropological inquiry;analy- sis of theory construction, research design, problems of data col- lection, processing, and evaluation. ANT 5486-Quantitative Methods for Anthropology (3) Prereq: ANT 5485 or consent of instructor. Introductory survey of rele- vant quantitative procedures for collecting, analyzing, and interpreting anthropological data. ANT 5527-Human Osteology and Osteometry (3) Prereq:ANT 3511 and consent of instructor. Human skeletal identification for the physical anthropologist and archeologist. Techniques for. estimating age at death, race, and sex from human skeletal remains. Measurement of human skeleton for comparative pur- poses. Not open to students who have taken ANT 4525. ANT 5546-Seminar: Human Biology and Behavior (3) Prereq: consent of instructor. Social behavior among animals from the ethological-biological viewpoint; the evolution of animal socie- ties; the relevance of the ethological approach for the study of human development. ANT 5615-Language and Culture (3) Principles and problems of anthropological linguistics. The cross-cultural and compara- tive study of language. Primarily concerned with the study of non-Indo-European linguistic problems. ANT 5624-Introduction to Anthropological Linguistic Field Methods (6) Field procedures, collections, and processing of language data. ANT 5625-Anthropological Linguistics (3) Prereq: ANT 2610. Descriptive linguistics. Language structure and process espe- cially related to describing, understanding, and analyzing non- Western languages. Not open to students who have taken ANT 4620. ANT 5675-Laboratory Work in Anthropological Linguistics (1- 3; max: 10) ANT 5728-Anthropology and Education (3) Comparative study of teaching and learning processes in societies of differing complexity and cultural variability. Empirical data examined from an anthropological perspective and in the context of theo- ries about culture and perception, world view, rites of passage, culture and personality, and change. ANT 6038-Seminar in Anthropological History and Theory (3) Theoretical principles and background of anthropology and its subfields. ANT 6128-Lithic Technology (3) Flintworking techniques and uses of stone implements for two million years. Emphasis on stoneworking technology in prehistoric Florida. ANT 6129-Ceramic Analysis (3) Prereq: permission of instruc- tor. Properties and methods of analysis of clays and pottery. Ethnographic pottery making and problems of archeological ceramics. Laboratory exercises. ANT 6186-Seminar in Archeology (3; max: 10) Selected topic. ANT 6276-Principles of Political Anthropology (3) Problems of identifying political behavior. Natural leadership in tribal socie- ties. Acephalous societies and republican structures. Kingship and early despotic states. Theories of bureaucracy. ANT 6286-Seminar in Contemporary Theory (3; max: 10) Areas treated are North America, Central America, South Ameri- can, Africa, Oceania. ANT 6356-Peoples and Culture in Southern Africa (3) Prehis- toric times through first contacts by explorers to settlers; the contact situation between European, Khoisan, and Bantu-speak- ing; empirical data dealing with present political, economic, social, and religious conditions. ANT 6387-Seminar on the Anthropology of Latin America (3; max: 10) Prereq: reading knowledge of Spanish or Portuguese