GED 210 Unit 1 Examination Answers
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- Which of the following would not be considered a
specialization within the discipline of physical anthropology?
- human anatomy
- paleopathology
- primatology
- phonology
- The material products of former societies are known as:
- artifacts
- fossils
- legacies
- antiquaries
- Anthropologist, Spencer Wells, is the director of the
geographic project which is:
- making significant contributions to the philosophy of
archaeology.
- conducting ethnographic fieldwork among the Vanomamö
Indians of Venezuela
- helping to illuminate the migrations of humans
throughout the world
- using computer technology to do cross-cultural
comparisons.
- Kelley Hays-Gilpin, a southwestern U.S. Archaeologist,
studied:
- Brazil
- gender approaches to the archaeological record
- tropical rainforests.
- East Africa
- The people known as classical archaeologists conduct
research on:
- ancient civilizations of Greece and Rome.
- the evolution of prehistoric stone tools.
- societies of the more recent past.
- ancestors of contemporary Native Americans.
- Research on artifacts found in the remains of slave
quarters at an 18th century tobacco plantation in Virginia would be an
example of:
- historical archaeology.
- forensic anthropology.
- applied anthropology.
- classical archaeology.
- One of the most important tool types invented by homo
erectus was the:
- Mousterian hammerstone.
- Clovis projectile point.
- Neolithic grinding stone.
- Acheulian hand axe.
- The stone tool industry associated with Neanderthal
populations was called the:
- Oldowan complex.
- Mousterian tradition.
- Acheulian technology.
- Chopper tool system.
- Composite tool tradition.
- The climate characteristic of environments occupied by
Neanderthals was:
- hot
- warm
- temperate
- cool
- Fossil and archaeological evidence suggests that the
first hominids to practice intentional burial of their dead were:
- modern upper Paleolithic homo sapiens.
- Homo erectus.
- Neanderthals
- Homo habilis.
- The remains of four individuals, one of whom appears to
have been surrounded by a bed of flowers, represent the first evidence of
intentional burial. They were found at an archaeological site in:
- England
- Mexico
- Chin
- Iraq
- Evidence suggesting that there were religious beliefs
among Neanderthals includes:
- cave paintings of supernatural beings.
- small chambers in the far recesses of caves that
contained “religious objects,” primarily clay figures of gods and
goddesses.
- stone-lined rectangular pits containing dozens of cave
bear skulls.
- burial sites.
- The earliest traces of material culture are:
- fossil teeth of the species australopithecus.
- words like “ma” to indicate mother.
- simple stone tools, like choppers and scrapers.
- forms of social organization among different primates.
- Which of the following would not be considered a form
of material culture?
- igloos
- cufflinks
- lullabies
- forks
- The term “ideology” refers to:
- signs and symbols used to communicate particular ideas.
- beliefs and values supporting the interests of a group.
- specific expressions of material culture.
- a faulty or misguided world view.
- One example of an ideology would be:
- Capitalism
- Egyptian hieroglyphs.
- Navajo sand paintings.
- the Big Bang theory.
- __________ may occur when one dominant group in a
complex society imposes its cultural beliefs on subordinate ethnic groups.
For example, the dominant ethnic group in the U.S. during the eighteenth
and nineteenth centuries (the white, Anglo-Saxon Protestants) was able to
impose its language, cultural beliefs, and practices on other minority
groups in U.S. society.
- Cultural hegemony
- Cultural chaos
- Multiculturalism
- Ethnic superiority
- Norms are:
- prohibitions against a particular kind of behavior.
- values that are accepted by every human society.
- a given society’s rules for right and wrong behavior.
- individuals who look like the majority of people.
- In her classic work Patterns of Culture (1934), Ruth
Benedict used the terms “apollonian” and “dionysian” to describe:
- cultural “personalities” of pueblo and plains Indians.
- religious cults of northern and southern Greece.
- rituals of warfare and celebration in the South Pacifi
- contrasting models of cultural diffusion.
- Margaret Mead got most of her information on the
behavior of adolescents in Samoa from:
- accounts of travelers and missionaries.
- newspaper accounts and government reports.
- watching ethnographic films.
- interviewing young women.
- The central object of Mead’s study, Coming of Age in
Samoa (1928), was to determine whether or not:
- kinship patterns in Samoa could be attributed to
diffusion from Chin
- the events of World War II had an effect on traditional
family structure in Samo
- the transition from adolescence into adulthood was
stressful in all societies.
- maturation rates of Samoan teenagers were directly
related to race and heredity.
- After spending nine months in Samoa and working with
individuals in three different villages, Margaret Mead concluded that:
- Samoan society differed little from that of the U.S. in
the 1920s.
- many key elements of Samoan culture had diffused from
Thailan
- Franz Boas’ theories of cultural relativism had serious
flaws.
- becoming an adult was less stressful in Samoa than in
the U.S.
- One of the principal criticisms of the
culture-and-personality school is that:
- there is no evidence for a biological link between
culture and personality.
- it tends to assume greater uniformity in personality
than actually exists in society.
- the investigation of personality should be done by
psychologists, not anthropologists.
- individual behavior is more important than the behavior
of a whole society.
- Functionalist anthropologists have suggested that
incest taboos originated in order to:
- encourage alliances and cooperation between descent
groups.
- avoid the serious consequences of genetic
interbreeding.
- strengthen the role of patrilineal descent groups.
- regulate and limit sexual behavior within small communities.
- Research on the “childhood familiarity hypothesis”
supports the notion that:
- unrelated children raised together make good marriage
partners.
- children who have grown up in the same household share
sexual attractions.
- children living in close association with one another
develop mutual sexual aversion.
- unrelated adolescents who live together are likely to
become erotically involve
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