ANTH3480-01.Cultural Ecology.F13.Tennessen,David

Goal: To discuss and analyze how anthropologists have developed and applied the ecosystem concept to questions about how modern and ancient peoples have interacted with their environment. To understand how anthropologists have developed systems models of cultures as finely attuned adaptive systems....

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Main Author: Tennessen, David
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@Hamline 2013
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Online Access:https://digitalcommons.hamline.edu/syllabi/1577
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spelling fthamlineuniv:oai:digitalcommons.hamline.edu:syllabi-2576 2023-05-15T14:58:57+02:00 ANTH3480-01.Cultural Ecology.F13.Tennessen,David Tennessen, David 2013-01-01T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.hamline.edu/syllabi/1577 unknown DigitalCommons@Hamline https://digitalcommons.hamline.edu/syllabi/1577 Historic Syllabi -- full text access limited to internal Hamline administrative staff only text 2013 fthamlineuniv 2022-01-06T16:45:22Z Goal: To discuss and analyze how anthropologists have developed and applied the ecosystem concept to questions about how modern and ancient peoples have interacted with their environment. To understand how anthropologists have developed systems models of cultures as finely attuned adaptive systems. To learn how to develop explanatory models that relate cultural behavior to ecological considerations. Content: The comparative development of human cultural adaptive strategies to the major ecosystems of this planet: arctic, arid zone, grasslands (temperate and tropical), high altitude systems, and forests (boreal, temperate, and tropical). The methodologies and techniques employed in cultural ecological studies. Taught: Alternate years. Prerequisite: ANTH 1160. Text Arctic Hamline University: DigitalCommons@Hamline Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Hamline University: DigitalCommons@Hamline
op_collection_id fthamlineuniv
language unknown
description Goal: To discuss and analyze how anthropologists have developed and applied the ecosystem concept to questions about how modern and ancient peoples have interacted with their environment. To understand how anthropologists have developed systems models of cultures as finely attuned adaptive systems. To learn how to develop explanatory models that relate cultural behavior to ecological considerations. Content: The comparative development of human cultural adaptive strategies to the major ecosystems of this planet: arctic, arid zone, grasslands (temperate and tropical), high altitude systems, and forests (boreal, temperate, and tropical). The methodologies and techniques employed in cultural ecological studies. Taught: Alternate years. Prerequisite: ANTH 1160.
format Text
author Tennessen, David
spellingShingle Tennessen, David
ANTH3480-01.Cultural Ecology.F13.Tennessen,David
author_facet Tennessen, David
author_sort Tennessen, David
title ANTH3480-01.Cultural Ecology.F13.Tennessen,David
title_short ANTH3480-01.Cultural Ecology.F13.Tennessen,David
title_full ANTH3480-01.Cultural Ecology.F13.Tennessen,David
title_fullStr ANTH3480-01.Cultural Ecology.F13.Tennessen,David
title_full_unstemmed ANTH3480-01.Cultural Ecology.F13.Tennessen,David
title_sort anth3480-01.cultural ecology.f13.tennessen,david
publisher DigitalCommons@Hamline
publishDate 2013
url https://digitalcommons.hamline.edu/syllabi/1577
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source Historic Syllabi -- full text access limited to internal Hamline administrative staff only
op_relation https://digitalcommons.hamline.edu/syllabi/1577
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