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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to archaeology which looks at kinds of prehistoric data and the methods used to obtain and interpret it. Attention will center upon the lives of hunters, food producers, and early community settlements.
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3.00 Credits
Selected topics or problems in the general area of anthropology and related group cultural processes; offered periodically as the special interests of faculty and students permit.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines how humans have adapted to their unique environments through cultural alterations and physical changes to the body by looking at pre-1492 Native American peoples. The development of human cultures are examined beginning with the origins of the First Americans and tracing their migrations to the various environments of North, Central, and South America for a more in-depth look at the range of variability among living peoples. The growth and development of human cultures are examined from the movement of pre-1492 Native Americans as bands and progressing through tribes to more advanced urban societies.
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3.00 Credits
The scientific and historical development of Astronomy, concentrating on the study of the Solar System. No prerequisites. Topics include our place in the Universe, the history of Astronomy, the Earth-Sun-Moon system, Solar System formation, and a scientific description of planets, asteroids and comets.
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3.00 Credits
The scientific and historical development of Astronomy, concentrating on the study of stars and galaxies. No prerequisites. Topics include our place in the Universe, the history of Astronomy, the Earth-Sun-Moon system, stellar properties, classification of galaxies, evolution of normal and large stars, neutron stars and black holes, cosmology
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1.00 Credits
Experiments used by astronomers and astrophysicists to develop theories about our Universe. No prerequisites. Topics include telescopes, spectroscopy, Kepler's Laws, planetary cratering, magnetism and material properties.
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1.00 Credits
Experiments used by astronomers and astrophysicists to develop theories about our Universe. No prerequisites. Topics include telescopes, spectroscopy, Kepler's Laws, stellar classification, globular clusters and Hubble's Law.
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3.00 Credits
A descriptive introduction to the universe, our sun and its solar system, the Earth and the other planets, asteroids, and comets. Practical observational astronomy. Planetary discoveries made by space craft. Life in the universe.
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3.00 Credits
The universe outside the solar system, the sun as a typical star, the Milky Way and other galaxies, pulsars, quasars, and black holes are studied.
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3.00 Credits
The structures, atmospheres, dynamics, and evolutions of stars; the techniques of stellar abundance analysis and spectral classification; the reduction, eigenvalue problems, boundary-value problems, representation theory, and perturbation theory.
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