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Course Criteria
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6.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 2113. Devoted to the laboratory phase of analyzing archaeological data derived from survey or excavation. The procedures and methods used for classifying and studying the raw data provided by the fieldwork. Laboratory (Irreg.)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 1113 or junior standing. A detailed survey of the archaeological remains from the Great Plains from the earliest occupation of the area until the reservation period. (Irreg.)
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5.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 1113 or junior standing. A detailed survey of the prehistoric sequence in the American Southwest and northwestern Mexico from earliest times up to the time of European contact. (Irreg.)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 2503 or permission of instructor. May be repeated with change of content; maximum credit nine hours. Special topics in biological anthropology such as advanced human osteology, human variation, and theory of evolutionary change. (Irreg.)
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 2503. Allows the student to develop a basic familiarity with human skeletal remains, standard anatomical terminology, and methods and techniques of data collection. In turn, these osteological skills will provide a means to explore questions of human adaptability, variation, evolution, patterns of health and disease in prehistory, and the applicability of these findings to contemporary problems.
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7.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 2113. An introductory-level look at animal bone analysis as performed by archaeologists and zooarchaeologists. The bones of birds, fish, reptiles, amphibians, and mammals, as well as mollusk shell are discussed under the topics of taxonomy, taphonomy, age and sex determination, morphometrics, seasonality, and specialized techniques. Identification of bone and discussions relating recent advances in animal bone analysis are typical class activities. No student may earn credit for both 4973 and 5973. (Irreg.)
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1.00 Credits
Prerequisite: graduate standing. This class focuses on the phonetic and phonological skills needed for describing world languages. Topics covered under phonetics include articulatory phonetics, ear training, and using acoustic computer programs. Topics in phonology will cover variation and allomorphy in many languages, writing phonological rules, and the analysis of tone and stress. (F)
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2.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 5123, 5223. Recent ethnographies are used to critique current sociocultural theory in anthropology. Students will be required to write analytical essays as a means of understanding the relationship between ethnography and theory. (Irreg.)
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisite: graduate standing. Introduces the academic study of folklore and folklife. Focus is on theories and methods used to document and interpret expressive culture, including a wide array of verbal, material, performance, and customary genres. Ethnographic, comparative, literary, geographic, historical, and psychological perspectives will be explored. Emphasis will be placed on contextual studies understanding art in community settings. (Irreg.)
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5.00 Credits
Prerequisite: 3053 and 3353. Introduces and develops theories and concepts of morphology including word formation, derivation, inflection, non-concatenative morphs, covert categories, prosodic phenomena, morphosyntactic categories and clitics. Data from non-Western languages will be prominent. No student may earn credit for both 4053 and 5053. (Irreg.)
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