Which of the following statements best describes the land ownership situation among the Hadza of Tanzania?

A) The Hadza do not believe that they have exclusive rights over the land they use.
B) The political leaders decide who owns specific parcels of land.
C) Individuals may only use the land that they have purchased.
D) The government owns all the land, and hunting time on it is “rented” by the individual.


A) The Hadza do not believe that they have exclusive rights over the land they use.

Anthropology & Archaeology

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According to the text, what can we appropriately conclude from geneticists' finding that someone of African ancestry may have more in common biologically with someone of native Australian, Asian, or northern European descent than with a fellow African?

A. People of African descent have migrated to Australia, Asia, and northern Europe and mixed their genes with local populations. B. People of Australian, Asian, and northern European descent have migrated to Africa and mixed their genes with local African populations. C. You may have more genetic material in common with someone who looks totally different from you than with someone considered your own "race". D. African populations are divided into a number of races, some of which have evolved to look like peoples of other regions of the world. E. Because Homo sapiens evolved in Africa, African peoples have much in common with peoples of all regions of the world.

Anthropology & Archaeology

Which state agencies, according to Philippe Bourgois, do women in inner-city neighborhoods such as El Barrio usually have contact with?

a) The penal system and welfare system b) The education system and the welfare system c) The public housing authority and the police d) They have little or no contact with any agencies.

Anthropology & Archaeology

Technology is a cultural product

a. True b. False

Anthropology & Archaeology

The frequency of EVC among the American Amish populations is the result of __________

a. sexual selection b. genetic bottleneck c. founder effect d. sexual dimorphism

Anthropology & Archaeology