The western Pueblo responded to a high-risk environment by

A) becoming sheepherders like the Navajo.
B) moving as frequently as possible.
C) reducing their dependence on agriculture.
D) using irrigation as much as possible.
E) none of the above.


E

Anthropology & Archaeology

You might also like to view...

A monopoly is charging $500 for its product and at this price, the price elasticity of demand is 1.0. What is its marginal revenue?

A) $0 B) -$500 C) $1 D) $500

Anthropology & Archaeology

This chapter's survey of the major theoretical perspectives that have characterized anthropology highlights all of the following EXCEPT

A. attention to whether or not anthropological data ought to be comparative across time and space. B. a continuous concern with how to define and study culture. C. the theoretical and methodological shift from complexity to models that simplify human diversity. D. a continuous concern with scientific fundamentals and whether or not anthropology's research subject is best studied scientifically. E. the discipline's profound commitment to understanding human diversity.

Anthropology & Archaeology

The fossils attributed until recently to Homo habilis have now been split into two species called Australopithecus habilis and Homo rudolfensis

Indicate whether the statement is true or false

Anthropology & Archaeology

Most anthropologists would agree with the following statement about Yanomamo warfare:

a. Their fighting is grounded in a biologically based human instinct for aggression. b. Warfare among the Yanomamo is too complex a situation to ever be explained by anthropologists. c. Warfare is only of interest to anthropologists when it occurs in non-Western, tribal societies. d. Warfare only occurs in patrilineal, patrilocal societies such as the Yanomamo. e. Yanomamo warfare intensified after contact with the West.

Anthropology & Archaeology