Anthropology (ANTH) Courses>Peopling of New Territories

ANTH348 - Peopling of New Territories

Description

Current reconstructions show humans initially evolved in Africa and subsequently expanded their range to the extent that, by the time of European voyages of world exploration, people were already almost everywhere. Focuses on the processes by which humans discovered and adapted to previously unsettled lands. Emphasis is on archaeological data and interpretation via selected case studies, particularly the first people of Australia, the Pacific, and the Americas.

Units

1.5

Hours: lecture-lab-tutorial

3-0-0

Note(s)

  • Credit will be granted for only one of ANTH 348, ANTH 390, ANTH 392 (if taken in the same topic).

Prerequisites

  • Complete all of:

Course offered by

Department of Anthropology

Course schedules

Summer timetable available: February 15. Fall and Spring timetables available: May 15.

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