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Prehistoric man in the New Worl.

Por: Jennings, Jesse D., edColaborador(es): Norbeck, Edward, edIdioma: Español Series Rice University Semicentennial ; , s/nDetalles de publicación: Chicago - US The University of Chicago Press 1964Descripción: vii; 633 p. ilus., figs., mapsTema(s): PREHISTORIA | ORIGEN DEL HOMBRE | EVOLUCION | ANTROPOLOGIA HISTORICA | ANTROPOLOGIA FISICA | ARQUEOLOGIA | GEOLOGIA | CULTURAS INDIGENAS | AGRICULTURA | CIVILIZACION | CIENCIA | GENETICAClasificación CDD: 599.938 Resumen: Contiene: Estimates of man's antiquity in the Americas vary from about 12000 to as much as 30000 to 40000 years. Clear evidence indicates that he lived in North America as early as 12000 years ago as a hunter of mammoths and bison. The highest develompemt of American indian culture followed much later in the civilizations based on agriculture of Mesoamerica and northern South America. Learning the complete record of man's live in the New World has been one of the goals of archeology, and recent research has greatly increased our knowledge of this subject. But the vastness of the area and the variations in the quality and quantity of the data found in different parts of the country make American prehistory as unwieldy a subject as it is fascinating. Archeologists in this field log ago became specialists in restricted geographical areas, and it grows increasingly difficult to gain an over-all view. Geologists and linguists, too, have contributed through research in their disciplines to the literature of American prehistory. This volume performs a unique service for professional archeologists and lay readers alike in bringing together in straighforward non-technical language the principal findings of the most recent research as well as the accumulated results of many years'study.Existencias: 1
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Contiene: Estimates of man's antiquity in the Americas vary from about 12000 to as much as 30000 to 40000 years. Clear evidence indicates that he lived in North America as early as 12000 years ago as a hunter of mammoths and bison. The highest develompemt of American indian culture followed much later in the civilizations based on agriculture of Mesoamerica and northern South America. Learning the complete record of man's live in the New World has been one of the goals of archeology, and recent research has greatly increased our knowledge of this subject. But the vastness of the area and the variations in the quality and quantity of the data found in different parts of the country make American prehistory as unwieldy a subject as it is fascinating. Archeologists in this field log ago became specialists in restricted geographical areas, and it grows increasingly difficult to gain an over-all view. Geologists and linguists, too, have contributed through research in their disciplines to the literature of American prehistory. This volume performs a unique service for professional archeologists and lay readers alike in bringing together in straighforward non-technical language the principal findings of the most recent research as well as the accumulated results of many years'study.

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