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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
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- Keyword
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- Arrowhead (Plants) -- Oregon -- Portland Region (1)
- Arrowhead (Plants) -- Washington (State) -- Vancouver Region (1)
- Chinookan Indians -- Ethnobotany -- Oregon -- Portland Region (1)
- Chinookan Indians -- Ethnobotany -- Washington (State) -- Vancouver Region (1)
- Chinookan Indians -- Implements -- Oregon -- Columbia County (1)
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- Chinookan Indians -- Oregon -- Columbia County -- Social conditions (1)
- Distributional archaeology -- Oregon -- Columbia County (1)
- Excavations (Archaeology) -- Oregon (1)
- Lemurs -- Behavior (1)
- Lemurs -- Ecology -- Madagascar (1)
- Lemurs -- Madagascar (1)
- Meier Site (Or.) (1)
- Military symbols (1)
- Nationalism -- History (1)
- Oregon -- Antiquities (1)
- Sri Lanka (1)
- Stone implements -- Oregon -- Columbia County (1)
- West Lost River Site (Or.) (1)
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Wearing A Dead Man's Jacket: State Symbols In Troubled Places, Michele Ruth Gamburd
Wearing A Dead Man's Jacket: State Symbols In Troubled Places, Michele Ruth Gamburd
Anthropology Faculty Publications and Presentations
A village rumor concerning the attempted theft of a uniform from the corpse of a Sri Lankan army soldier supplies the subject matter for this paper. In May 1993, soon after the assassination of President Ranasinghe Premadasa, a spectacular local funeral for a Low Country Sinhalese soldier killed in the civil war near Trincomalee provided a space for the display of state symbols, the voicing of patriotic rhetoric, and the exhibition of the precision and discipline of the national army. Military pageantry legitimated the use of force by the government, while the funeral ritual as a whole produced a catharsis …
Social Stratification Within A Protohistoric Plankhouse Of The Pacific Northwest Coast: Use-Wear And Spatial Distribution Analysis Of Chipped Lithic Artifacts, Cameron Mcpherson Smith
Social Stratification Within A Protohistoric Plankhouse Of The Pacific Northwest Coast: Use-Wear And Spatial Distribution Analysis Of Chipped Lithic Artifacts, Cameron Mcpherson Smith
Dissertations and Theses
The spatial distribution of chipped lithic artifacts excavated at site 35C05, a Chinookan plankhouse of the protohistoric period, was observed to test the hypothesis that a gradient of material culture -- reflecting social status -- should be evident within the plankhouse, ranging from the highest to the lowest social rank. Prior to the spatial analysis, use-wear analysis was used to evaluate the classificatory labels used to describe the assemblage by a previous researcher. The use-wear analysis largely confirmed the functional classification of chipped lithic artifacts used by the previous researcher. The spatial analyses revealed that while most tool types were …
Early Holocene Occupation At The West Lost River Site, Klamath County, Oregon, Douglas C. Wilson, John L. Fagan, Dorothy E. Freidel, Susan M. Colby
Early Holocene Occupation At The West Lost River Site, Klamath County, Oregon, Douglas C. Wilson, John L. Fagan, Dorothy E. Freidel, Susan M. Colby
Anthropology Faculty Publications and Presentations
Excavations at the West Lost River Site (35KL972) provide new insights on early Holocene occupation of southwestern Oregon. The article focuses on the artifacts and specimens recovered from the site.
Clinging To Life: Varecia Variegata Rubra And The Masoala Coastal Forests, Natalie Vasey
Clinging To Life: Varecia Variegata Rubra And The Masoala Coastal Forests, Natalie Vasey
Anthropology Faculty Publications and Presentations
The article describes the authors field study from October 1993 to February 1995 in Madagascar, surveying coastal and riverine forests, villages, and watersheds, studying the ecology and behavior of Varecia varuegata rubra, the red ruffed lemur, and Lemur fulvus albifrons, the white fronted lemur.
Wapato For The People : An Ecological Approach To Understanding The Native American Use Of Sagittaria Latifolia On The Lower Columbia River, Melissa Cole Darby
Wapato For The People : An Ecological Approach To Understanding The Native American Use Of Sagittaria Latifolia On The Lower Columbia River, Melissa Cole Darby
Dissertations and Theses
Sagittaria latifolia Willd. was an important root food and trade commodity for the Indians who lived along the Lower Columbia River in early historic times. This plant was prolific in the extensive wetlands of the Lower Columbia from about the great Cascades to the Kalama River. The tubers of this plant were called "wapato" in Chinook Jargon, the local trade language. The wetlands, and this plant that grew there, occupied a vast extent of the Lower Columbia territory; so much so that this valley was named 'Wapato Valley' by Lewis and Clark in 1805. This thesis will provide pertinent information …