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Anthropology
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Archaeology
Quiz 13: Understanding Key Transitions In World Prehistory
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Question 1
Multiple Choice
In anthropological terms, a civilization refers to:
Question 2
Multiple Choice
A(n) perspective demonstrates that the first plants to be domesticated and eventually turned into today's agricultural staples began as wild plants with low return rates, plants that were used when other, better resources were depleted.
Question 3
Multiple Choice
Plant and animal domestication occurred independently in several centers across the globe. Which of the following is not a major independent hearth of plant domestication?
Question 4
Multiple Choice
The theory proposed by Robert Braidwood, arguing that agriculture arose in areas where the wild ancestors of domesticated wheat and barley grew, and resulted from human efforts to increase the productivity and stability of their food base, is the:
Question 5
Multiple Choice
The process through which some individuals survive and reproduce at higher rates than others because of their genetic heritage is known as:
Question 6
Multiple Choice
Nineteenth century social Darwinism provided justification for:
Question 7
Multiple Choice
Egalitarian societies are associated with , while chiefdoms and states are associated with .
Question 8
Multiple Choice
In the 19th century's most influential archaeology textbook, Pre-historic Times, as Illustrated by Ancient Remains, and the Manners and Customs of Modern Savages (1865) , John Lubbock argued that:
Question 9
Multiple Choice
The "density-equilibrium theory," which explains the origins of agriculture as a product of population growth that eventually causes the human population to exceed the hunting and gathering carrying capacity of an environment, was proposed by:
Question 10
Multiple Choice
The period during which people began using ground stone tools, manufacturing ceramics, and relying on domesticated plants and animals is known in the Near East as the:
Question 11
Multiple Choice
If you live in a city with a high population density, with different types of specialized subsistence strategies and non- food producing specialists, where elites control access to strategic resources and where social organization is based on class membership (elite or commoner) , you live in a:
Question 12
Multiple Choice
In the early 20th century, Franz Boas and his students:
Question 13
Multiple Choice
The difference between modern cultural evolutionary paradigms and 19th century unilineal evolutionism is:
Question 14
Multiple Choice
One effect of the 19th century comparative method was:
Question 15
Multiple Choice
The paradigm known as unilineal cultural evolution:
Question 16
Multiple Choice
The theory made popular by V. Gordon Childe in the 1940s, explaining the origin of animal domestication as a response by animals and people to arid conditions following the end of the Pleistocene, which caused them to congregate around water sources is the:
Question 17
Multiple Choice
While today the comparative method refers to the testing of hypotheses against a range of human societies, in the 19th century the comparative method:
Question 18
Multiple Choice
Unilineal cultural evolution and the comparative method were rooted in:
Question 19
Multiple Choice
The position held by Franz Boas, which maintained that each culture is the product of its own unique sequence of developments and in which chance plays a major role in bringing about change is called: