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Anthropology (ANTH) 1 Anthropology (ANTH) 1 ANTH 203. Archaeology of Human History - D2, SBH 3 Units ANTHROPOLOGY (ANTH) Term Typically Offered: Fall, Spring, Summer Description: A global survey of the first 2 million years of human Subject-area course lists indicate courses currently active for offering existence. We will trace the evolution of human culture through time, at the University of Louisville. Not all courses are scheduled in any focusing on well-known archaeological sites in Africa, Asia, Europe and given academic term. For class offerings in a specific semester, refer to the Americas, examine long-term change in human societies focusing on the Schedule of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ the major developments in human physical and cultural evolution, such setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm). as tool-making, hunting, art, music, religion, the domestication of plants and animals, the rise of cities and states. Causes for these changes will 500-level courses generally are included in both the undergraduate- and be considered in detail. graduate-level course listings; however, specific course/section offerings For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule may vary between semesters. Students are responsible for ensuring that of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ they enroll in courses that are applicable to their particular academic setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) programs. ANTH 204. Archaeology - D2, SB 3 Units Course Fees Term Typically Offered: Fall, Spring, Summer Some courses may carry fees beyond the standard tuition costs to cover Description: Archaeology is about discovery and learning how and why additional support or materials. Program-, subject- and course-specific people of the past made things, what people ate, where they settled, fee information can be found on the Office of the Bursar website (http:// how they used the land and sea, how they organized their societies and louisville.edu/bursar/tuitionfee/). economies, and the nature of their religious practices and ideologies. This course emphasizes the history of archaeological endeavors, the theories that guide archaeological research and the methods and tools used by ANTH 111. Applied Mathematics for Understanding Science and archaeologists to study the lifeways of the past. Evolution - QR, S 4 Units For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule Term Typically Offered: Fall Only of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ Prerequisite(s): Appropriate placement score or equivalent coursework. setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) Description: Any understanding of human evolution requires knowing ANTH 205. Music in World Cultures - D2, SB 3 Units how each fact is supported by verifiable data, and mathematics is a Term Typically Offered: Fall, Spring, Summer primary tool for any scientific investigation of the evolution of human Description: General introduction to the world of music covering basic variation. This class will develop and apply mathematical techniques elements of music along with the socio-cultural aspects of music and and models used to investigate and describe the distribution of human music-making from an ethnomusicological perspective. biological variation. Note: Cross-listed with MUH 205. Note: Cross-listed with MATH 106. For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) ANTH 206. Principles of Archaeology - B 4 Units ANTH 201. Introduction to Cultural Anthropology - SB, D2 3 Units Description: This course introduces students to the science of Term Typically Offered: Fall, Spring, Summer archaeology. We will cover the practical ways in which various sciences Description: This course introduces cultural anthropology and surveys and technologies that contribute to our knowledge of how the world its fundamental questions, concepts, methods, and data. The overall works also make possible our interpretation of the archaeological record. question it seeks to answer: what does it mean to be human? To answer In addition to lecture, students will have the opportunity to actively this question and many related ones involves learning concepts such explore and better understand archaeological methods in a laboratory as culture, cultural relativism, universal-ism, evolution, race, gender, and setting. class. The course explores the way cultural anthropologists develop their For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule research questions and the methods and data they use to answer them. of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) ANTH 207. Principles of Biological Anthropology - B 4 Units Description: This course provides a general introduction to biological ANTH 202. Biological Anthropology - S 3 Units anthropology through an examination of the place of humans in Term Typically Offered: Fall, Spring, Summer the animal kingdom, the human evolutionary past, a comparative Description: This course provides a general introduction to biological examination of primate and hominid fossils, and the dynamics of human anthropology through an examination of humans in the animal kingdom, variation and human adaptation. In addition to lecture, students will have the human evolutionary past, anthropological genetics, a comparative opportunity to actively explore and better understand the methods of examination of primate and hominin fossils, and the dynamics of human biological anthropology in a laboratory setting. variation and human adaptation. Note: Credit is not allowed for both ANTH 202 and ANTH 207. Note: Credit is not allowed for both ANTH 202 and ANTH 207. For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) Anthropology (ANTH) 2 ANTH 252. People and Their Food 3 Units ANTH 305. Genes, Peoples and Evolution 3 Units Term Typically Offered: Fall Only Term Typically Offered: Occasionally Offered Description: Everyone eats but we eat such different things. This course Prerequisite(s): ANTH 202 or 3 hours Biology. examines the reasons why, across the globe, we meet our common Description: Examines how geography and history affect genetic nutritional needs in so many different ways. We explore food and diversity; analyzes how genetics reconstruct individual ancestry and foodways as products of soil, politics, and culture. population history. For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) ANTH 301. Archaeology of Sacred Sites 3 Units ANTH 306. Human Biological Variation 3 Units Term Typically Offered: Occasionally Offered Term Typically Offered: Occasionally Offered Description: This course examines religion through material remains that Prerequisite(s): ANTH 202 or 3 hours of Biology. have been excavated, conserved and interpreted by archaeologists. The Description: Course explores biological diversity in terms of evolutionary archaeological record makes it clear that religious experiences were a origin and adaptive significance. vital component of all pre-modern cultures and that the religious impulse For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule has been a driving force in the creation of artifacts and monuments of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ from the Paleolithic era to the present. Although religion is traditionally setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) studied from the perspective of theology, creeds, and iconography, the ANTH 307. Darwin 3 Units mute material record of ancient religious practices offers many insights Term Typically Offered: Fall Only into forms of ritual, vision and belief that appear in widely scattered parts Description: Darwin's work in its historical and intellectual milieu; his of the world, and widely separated in time. The sacred sites studied in commitment to empirical support for his theory of evolution. The social this course range from Stonehenge and Easter Island to Giza and Machu controversy associated with misunderstanding evolution today. Picchu. For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule For class offerings for a specific term, refer to the Schedule of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ of Classes (http://htmlaccess.louisville.edu/classSchedule/ setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) setupSearchClassSchedule.cfm) ANTH 308. Primates 3 Units ANTH 302. Underwater Archaeology 3 Units Term Typically Offered: Spring Only Term Typically Offered: Occasionally Offered Description: Survey of primate behavior, ecology, and culture. Focus on Description: An introduction to one of the newest and most important violence and aggression, kin selection, altruism, evolution and sex, the fields within the discipline of archaeology: underwater archaeology. This
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