Homology (Anthropology)
In
anthropology
and
archaeology
,
homology
refers to a type of
analogy
whereby two human beliefs, practices or
artefacts
are separated by time but share similarities due to
genetic
or
historical
connections. The concept was explored by the American archaeologist
William Duncan Strong
in his
direct historical approach
to
archaeological theory
.
<< Previous
Word Browser
Next >>
sida
eia 708
amy ridenour
list of native american artists
sartor resartus
muhammad abdullah
william duncan strong
iorwith wilbur abel
hen and chicks
john jacob abel
chris reifert
othenio abel
george abernethy
antonio abetti
fanny abington
tamp
arthur, king of time and space
direct historical approach
wanna be a vj
aiswarya
d. michael fisher
graham spanier
kindred
suzuki vx 800
portafilter
rotary converter
kalpana
jesse camp
denise faustman
viewfinder
dave holmes
taffel
antiparos
shaaron claridge
vic mizzy
edwin ellis
batikent
tower (disambiguation)
deep space (music)
frank ifield
robert r. reid
shikigami no shiro ii
new covenant
welsh highland railway (historical notes)
Copyright 2005-2009 OnPedia.com. All Rights Reserved