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Object Description
| Contact Information | Please send any questions regarding this item to libref@uno.edu |
| Title | Sociopolitical development amongst the Calusa |
| Author | Tape, Dwan Dawson |
| Keywords | University of New Orleans. Honors thesis. 1994.; University of New Orleans. Dept. of Anthropology. |
| Abstract/Introduction | The Calusa Indians are an extinct and lesser known culture whose original domain was approximately between Charlotte Harbor and the Ten Thousand Islands area in southwest Florida (fig. 1). The Calusa are somewhat unique in that, at least at the time of the first European contact early in the sixteenth century, they evidently maintained a complex chiefdom without the use of agriculture. They are also unique in that the chief maintained the practice of "royal" sibling marriage, a practice which is rare in the world, even among state level societies (see Hudson 1976:519; Goggin and Sturtevant 1964). |
| Access | PDF access restricted to UNO campus only |
| Degree | B.A. |
| Degree Program | Anthropology |
| Department | Department of Anthropology |
| Thesis Advisor | Webb, Malcolm C. |
| Advisory Committee | Beavers, Richard C.; Mooney, Michael E. |
| Date Degree Awarded | 1994; * |
| Rights | The University of New Orleans and its agents retain the non-exclusive license to archive and make accessible this thesis in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. The author retains all other ownership rights to the copyright of the thesis. |
| Notes | iii, 54 leaves : ill. ; 29 cm.; typescript; Thesis (Bachelor of Arts, with Honors in Anthropology)--University of New Orleans; Bibliography: leaves 45-54; May 1994; approved May 13, 1994. |
| Object File Name | st000073 |
| Viewer Information | Adobe Reader required for viewing (http://www.adobe.com) |
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