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Question
Organic and environmental remains, or ecofacts, which were not made by humans but still provide information about the past include such items asa) animal bones, plant remains, pottery fragments
b) soils, sediments, animal bones, plant remains
c) stone tools, weapons, pottery
d) soils sediments, animal bones, stone tools, weapons, pottery
e) none of the above
Answer
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Related questions
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The earliest well-dated example of _____________ is a piece of incised red ochre from Blombos Cave, South Africa, dated to 77,000 years ago
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b) medicine
c) money
d) weight measurement
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Q:
Paleolithic cave art, concentrated in the caves of western Europe (particularly in southwest France and northern Spain), is thought to date approximately to
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b) 80,00060,000 bc
c) 30,00010,000 bc
d) 8,0005,000 bc
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Q:
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a) the archaeology of cult
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Cause of death for skeletal remains can be ascertained
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Q:
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Q:
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a) ICOMOS
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Q:
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a) the conservation of the archaeological record
b) the prevention of commercial and industrial development
c) the repatriation of archaeological objects
d) the publication of archaeological findings
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Q:
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a) effective planning legislation
b) protest and resistance
c) clandestine digging
d) a long series of suits and other litigation
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Q:
England's first inspector of Ancient Monuments, who was selected in 1882, was
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b) Augustus Lane Fox Pitt-Rivers
c) Graham Hancock
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Q:
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a) colonialism
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Q:
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Q:
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a) human remains contain diseases that can make archaeologists sick
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c) burials are usually quite hard to locate and archaeologists have to do a lot of digging to find them
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Q:
It is important that archaeological information be disseminated to the wider public. Which of the following have been used by archaeologists to popularize the human past
a) museum exhibits
b) the internet
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Q:
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a) Ignatius Donnelly; Greece
b) Heinrich Schliemann; Turkey
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e) Piltdown Man; China
Q:
There are certain areas where archaeological reality and evidence clashes with harmless popular belief, and archaeologists must question whether they should respect these beliefs or focus on refuting. An example of just such an ethically challenging situation is
a) when an author is trying to sell a book that makes false claims about the past and accuses archaeologists of keeping secret information about the public
b) when false ideas about the ancient past are being used to fuel racism and hate
c) when a major archaeological site is destroyed because those in charge of the country belong to an extremist religion
d) when aboriginal and Indigenous religions or oral history are at odds with archaeological interpretation
e) none of the above
Q:
Despite its name, evolutionary archaeology has very little to do with the ideas of biological evolution.