Interview Questions Answers.ORG
Interviewer And Interviewee Guide
Interviews
Quizzes
Home
Quizzes
Interviews School Education Interviews:Academic WriterAccuplacer TestACT (American College Testing)AnthropologyAssistant College PrincipalAstronomyBiochemistryBiologyCase StudyCertified Accounting Technician (CAT)ChemistryCollegeDepartment of Motor Vehicles (DMV)Discrete MathEarth ScienceEcologyElectron MicroscopistEnglish LanguageFemale PrincipalGeneral AptitudeGeneral Educational Development (GED)General ScienceGeographyGeologyGeometricGMATGRE (Removed DMCA)HistoryLSAT (Law School Admission Test)Mass CommunicationMathematicsMCAT (Medical College Admission Test)MetallurgyNatural Language Processing EngineerPeachtreePhilosophyPhysical EducationPhysiologyPlacement PapersPolio Eradication OfficerPolitical SciencePSAT/NMSQTPsychiatryPsychologyResume PhrasesSATScienceStaticsStatisticianSurveyTOEFLWASL TestZoology/Botany
Copyright © 2018. All Rights Reserved
Anthropology Interview Question:
Did the Eskimos have fire before the Europeans arrived? Did they cook food? Use for heat?
Submitted by: AdministratorThey did indeed have fire long before Europeans arrived. Earliest traces of fire in the Arctic New World date to at least 10,000 years ago and much older in the parts of Siberia from which Eskimos (who prefer to be called Inuit, actually) migrated.
They did cook food, as indicated by numerous burned bones from Arctic archaeological sites. Presumably they also used it for heat, light, anti-predator defense, as well as to smoke meat and help dry/tan leather.
The arctic is very poor in vegetal resources, so the traditional Inuit diet was heavily meat-dependent. They did collect some plants, however, and often they would eat the partly digested stomach contents of herbivores that they killed.
The Inuit had many health problems when Europeans encountered them, the most virulent of which was probably tuberculosis. In general, though, their skeletons suggest people who were in excellent health, partly from a sound diet (few sugars, lots of fat from fish sources) and from regular exercise in the course of their daily foraging activities.
Submitted by: Administrator
They did cook food, as indicated by numerous burned bones from Arctic archaeological sites. Presumably they also used it for heat, light, anti-predator defense, as well as to smoke meat and help dry/tan leather.
The arctic is very poor in vegetal resources, so the traditional Inuit diet was heavily meat-dependent. They did collect some plants, however, and often they would eat the partly digested stomach contents of herbivores that they killed.
The Inuit had many health problems when Europeans encountered them, the most virulent of which was probably tuberculosis. In general, though, their skeletons suggest people who were in excellent health, partly from a sound diet (few sugars, lots of fat from fish sources) and from regular exercise in the course of their daily foraging activities.
Submitted by: Administrator
Copyright 2007-2024 by Interview Questions Answers .ORG All Rights Reserved.
https://InterviewQuestionsAnswers.ORG.
https://InterviewQuestionsAnswers.ORG.