Open-access-anthropology-journals

Anthropology is that the study of what makes us human. Anthropologists take a broad approach to understanding the various different aspects of the human experience, which we call holism. They consider the past, through archaeology, to ascertain how human groups lived hundreds or thousands of years ago and what was important to them. They consider what makes up our biological bodies and genetics, also as our bones, diet, and health. Even though nearly all humans need an equivalent things to survive, like food, water, and companionship, the ways people meet these needs are often very different. For example, everyone must eat, but people eat different foods and obtain food in several ways. So anthropologists check out how different groups of individuals get food, prepare it, and share it. World hunger isn't a drag of production but social barriers to distribution, which Amartya Sen won a Nobel prize for showing this was the case for all of the 20th century’s famines. Biological anthropologists which seek to know how humans adapt to different environments, what causes disease and early death, and the way humans evolved from other animals. To do this, they study humans (living and dead), other primates like monkeys and apes, and human ancestors (fossils). They are also curious about how biology and culture work together to shape our lives. They are interested in explaining the similarities and differences that are found among humans across the world. 

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