Anthropology

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Across
  1. 5. Fragmentary records are interpreted to reassemble long-ago cultures and forgotten ways of life.
  2. 7. engraved, written, or painted signs that express ideas or meaning in the form of pictures
  3. 8. Information that analyze or interpret primary data. They do not offer new evidence.
  4. 9. it explores how language shapes communication, forms social identity and group membership
Down
  1. 1. The study of humans – their origins, biological characteristics and cultural development, social relationships, and more based in scientific methods.
  2. 2. the tendency to interpret strange customs on the basis of preconceptions derived from one’s own cultural background.
  3. 3. also known as physical anthropology, is a scientific discipline concerned with the biological and behavioral aspects of human beings, their extinct homin in ancestors, and related non-human primates, particularly from an evolutionary perspective
  4. 4. applies comparative method and evolutionary perspective to human culture
  5. 6. Information that comes directly from a person who experienced an event (e.g. through qualitative in-depth interviews, personal narratives, first-hand observations)