Results 251 to 260 of about 293,660 (313)
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MICA polymorphism in South American Indians

Immunogenetics, 2002
We have studied the MICA alleles of 196 unrelated subjects from three South American Indian tribes (Toba, Wichi and Terena). They are members of isolated tribes located in the Gran Chaco area in northeastern Argentina and in Mato Grosso do Sul in South Central Brazil.
Yanzheng, Zhang   +6 more
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HLA Antigens in South American Indians

Tissue Antigens, 1980
New HLA data for the Tirio, Parakanã, Kayapo and Mapuche tribes, as well as supplementary data for the Waiãpi are presented. Taken together with previously published information on South American Indians, these typings show a remarkably homogeneous gene pool with a restricted range of polymorphisms and a further restricted set of haplotypes.
F L, Black, L L, Berman, Y, Gabbay
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South American Indians

Nature, 1951
Handbook of South American Indians Edited by Julian H. Steward. Vol. 6: Physical Anthropology, Linguistics and Cultural Geography of South American Indians. (Smithsonian Institution: Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 143.) Pp. xiii + 715 + 47 plates. (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1950.) 5 dollars.
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Handbook of South American Indians

Nature, 1948
THE first two volumes of this Work, dealing with the marginal tribes and the Andean civilizations, were introduced in Nature, Nov. 30, 1946, p. 769. Those now under review cover vast areas in eastern and northern South America, besides the West Indies and most of Central America south of Mexico.
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Chromosomal breakage in leukocytes of South American Indians

Cytogenetic and Genome Research, 1973
Cytogenetic studies were performed in 1969, 1970, and 1971 on the Yanomama and Piaroa Indians of Venezuela. The early studies involved 49 Yanomama, of whom 13 had 23 cells with extensive chromosome breakage and rearrangement, so-called complex cells. The virtual disappearance of these complex cells in subsequent studies of the Yanomama was accompanied ...
A D, Bloom   +3 more
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Handbook of South American Indians

Nature, 1946
MORE than a hundred contributors, all from the America have undertaken the task of producing the volumes of this Handbook, of which the two under review are the first to appear; a volunic will be devoted to each of four cultural divisions into which South America and certain regions to the north have been divided: marginal and hunting tribes from Terra
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South American Paleo-Indian Projectile Points

Lithic Technology, 1996
(1996). South American Paleo-Indian Projectile Points. Lithic Technology: Vol. 21, No. 2, pp. 134-148.
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North and South American Indian Music

The Journal of American Folklore, 1967
as a nonspecialist, I am impressed by the competence of this group. A third point of interest is much more academic, but it is one which should be food for thought for folklorists concerned with the "folksong revival" and with other sorts of transfer of folklore from a rural habitat to a foreign or urban culture.
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