Clinton Hart Merriam, who signed his name C. Hart Merriam was a naturalist who spent part of his professional life studying California Indians. He worked assiduously with native informants. For Merriam's background, which was that of a biologist and not ananthropologist, the reader is referred to a following section written by Alfred L. Kroeber, "C. Hart Merriam as Anthropologist." Although Merriam had a formal tie with the Smithsonian Institution which held a bequest known as the E.H. Harriman Fund, he was not a member of the Smithsonian staff. He had, in brief, an institutional connection, but he did not work under the direction of that institution
"This is Number 3 of Volume 16 of the University of California's Publications in American Archaeolog...
In this article we publish two Chumash vocabularies representing the speech of groups who lived away...
This 1877 report references 36 Tribes of California including, but not limited to, their habitats, c...
Clinton Hart Merriam, who signed his name C. Hart Merriam was a naturalist who spent part of his pro...
Ethnogeographic and Ethnosynonymic Data from Northern California Tribes. C. Hart Merriam (Assembled ...
Ethnogeographic and Ethnosynonymic Data from Central California Tribes. C. Hart Merriam (Assembled a...
Indian Names for Plants and Animals Among Californian and Other Western North American Tribes. ...
American anthropology, from its earliest practice, focused on what was termed “salvage ethnography,”...
Although Alfred Kroeber is universally regarded as the founder of California Indian studies, his imp...
This paper concerns two Nineteenth Century ethnographic accounts of subsistence practices of native ...
Extracted from the Bulletin of the American museum of natural history, v. XVII, part IV, November 4,...
John Peabody Harrington: The Man and his California Indian Fieldnotes. Jane Mac-Laren Walsh. Ramona,...
John Peabody Harrington (1884-1961) collected over one million pages of linguistic and ethnographic ...
2 One often hears Muir spoken of as an authority on the animal life of the mountains. This is a...
Comparing the hunter-gatherers of California and the Great Basin illustrates enormous differences be...
"This is Number 3 of Volume 16 of the University of California's Publications in American Archaeolog...
In this article we publish two Chumash vocabularies representing the speech of groups who lived away...
This 1877 report references 36 Tribes of California including, but not limited to, their habitats, c...
Clinton Hart Merriam, who signed his name C. Hart Merriam was a naturalist who spent part of his pro...
Ethnogeographic and Ethnosynonymic Data from Northern California Tribes. C. Hart Merriam (Assembled ...
Ethnogeographic and Ethnosynonymic Data from Central California Tribes. C. Hart Merriam (Assembled a...
Indian Names for Plants and Animals Among Californian and Other Western North American Tribes. ...
American anthropology, from its earliest practice, focused on what was termed “salvage ethnography,”...
Although Alfred Kroeber is universally regarded as the founder of California Indian studies, his imp...
This paper concerns two Nineteenth Century ethnographic accounts of subsistence practices of native ...
Extracted from the Bulletin of the American museum of natural history, v. XVII, part IV, November 4,...
John Peabody Harrington: The Man and his California Indian Fieldnotes. Jane Mac-Laren Walsh. Ramona,...
John Peabody Harrington (1884-1961) collected over one million pages of linguistic and ethnographic ...
2 One often hears Muir spoken of as an authority on the animal life of the mountains. This is a...
Comparing the hunter-gatherers of California and the Great Basin illustrates enormous differences be...
"This is Number 3 of Volume 16 of the University of California's Publications in American Archaeolog...
In this article we publish two Chumash vocabularies representing the speech of groups who lived away...
This 1877 report references 36 Tribes of California including, but not limited to, their habitats, c...