| 6 | Author: | Whiting, Alfred F. | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Alfred Whiting collection, ead | | | Date(s): | unknown | | | Abstract: | Botanist, Anthropologist, and Ethnobotanist, Alfred
Whiting's career took to institutions across the United States (Museum of Northern
Arizona, Michigan Ethnobotanical Laboratory, University of Oregon, Dartmouth College
Museum). This collection consists of his research materials, particularly as they
relate to his research at the Museum of Northern Arizona. | | | Repository: | Museum of Northern Arizona | | | Subjects: | All-Indian Pow-Wow (Flagstaff,
Ariz.) | Animals | Catclaw acacia | Desert plants | Desert plants --
Arizona | Ethnobiology | Ethnobiology --
Arizona | Ethnobotany | Ethnology | Ethnozoology | Folklore | Havasupai Indians | Havasupai Indians --
Religion | Havasupai Indians -- Social life
and customs | Havasupai baskets | Havasupai
language | Havasupai
mythology | Hopi Indians | Hopi Indians --
Agriculture | Hopi Indians --
Ethnobotany | Hopi Indians --
Folklore | Hopi Indians --
Jewelry | Hopi Indians --
Music | Hopi Indians --
Religion | Hopi Indians -- Rites and
ceremonies | Hopi art | Hopi language | Hopi mythology | Hopi textile
fabrics | Hualapai language | | | Similar Items: | Find Similar Guides |
7 | Author: | McKee, Edwin D. (Edwin Dinwiddie), 1906-1974. | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Edwin and Barbara McKee Collection, 1929-ca.
1980. ead | | | Date(s): | 1929-ca.
1980. | | | Abstract: | In assembling the three photograph albums, Barbara Hastings
McKee created a remarkable glimpse into her life and that of her husband and family.
Fittingly, they begin with her trip to the Grand Canyon in 1929. In the pages that
follow she meets and marries Edwin McKee, travels, studies, explores, raises a family.
The albums end in 1944, although a few photographs were added later, from the
1960s. | | | Repository: | Cline Library. Special Collections and Archives
Department | | | Subjects: | Havasupai Indians. | Hopi Indians. | Navajo Indians. | Geologists. | Women biologists. | Zapotec Indians. | | | Similar Items: | Find Similar Guides |
10 | Author: | unknown | Requires cookie* | | Title: | Doris Duke Native American
Oral History Project, 1966-2022 ead | | | Date(s): | 1966-2022 | | | Abstract: | The Doris Duke Native American Oral History Project was initiated in 1967 across seven different universities. At the University of Arizona, the project was conducted through the Arizona State Museum and coordinated by Bernard “Bunny” Fontana, an anthropologist who was the museum’s Director of Ethnology at the time. The project resulted in the collection of 615 interviews, representing 33 different tribal groups. The bulk of the collection is from Apache, Navajo, Pima, Tohono O'Odham, and Yaqui consultants. Other tribes from Arizona and Mexico are also represented: including the Mohave, Hopi, Seri, Tarahumara, and Yavapai. The interviews discuss personal and family histories, along with topics such as social culture, education, folklore, health and health care, history, language, and religion. Interviews with Acoma, Apache, Chiricahua, Chemehuevi, Chontal, Dakota, Inuit, Havasupai, Hualapai, Juaneño, Maricopa, Mexican, Mormon, Muslim, Mohave, Navajo, Pima, Quechua, San Juan, Santa Clara, Seri, Spanish-American, Tarahumara, Tewa, Tohono O'Odham, Tiwa, Western Apache, Yaqui, Yavapai, and Yuman interviewees.
In addition to audio recordings and the associated transcripts, this collection includes project overviews, financial records, correspondence, project references and publications, documentation related to cataloging and access, research proposals, and materials related to the project at the other six universities. | | | Repository: | Arizona State Museum | | | Subjects: | Apache Indians | Acoma Indians | Borderlands--Arizona | Chemeheuvi Indians | Genizaros | Havasupai Indians | Hualapai Indians | Indian College Students—Arizona | Indians of North America—Languages | Inuit | Mohave Indians | Navajo Indians | Oral history—Archival resources | Tiwa Indians | Tohono O’Odham Indians | White Mountain Apache Indians | Yuma Indians | | | Similar Items: | Find Similar Guides |
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