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Anthropology
Library
Library
Overview | News & Links
Contact & Staff Info | Collections
Collections
The
Anthropology Library is the product of a century and a half of building
in support of museum collections and the pursuits of its staff.
It contains approximately 80,000 print volumes, including over 400
serial titles, a large number of microforms, smaller collections
of CD-ROMs, audio cassettes, slides, and the like, as well as electronic
links to other information sources. All can be located through the
SIL's online catalog (http://www.siris.si.edu). The library includes
research material from the four sub-disciplines that traditionally
define American anthropologyphysical anthropology, archaeology,
cultural anthropology and linguistics as well as some related
disciplines, such as folklore, linguistics, biomedicine, forensic
science and a number of area studies.
The
overall strength of the collection lies in its holdings of early
materials, including national and international journals. With respect
to subject emphases, it remains especially strong in Native American
culture, language and history for all of North America and the Arctic
Rim with additional collections focusing on indigenous cultural
and linguistic development in Latin America. The Asian cultural
history collection is exceptionally strong. Also represented is
material on the Near East, Africa, Europe, the New World diaspora,
and Oceania. The latter includes the Alexander Easter Island Collection,
an extensive collection of books, pamphlets and reprints from the
1950s through the 1970s.
A diverse
body of physical anthropological and biomedical literature supporting
research in skeletal biology, paleopathology, forensics and human
variation is also held. In addition, the library has research materials
concerning the study of human origins in Africa and of early humans
in the Americas. The Anthropology Department's Physical Anthropology
Division maintains a separate reprint collection of former curator
Ale Hrdlicka. Approximately 700 boxes of reprints and offprints,
primarily from European sources, are arranged topically for use.
There is an author/subject index to the collection. The Division
also houses more than 100 boxes of reprints and offprints collected
by the late curators Lawrence Angel and T. Dale Stewart. Finally,
the library collection is especially strong in the history of American
anthropology and complements that of the National Anthropological
Archives (NAA) and the Human Studies Film Archives as many of its
published materials support and/or stem from its archival holdings.
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