BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE Bloomsburg Pennsylvania Anthropology Newsletter Vol. 5, No. 2 October 1980 Department of Philosophy/Anthropology Enrollments in 1980: When the dust cleared after registration we found that 480 students enrolled in the 12 courses we are offering in the fall semester. That represents an all-time high for anthropology at BSC. We'd like to say "thanks" for your interest. We hope we can continue to merit that kind of student interest. Southwest Tour: A meeting of all students interested in joining the 1981 Southwest Tour will be held October 27 in 102 Bakeless at 3 p.m. An itinerary has been prepared, and fees and costs will be discussed. If you cannot attend, please contact either Dave Minderhout or Bob Reeder in 219 Bakeless. Private vehicles will be used, and lodging will consist of camping out in KOAs and national parks. Priority registration will be given to anthropology majors or students with cars. Graduate School in Your Future? Now is a good time to be collecting catalogs and admissions materials for graduate school. Most departments have February deadlines for applications, especially for students applying for financial aid. If you need to take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE), arrangements can be made to take the test locally through the Counseling Office. The Guide to Departments of Anthropology is a good source of information on graduate schools, including special programs offered, fellowships and assistantships, and addresses for catalogs and other admission materials. The faculty receives many brochures describing graduate programs in other schools. Contact Dave Minderhout if you're interested in seeing them. Ethnographic Facts: Anthropologists have known for some time that in individual cultures women in monogamous unions tend to have more children than those in polygynous unions. The reason for this has always been unclear, and the suspicion has always been there that the difference in fertility was due to erratic sampling procedures or sloppy statistics. Now Barry Isaacs of the University of Cincinnati has suggested in the latest issue of Ethnology that the difference is real and is directly related to significant social practices. Isaacs did his research among the Mende of Sierra Leone, finding that women in monogamous unions had statistically significantly more children than those in polygynous unions. Two factors seemed to influence this relationship. Isaacs found that more than half the women in monogamous unions were in their second marriages with a husband in his first marriage. Children are highly valued among the Mende, and women are valued primarily for child-bearing abilities. Men contemplating marriage for the first time are mainly interested in women who will provide them with children. What better wife, then, than a divorcee or widow with a proven record? The most desirable women in Mende society are young virgins, but marriage with them is chancy, since a husband never knows whether the girl will produce babies. Isaacs also found that first wives in polygynous unions had as many babies as women in monogamous unions and that second wives tended to be women of low fertility in their second marriages or young, unproven women. First wives have a monopoly of attention and nutrition for the first years of marriage; this may pay off in more children. Subsequent wives can then be chosen for qualities other than child-bearing. The fact that men have to spread their attentions around in polygynous unions may also affect the fertility rate. Incidentally, while 63% of the polygynous unions involved two wives, 6.5% involved six or more wives. 2 In a related vein, Rose Frisch of Harvard in a recent Natural History magazine describes the close relationship between fat and fertility in women. Frisch found in her research that a particular body composition, i.e., a ratio of fat to body weight, proved to be an important determinant of fecundity and that a woman who loses 10 to 15 percent of her body weight becomes anorrheic, that is, her menstrual cycle stops. Too much fat can have the same effect. The average age of menarche 100 years ago in America was 16; today it is 12.6 years whereas among South American Indians living in the Andes above 10,000 feet, it is 18 years. The key, on average, Frisch argues, is when the women weighs 103 pounds. If she is of average height, she should begin to menstruate. If she is uncommonly tall or short, her menstruation should be delayed. Since women reach these weight-height dimensions earlier now than they did 100 years ago, they are menstruating sooner. As Frisch points out, reproduction requires energy. A pregnancy requires a total of 50,000 extra calories, and lactation about 1,000 extra calories per day. The main function of the 35 pounds of fat stored on average by girls by age 18 in our culture may be to provide easily mobilized energy for reproduction. The 144,000 calories stored at the time of mature reproductive ability would be sufficient for a pregnancy and about three mcnths' lactation. This may also help explain why first wives in Sierra Leone have more children. The Anthropologist's Cookbook: Ropa vieJa (Old Clothes) is a recipe from Panama. Its ingredients reflect Panama's position as an international transit zone, including as they do both soy sauce (salsa China) and Worcestershire sauce (salsa Inglesa)o This dish is served with rice, preferably a broken coarse variety of rice cooked in blackened iron pots over an open fire. 450 grams (1 lb.) chuck or stewing beef salt to taste 1 clove garlic 2% tsp. soy sauce 1 medium onion, finely chopped pepper to taste cup water cup vinegar 1 tbsp. Worcestershire Sauce t t Sprinkle the raw meat lightly with salt and pepper, then place in a flat shallow dish with vinegar and soak for two-three hours. Place the soaked meat in a pot with an inch or so of water and simmer for 15-30 minutes. Remove and chop it into small, thin strips and place in a frying pan with the onion, salt, pepper and garlic. Mix together the water, soy sauce, and Worcestershire sauce and add to the meat. Simmer slowly until almost all the moisture evaporates. The result is a tasty meat with a thin sauce. As a variation, a little tomato paste may be added to the sauce. Bigfoot in Columbia County?--Part I: The Wright family dog lay placidly on the kitchen floor trying to escape the late afternoon heat of a mid-August day. The aging farm dog now merely kept out of the way of trouble and the discomfort of the Columbia County heatwave. Years had passed since he bothered with squirrels scampering on the farmhouse yard which stretched southward to the edge of the great oak forrest. His utility as a sheep dog and a vigil for strange night sounds was only a memory as he dozed, stretching out on the cool linoleum floor. Mrs. Wright was hurrying to finish her ironing before her husband returned from a construction job in town. A soft summer breeze swept down from the mountain ridge nearby rustling the dried sweet corn patch and passed through the open kitchen windows. As Mrs. Wright looked up from her absent minded ironing, she did a double-take noticing that a shadow had passed over the kitchen wall in front of her. She turned 3 around toward the window at her back only to see the curtains moving in the wind. She began to perceive an odd odor which developed rapidly into an overwhelming and unfamiliar rancid stink, A dense heavy asthmatic breathing caught her attention at about the same time as the dog let out a ferocious snarl. The old farm dog, shaken from its sleep, suddenly began to howl unearthly wails. With flared nostrils and bared teeth, the old dog circled madly around the room as Mrs. Wright wondered whether her husband's 12-gauge shotgun was still in the hall closet and if it was loaded. She was hoping the red pickup truck would immediately be heard grinding up the hollow road bringing Mr. Smith home for supper. But the odd pungentodor was gone as quickly as it had appeared. The heavy breathing could no longer be heard and the old dog's yelps soon changed into a few defensive barks. It was a longer time before the dog stopped its shaking and longer still before he curled his tail under his body and went back to sleep on the floor. During the next week the Wrights learned of other neighbors' dogs acting strangely, always at the same time of the day--late afternoon. Further conversations with more remote neighbors on the other side of the mountain revealed a curious pattern: the farm dogs on the north side of the mountain regularly became unsettled in the late afternoon. The farm dogs on the southern slope of the mountain became agitated early in the morning. Two weeks later Bill Tolanca was driving his truck up the Jonestown mountain from the south slope at 8 a.m. As he was rounding a curve in the road he saw a giant, two-legged hairy beast standing in the center of the road. It turned its head in the direction of Tolanca's truck. NEXT ISSUE: BIGFOCYf'S HUT? Archeology News: Systematic excavation of the Brouse prehistoric Indian site near Riverside is now under way. The work is being done by members of Mr. Solenberger's Field Archeology II class, primarily, but half a dozen members of the M.A.N. Club also dug at the site under Solenberger's supervision on Saturday, September 20. So far only a little worked flint has been found, but flint chips and hearth stones cracked and reddened by fire give promise of more finds to come. On the last two Thursdays, on account of rain, classes have been held indoors, which gave an opportunity for discussion of technical terms used in archeology, and for students to see and handle specimens of various types of stone artifacts and pottery. M.A.N. members, meaning any students interested in either Indian or historic archeology, are urged to contact Mr. Solenberger, at the Department of Philosophy and Anthropology office, if they are interested in further field trips, either for more digging at the Brouse site or in Saturday excursions to places of archeological or historical interest. Once or twice each month, Mr. Solenberger is accustomed to attend evening meetings of chapters of the Society for Pennsylvania Archeology, such as one in Williamsport on Monday, October 6, with slides on the Overpeck Site. He also plans to attend the convention of the Eastern States Archeological Federation at Albany, New York, October 31-November 2, 1980. Call him for details if interested. On the afternoon of Saturday, September 20, Mr. Solenberger attended the unveiling of a bronze plaque at the Montgomery House in Danville, showing that this 18th Century house is now on the National Register of historic properties. The house serves as the muset.nn of the Montour County Historical Society. At that time, Mr. Solenberger presented to the Society some Indian artifacts excavated by the BSC Archeology Project at the Creekmouth Site, Danville, during 1979.