| Geoffrey M. Horn - Juvenile Nonfiction - 2004 - 54 pages
Examines the life and work of the woman who became one of the twentieth-century's most respected and foremost anthropologists through her studies of various peoples and ... | |
| Rafael Tilton - Biography & Autobiography - 1994 - 120 pages
A biography of the woman whose studies of primitive cultures established her as one of the world's most acclaimed anthropologists. | |
| Phyllis Grosskurth - Anthropologists - 1988 - 122 pages
An absorbing, incisive biography of world-famous anthropologist Margaret Mead, detailing her life from her childhood in Philadelphia to her research in Samoa and New Guinea and ... | |
| Joan Mark - Juvenile Nonfiction - 1999 - 112 pages
The American anthropologist Margaret Mead (1901-1978) was barely 24 years old when she left New York to study the natives of Samoa, New Guinea, and other remote Pacific islands ... | |
| Susan Saunders - Anthropologists - 2015 - 98 pages
Examines the life of the pioneer anthropologist who popularized the field and used her ideas to promote world unity and peace. | |
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