Jenks, Albert Ernest, 1869-1953
URI(s)
Additional Information
Birth Date
- 1869-11-28
Death Date
- 1953
Has Affiliation
- Affiliation Start: 1918
- Affiliation End: 1936
- Organization: University of Minnesota. Department of Anthropology
Birth Place
- Ionia (Mich.)
Associated Language
- English
Field of Activity
Anthropology
Occupation
Author
Anthropologist
Professor
Exact Matching Concepts from Other Schemes
Closely Matching Concepts from Other Schemes
Sources
- found: His Pleistocene man in Minnesota, 1936:t.p. (Albert Ernest Jenks)
- found: LC in OCLC, 4/13/87(hdg.: Jenks, Albert Ernest, 1869-1953)
- found: His The childhood of Ji-shib́, the Ojibwa, 1900:title-page (by Albert Ernest Jenks, with illustrations by the author) words to the reader (signed Albert Ernest Jenks, Madison, Wisconsin)
- found: Wikipedia, July 14 2015(heading: Albert Jenks; Albert Ernest Jenks (1869-1953); American anthropologist and a professor at the University of Minnesota; born Nov 28, 1869, Ionia, Michigan; died 1953; fields: economics, sociology, anthropology; known for his work in historical anthropological studies on rice cultivation, the development of hominids, and his identification of the skeletal remains of Minnesota Woman, 8,000-year old human remains found near Pelican Rapids, Minnesota; joined the United States Bureau of Ethnology in 1901 and served in the U.S. colonial government of the Philippines from 1902 to 1905; involved in the exhibition of Bontoc Igorot people at the 1904 Louisiana Universal Exposition in St. Louis; joined the faculty of the University of Minnesota in 1906; In 1918, he was a founder of the Department of Anthropology at the University of Minnesota and he served as the chair of that department until his retirement in 1936) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Jenks
Instance Of
Scheme Membership(s)
Collection Membership(s)
Change Notes
- 1987-05-12: new
- 2015-07-15: revised
Alternate Formats