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  1. 3 mar 2018 · Here, we statistically explore the influence of river networks on patterns of inter-community material culture variation by utilizing spatial, linguistic, and material culture data from linguistically diverse peoples of the Upper Amazon region, using an ethnographic dataset recorded during the early twentieth century.

  2. 4 wrz 2019 · The cases described in this paper illustrate opportunities for the adaptation of existing environmental flow methodologies to achieve greater consideration of river-human relationships, but also underscore the relevance of new approaches that use social and cultural perspectives for framing sustainable ways of living with rivers that can ...

  3. 22 wrz 2021 · This chapter recasts the question asked by aquatic ecologists and hydrologists—How much water does a river need?—to assist the environmental water management sector to better appreciate the social and cultural complexity of human relationships with water.

  4. 15 sty 2017 · By social connectivity we refer to the communication and movement of people, goods, ideas, and culture along and across rivers, recognizing longitudinal, lateral, and vertical connectivity, much as has been described for other rivers for hydrology and ecology.

  5. 31 sie 2019 · As this quote reveals, rivers and their waters mediate social relationships through belief systems, cultural identity, institutions, knowledge and technology (Figure 1).

  6. 5 lip 2022 · From the perspective of supporting the stability of Earth's systems and the development of human civilization, rivers have five attributes: ecological, environmental, resource, social, and economic attributes.

  7. 31 sie 2015 · Two meta-analytical models of culture underline the concept of acculturation, that is, the assimilation of the cultural traits of another society (Kmite, 2011; Sam, 1994). They refer to three processes of socialization, two frameworks of analysis, and three theories of thinking.