Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
  • BVB  (9)
  • 2005-2009  (9)
  • 2008  (9)
  • Human Relations Area Files, Inc  (9)
  • NetLibrary, Inc
Datasource
Material
Language
Years
  • 2005-2009  (9)
Year
Subjects(RVK)
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New Haven, Conn : Human Relations Area Files, Inc
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Baseri tribe ; Basseri ; Basseri
    Abstract: In addition to a culture summary, the Basseri collection consists of two anthropological studies by Fredrik Barth. The first, published in 1961, is based on ethnographic materials collected in the period from December 1957 to July 1958 while the author was living with the Danbar tribal section of Basseri. The book describes and analyses Basseri social and economic organization in terms of a general ecological perspective. The focus is on the processes through which the Basseri organize nomadic herding and relate to one another as members of different households, herding units, camps, lineages (oulad) and tribal sections (tira). The second document, published in 1964, discusses the nature of Basseri pastoral economy and its implications for social structure. Together, these documents provide a first-hand account and analysis of Basseri economy and social organization, but contain little information on arts, language, medicine, death and afterlife. The Basseri are a pastoral nomadic people living around Shiraz, capital of the Iranian province of Fars, in land that stretches between deserts in the south to high mountain ranges in the north
    Note: Culture summary: Basseri - Teferi Abate Adem - 2009 -- - Nomads of South-Persia: the Basseri tribe of the Khamseh Confederacy - Frederik Barth - 1961 -- - Capital, investment and the social structure of a pastoral nomad group in south Persia - By Frederik Barth - 1969
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Comanche Indians ; Comanchen ; Comanchen
    Abstract: This collection of 16 documents and a culture summary provide a variety of cultural, historical and environmental information from two historical periods. The first covers the Comanche's long history from antiquity to their first contact with Europeans in 1701, to their defeat by the United States army in the 1870s. The second is from 1875 to the 1990s, and includes the Comanche's 1875 confinement to a reservation, and 1901-1906 when that reservation was broken into scattered allotments. All documents are in English except Canonge which includes stories and folktales in the Comanche language with English translations. The Comanche are a loosely organized Native American group who, before their confinement to reservations, occupied the southern Great Plains grasslands across southeastern Colorado, eastern New Mexico, western Oklahoma, and western Texas. The headquarters of the Comanche Nation is now in southwest Oklahoma
    Note: Culture summary: Comanche - Daniel J. Gelo and Teferi Abate Adem (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2009 -- - The political organization and law-ways of the Comanche Indians - E. Adamson Hoebel - 1940 -- - The Comanches: lords of the south Plains - Ernest Wallace and E. Adamson Hoebel - 1952 -- - Some notes on uses of plants by the Comanche Indians - Gustav G. Carlson and Volney H. Jones - 1939 -- - The Comanche Sun Dance - Ralph Linton - 1935 -- - The Comanche Sun Dance and Messianic Outbreak of 1873 - E. Adamson Hoebel - 1941 -- - Comanche kin behavior - Thomas Gladwin - 1948 -- - Comanche texts - Elliott Canonge ; illustrated by Katherine Voigtlander ; introduction by Morris Swadesh ; edited by Benjamin Elson - 1958 -- - Comanche baby language - Joseph Bartholomew Casagrande - 1965 -- - The Comanche on the white man's road - Ernest Wallace - 1953 -- , - Plains Indian law in development: the Comanche - Edward Adamson Hoebel - 1969 -- - Sanapia, Comanche medicine woman - David E. Jones - 1972 -- - Comanche - Thomas W. Kavanagh - 2001 -- - Bibliography - [edited by Raymond J. DeMallie] - 2001 -- - Being Comanche: a social history of an American Indian community - Morris W. Foster - 1991 -- - Comanche belief and ritual - By Daniel Joseph Gelo - 1986 [2006 copy]
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Tehuelche Indians--Folklore ; Tehuelche mythology ; Tehuelche Indians ; Tzoneca language--Glossaries, vocabularies, etc ; Patagonia--Description and travel ; Indians of South America--Costume ; ndians of South America--Patagonia (Argentina and Chile) ; Tehuelche ; Tehuelche
    Abstract: This collection about the Tehuelche consists of ten documents; eight in English and two in Spanish. The documents can be broadly categorized into three groups by time period and the information they cover. The first group consists of documents by a colonial administrator and a European explorer of Patagonia, and provide a first-hand account of Tehuelche society and culture, with particular emphasis on hunting methods, diet, warfare, social organization, inter-ethnic relations, religion, important ceremonies and the natural environment, prior to their forced encampment in reserves in the 1880s. The second group consists of documents by professional anthropologists who sought to recreate a picture of pre-conquest Tehuelche society by building on information by earlier writers. Topics covered by these documents include aspects of culture, territoriality and social structure, folklore, and mythology. The third group consists of just one book, but fills a critical gap by documenting the political and cultural processes that led to the gradual extinction of the Tehuelche beginning from their first contact with Europeans in 1520 to their final forced encampment in reserves in the 1880s. The Tehuelche were primarily hunter-gatherers living mostly in Patagonia, Argentina, and southern Chile
    Note: Culture summary: Tehuelche - Teferi Abate Adem - 2009 -- - The Patagonian and Pampean hunters - By John M. Cooper - 1946 -- - At home with the Patagonians - By George Chaworth Musters - 1873 -- - On the races of Patagonia - By George Chaworth Musters - 1872 -- - Polychrome Guanaco cloaks of Patagonia - by S.K. Lothrop - 1929 -- - Description of Patagonia - by Antonio De Viedma - 1837 -- - Folk literature of the Tehuelche Indians - Johannes Wilbert and Karin Simoneau, editors ; contributing authors, Maggiorino Borgatello ... [et al.] - 1984 -- - An ecological perspective of socioterritorial organization among the Teheulche in the ninteenth century - E. Glynn Williams - 1979 -- - extincion de un pueblo indigena de la Patagonia Argentina: los Tehuelches - Ana Fernández Garay - 1995 -- - Algunos personajes de la mitologia Tehuelche meridional - Alejandra Siffredi - 1968
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Rome--Social life and customs ; Rome (Italy)-- ; History--To 476 ; Rome (Italy)--History--To 476 ; Rome--History--Empire, 30 B.C.-476 A.D. ; Rome--Social conditions ; Rome--Economic conditions ; Rome--Civilization ; Rome--History--Sources ; Agriculture--Early works to 1800 ; Rome (Italy)--Industries ; Rome (Italy)--Commerce ; Graffito decoration ; Pompeii (Extinct city)--Social conditions ; Natural history--Pre-Linnean works ; Kultur ; Römisches Reich ; Römisches Reich ; Kultur
    Abstract: This collection of fifteen documents centers primarily on the city of Rome, and secondarily on the Roman Empire at the height of the imperial period. All documents are in English (and some are also in Latin). Most focus on the first century AD, particularly from the death of Augustus in 14 AD to the accession of Trajan in 98 AD, with less emphasis on the principate of Augustus itself and on the period of 99-192 AD. The most comprehensive studies for an overall understanding of Imperial Roman history and ethnography are: Carcopino, Rostovtsev, Lewis and Reinhold, and Pellisson. Both Carcopino and Pellisson are chiefly concerned with the daily life of the citizens of Rome, while Rostovtsev deals with the social and economic history of the empire, and Lewis and Reinhold with imperial policies and administration, economic life, society and culture, life in the municipalities and provinces, the Roman army, law, and religion (particularly with the rise and eventual triumph of Christianity). The works by Columella present one of the most comprehensive and systematic of all treatises by a Roman writer on agricultural affairs and animal husbandry. Loane presents a detailed study of the provisioning of the city of Rome (50 BC-200 AD), including data on various aspects of trade, manufacturing, and other associated commercial activities. Rivenburg gives an account of what Seneca thought about the fashionable life and manners of this day (i. e., 35-65 AD). Tanzier, an archaeologist, attempts to study the life of the common people of Pompeii as revealed through their graffiti, friezes, and wall paintings which were preserved in the ashes resulting from the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79 AD. The documents by Pliny the Elder are all from his Natural History, and deal with ethnometeorology and ethnogeography, ethnosociology, ethnopsychology and ethoanatomy, the medicinal use of plants, and a study of metals, minerals and a history of art
    Note: Culture summary: Imperial Romans - John Beierle - 2009 -- - Daily life in ancient Rome: the people and the city at the height of the empire - Jérôme Carcopino ; edited with bibliography and notes by Henry T. Rowell ; translated from the French by E. O. Lorimer - 1940 -- - The social and economic history of the Roman Empire - By M. Rostovtzeff - 1926 -- - Roman civilization: Sourcebook II : the empire - Edited and with an introduction and notes by Naphtali Lewis and Meyer Reinhold - 1966 -- - On agriculture: in three volumes : I. Res Rustica I-IV - Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella - 1960 -- - On agriculture: in three volumes : II. Res Rustica V-IX - Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella - 1968 -- - On agriculture and trees: in three volumes : III, Res Tustica X-XII, De Arboribus - Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella - 1968 -- , - Industry and commerce of the city of Rome (50 B.C. - 200 A.D.) - by Helen Jefferson Loane - 1938 -- - Fashionable life in Rome as protrayed by Seneca - [by] Marjorie Josephine Rivenburg - 1939 -- - The common people of Pompeii: a study of the graffiti - by Helen H. Tanzer - 1939 -- - Natural history in ten volumes: Volume I. Praefatio, Libri I, II - Pliny [Gaius Plinius Secundus] - 1967 -- - Natural history in ten volumes: Volume II. Libri III-VII - Pliny [Gaius Plinius Secundus] - 1969 -- - Natural history in ten volumes: Volume VI. Libri XX-XXIII - Pliny [Gaius Plinius Secundus] - 1969 -- - Natural history in ten volumes: Volume VII. Libri XXIV-XXVII - Pliny [Gaius Plinius Secundus] - 1966 -- - Natural history in ten volumes: Volume IX. Libri XXXIII-XXXV - Pliny [Gaius Plinius Secundus] - 1968 -- - Roman life in Pliny's time - by Maurice Pellison ; translated from the French by Maud Wilkinson ; with an introduction by Frank Justus Miller - 1897
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Burusho ; Hunzukuc ; Hunzukuc
    Abstract: This collection consists of 9 documents about the Burusho, a mountain people living primarily in the Hunza valley, but also in the Nagar and Yasin areas, and in the Gilgit district of the northern areas of Pakistan. All are in English except Lorimer, which provides both the original text in Burushaski and its translation into English. Four documents by David L. Lorimer, a British political agent who lived in Hunza from 1920 to 1924, and his wife, Emily O. Lorimer, focus on folklore, local traditions and linguistic issues. John Tobe's work tries to correct popular western views which wrongly regarded Hunza as a paradise where people live extraordinarily long healthy lifes. John Clark compliments Tobe's work by listing the many cases of disease which he encountered while maintaining a general dispensary in the area in 1948-1951. The remaining two documents discuss economy, ecology and social organization
    Note: Culture summary: Burusho - Hugh R. Page and Teferi Abate Adem - 2009 -- - The Burusho of Hunza - Emily Overend Lorimer - 1938 -- - Language hunting in the Karakoram - Emily Overend Lorimer - [1939] -- - The Burushaski language: Vol. 1, introduction and grammar - by D. L. R. Lorimer ; with preface by Georg Morgenstierne - 1935 -- - The Burushaski language: Vol. 2, texts and translations - by D. L. R. Lorimer - 1935 -- - Hunza: adventures in a land of paradise - John H. Tobe - 1960 -- - Hunza in the Himalayas: storied Shangri-La undergoes scrutiny - John Clark - 1963 -- - Subsistence, ecology, and social organisation among the Hunzakut: a high-mountain people in the Karakorams - M. H. Sidky - 1993 -- - Historical rivalry and religious boundaries in the Karakorum: the case of Nager and Hunza - Jürgen W. Frembgen - 1992
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Alltag, Brauchtum ; Ifaluk Atoll (Micronesia) ; Caroline Islands -- Social life and customs ; Micronesians -- Social life and customs ; Caroline Islands ; Ifalik Atoll (Micronesia) ; Art, Micronesian ; Folk songs, Micronesian--Micronesia (Federated States)--Ifalik Atoll ; Ethnology--Micronesia (Federated States)--Ifalik Atoll ; Folk music--Micronesia (Federated States)--Ifalik Atoll ; Lamotrek (Micronesia) ; Bevölkerung ; Woleai ; Woleai ; Bevölkerung
    Abstract: This collection of 28 documents about the peoples of the Woleai Region focuses primarily on the atoll of Ifaluk, and contains information on three time periods: the early 20th century, the late 1940s-mid-1950s, and the late 1980s to the early 1990s. The earliest information comes from travel reports by German explorers and missionaries who lived and worked in the region from 1904-1910; the other writings are by professional anthropologists. Together, the documents show that life in this region remains largely traditional, despite many years of administration by successive external powers. The Woleai Region is an administrative section of Yap State of the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). Woleai is the largest group of closely related atolls in the central and west-central Caroline Islands that also includes Eauripik, Ifaluk, Faraulep, Elato, and Lamotrek. Residents label themselves by means of a nominal prefixed to their particular island name, as in reweleya, which means "person of Woleai (nationality)" and speak dialects of Woleaian, a Micronesian language of the Eatern Oceanic Branch of Austronesian
    Note: The people of Ifalik: a little-disturbed atoll - Edwin Grant Burrows - [1949] -- - The Central Carolines: part II: Ifaluk, Aurepik, Faraulip, Sorol, Mog-Mog: part II: Ifaluk, Aurepik, Faraulip, Sorol, Mog-Mog - Hans Damm et al. - 1938 -- - Generalities: journal of the expedition - Georg Thilenius and F. E. Hellwig - 1927 -- - Culture summary: Woleai Region - William H. Alkire and John Beierle (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2009 -- - The Central Carolines: part I: the Lamotrek Group, Woleai - Augustin Friedrich Krámer - 1937 -- - Reminiscences of a trip to Russian America, Micronesia, and through Kamchatka - von F.H.v. Kittlitz ... - 1858 -- - The Caroline Islands of Woleai and Lamotrek - Arno Senfft - 1905 -- - Report of his visit to some island groups in the western Carolines - Arno Senfft - 1904 -- - Report of his circuit tour through the western Caroline and Palau Islands - Arno Senfft - 1906 -- , - Report of a trip to the western Carolines - Arno Senfft - 1904 -- - Some observations of an ethnographic nature concerning the Woleai Islands - Born - 1904 -- - A Typhoon in the western Carolines: the devastation of the Woleai Island Group - Born, et al. - 1907 -- - Meteorological observations from the German Protectorates of the South Seas for the year 1902 - 1903 -- - Amounts of precipitation in the Palau, Marianas, Caroline and Marshall Islands - 1904 -- - Results of rainfall measurements in the year 1906 - 1907 -- - Ifaluk: a South Sea culture - Melford E. Spiro - [1949] -- - A Psychotic personality in the South Seas - Melford E. Spiro - 1950 -- - Results of the meteorological observations in Herberts Deep - Wendland - 1905 -- - A new Pacific Ocean script - J. Macmillan Brown - 1914 -- - Coral Island: portrait of an atoll - [by] Marston Bates and Donald P. Abbott - [1958] -- - An atoll culture: ethnography of Ifaluk in the central Carolines - [by] Edwin G. Burrows and Melford E. Spiro - 1953 -- , - Flower in my ear: arts and ethos of Ifaluk Atoll - By Edwin G. Burrows - 1963 -- - The domain of emotion words on Ifaluk - Catherine Lutz - 1982 -- - Lamotrek Atoll and inter-island socioeconomic ties - [by] William H. Alkire - 1965 -- - The traditional classification and treatment of illness on Woleai and Lamotrek in the Caroline Islands, Micronesia - William H. Alkire - 1982 -- - Childcare on Ifaluk - Laura Betzig, Alisa Harrigan, Paul Turke - 1989 -- - Adoption by rank on Ifaluk - Laura L. Betzig - 1988 -- - Redistribution: equity or exploitation - Laura Betzig - 1988 -- - Ifaluk Atoll: an ethnographic account - Richard Sosis - 2005
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Semang (Malaysian people) ; Batek (Malaysian people) ; Batek (Malaysian people)--Religion ; Batek (Malaysian people)--Social conditions ; Batek (Malaysian people)--Government relations ; Batek (Malaysian people)--Politics and government ; Indigenous peoples--Ecology--Malaysia--Pahang ; Forest ecology--Malaysia--Pahang ; Forest degradation--Malaysia--Pahang ; Forest conservation--Malaysia--Pahang ; Pahang--Social conditions ; Pahang--Environmental conditions ; Semang ; Semang
    Abstract: This collection of six documents about the Semang covers four time periods: mid-1920s to late 1930s, mid-1950s, early 1970s, and 1993-1996. It documents the Semang's engagement with state and market forces over the degradation of the forests from which they take their identity and modes of life. At least nine distinct cultural-linguistic subgroups still exist: Kensiu of eastern Kedah (near Baling) and southern Thailand (Yala Province); Kintak of northwestern Perak (near Gerik); Jahai of northestern Perak and northwestern Kelantan; Lanòh of northwestern Perak (near Gerik); Mendriq of central Kelantan; Batèk D̀̀̀̀̀è' of southeastern Kelantan and northern Pahang; Batèk Nòng of central Pahang (near Jerantut); Mintil of north-central Pahang (near Cegar Perah); and Mos (or Chong) of the Pattalung-Trang area in southern peninsular Thailand. Semang live in temporary camps scattered in the forests of Malaysia, Indonesia and Southern Thailand
    Note: Culture summary: Semang - Kirk Endicott and Teferi Abate Adem (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2009 -- - The Negritos of Asia; vol. 2, ethnography of the Negritos: half-vol. 1, economy and sociology - Paul Schebesta - 1954 -- - The Negritos of Asia; vol. 2, ethnography of the Negritos: half-vol. 1, religion and mythology - Paul Schebesta - 1957 -- - A Lanoh Negrito funeral near Lenggong, Perak - P. D. R. Williams-Hunt - 1954 -- - Batek Negrito religion: the world-view and rituals of a hunting and gathering people of Peninsular Malaysia - Kirk Endicott - 1979 -- - Changing pathways: forest degradation and the Batek of Pahang, Malaysia - Lye Tuck-Po - 2004
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bambara (African people) ; Bambara ; Bambara
    Abstract: This collection of 12 documents is about the Bambara, a Mande-speaking people located primarily in Mali, West Africa. It covers information from two time periods: 1910-1950s and 1988-2003. Materials on the first period consist of four books translated from French. The earliest of these books are by a French Roman Catholic missionary, Henry, and a colonial administrator, Monteil, who lived among the Bambara from around 1900 to 1923. Henry discusses Bambara psychology and religion through broader explorations into their ideas on human life, taboos, animism, cults, sacrifices, and ceremonials relating to circumcision, marriage and funerals, while Monteil focuses on history and administrative practices with particular emphasis on functions of age-groups, religious cults, secret societies and territorial lineages. Both authors occasionally characterize the Bambara using strongly negative stereotypes that seem highly colored by their own respective religious and political views. Comprehensive ethnographic information on Bambara culture and society can be found in the remaining two books, Dieterlen and Paques. Both authors are professional French ethnographers with extensive field work experience in the region. Materials on the second period focus on Bambara economy and household dynamics. Toulmin and Becker (1996) discuss the constraints and opportunities different household heads encounter in attempting to enhance their access to key productive resources (land, labor and capital in the form of cattle and cash). Wooten, Becker (2000) and Grosz Ngate examine the impacts of increasing commoditization of rural economy on household food security, gender and intra-household relations
    Note: Culture summary: Bambara - Teferi Abate Adem - 2009 -- - An essay on the religion of the Bambara - Germaine Dieterlen ; préf. de Marcel Griaule - 1951 -- - The Bambara of Ségou and Kaarta: an historical, ethnographical and literary study of a people of the French Sudan - Charles Monteil - 1924 -- - The Bambara - Viviana Paques - 1954 -- - The Soul of an African people: The Bambara: their psychic, ethical, religious and social life - Joseph Henry - 1910 -- - Women, men, and market gardens: gender relations and income generation in rural Mali - Stephen Wooten - 2003 -- - Access to laobr in rural Mali - Laurence C. Becker - 1996 -- - Garden money buys grain: food procurement patterns in a Malian village - Laurence C. Becker - 2000 -- - Hidden meanings: explorations into a Bamanan construction of gender - Maria Grosz-Ngaté - 1989 -- , - Monetization of bridewealth and the abandonment of 'kin roads' to marriage in Sana, Mali - Maria Grosz-Ngaté - 1988 -- - Cattle, women, and wells: managing household survival in the Sahel - Camilla Toulmin - 1992
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Siriono Indians ; Siriono Indians--Cultural assimilation ; Indians of South America--Bolivia--Cultural assimilation ; Sirionó ; Sirionó
    Abstract: This collection about the Sirionó consists of five English language documents plus a culture summary, covering a time span from approximately 1900 to 1984. The Holmberg and Stearman studies are the basic works providing a broad general coverage of Sirionó ethnography. Holmberg is the classic study of the Sirionó based on his fieldwork among these people in 1940-1941. Stearman is largely a review of Holmberg's fieldwork with an update of ethnographic material to about 1984. She describes the affects of acculturation on the Sirionó since Holmberg's visit, and provides additional data on the general economy. Material culture is described and illustrated in Ryden and in Radwan. Radwan also presents some brief comments on general ethnography and on contacts with missionaries. The Sirionó inhabit an extensive tropical forest in northern and eastern Bolivia
    Note: Culture summary: Siriono - Mario Califano (translated by Ruth Gubler) and John Beierle (synopsis and indexing notes) - 2009 -- - Nomads of the long bow: the Siriono of eastern Bolivia - By Allan R. Holmberg ; prepared in cooperation with the U.S. Dept. of State as a project of the Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific and Cultural Cooperation - 1950 -- - The Siriono: a study of the effect of hunger frustration on the culture of a semi-nomadic Bolivian Indian society - Allan R. Holmberg - [1946] -- - A Study of the Siriono Indians - Stig Rydén - 1941 -- - Information about the Siriono Indians - Eduard Radwan - 1928 -- - No longer nomads: the Sirionó revisited - by Allyn MacLean Stearman - 1987 -- - Figures - Stig Rydén - 1941 -- - Illustrations: Information about the Siriono Indians - Eduard Radwan - 1928
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...