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Author Arlon, Penelope.

Title How people live / [written and researched by Penelope Arlon, Lorrie Mack, Zahavit Shalev ; Dena Freeman, chief consultant and Africa .. [and others]]..

Publication Info. London ; New York : DK Pub., 2003.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Avon Free Public Library - Children's Department  J 305.8 HOW    Check Shelf
 Cheshire Public Library - Children's Department  J 306.08 HOW    Check Shelf
 Glastonbury, Welles-Turner Memorial Library - Reference Material  REF 306.08 HOW    In-Library Use Only
 Granby, Main Library - Children's Room  J306 ARL    Check Shelf
 Mansfield, Main Library - Juvenile Nonfiction  J 306 ARLON    Check Shelf
 Windsor, Main Library - Children's Department  J305.8 AR    Check Shelf
Edition First American edition.
Description 304 pages : color illustrations, color maps ; 29 cm
Note Includes index.
Contents World map -- Global Village -- Earth at night -- People and culture -- Migration -- North and Central America -- South America -- Africa -- Europe -- Asia -- Pacific and Australia -- Index -- Acknowledgments.
Summary Describes different parts of the world and how people live in each, from the Eskimos and Inuit of the Arctic to the Amish and Maya of North America and the Asante and Zulu of Africa. How People Live combines the appeal of a fascinating collection of stories with the educational qualities of a reference book. Focusing on the daily lives, customs, languages, and religions of peoples from around the world, we look at the fundamental similarities of all peoples, and the extraordinary traditions that make each culture unique. Maasai cattle herders often open a vein in one of their cows, drink some nutritious blood, and seal it up again. A Russian custom involves dunking children into icy cold water in order to make them hardy and immune to illnesses. Knitting is an important craft tradition for the people of Taquile Island in Lake Titicaca -- but only the men know how to do it. Kazakh horsemen play kokpar, a version of polo, using a headless sheep's or goat's carcass instead of a ball. The people of the Pacific's Yap islands use the world's largest coins, round chunks of stone that can be up to 12 feet (3.5 meters) tall.
Subject Ethnology -- Juvenile literature.
Human geography -- Juvenile literature.
Ethnology.
Human geography.
Added Author Mack, Lorrie.
Shalev, Zahavit.
ISBN 0789498677 hardcover
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