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Murfin, Brian – Science Teacher, 1998
The Inuit subsist on a diet of virtually all meat and fat yet avoid deficiency and heart diseases. Explains this paradox and discusses cultural and geographic influences on diet. The Inuit diet is compared with a typical American diet and the diet recommended by the U.S. Department of Agriculture in a laboratory exercise that measures dietary fat.…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, Cultural Context, Eating Habits, Eskimos

Smith, Walter S. – Science Teacher, 1998
On the Fajada Butte in New Mexico, 11th-century Anasazi constructed a site that marks the high and low points of the orbits of the sun and the moon. This unit on astronomy challenges students to think differently about the moon and about the ability of native people to understand the natural world. Includes resources for further study. (PVD)
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, Astronomy, Consciousness Raising, Epistemology

O'Keefe, William A.; Joe, Jimson – Science Teacher, 1998
Spiders and insects are studied in both Navajo Studies and science classes at a middle school in New Mexico. In Navajo Studies, students learn the names of ground-dwelling insects and the connection between those names and traditional Navajo stories. In science class, students study arthropods to illustrate taxonomy of life, trophic and biological…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, Entomology, Field Studies, Interdisciplinary Approach