UC San Diego, Special Collections and Archives
We maintain the Tuzin Archive for Melanesian Anthropology, a repository of research materials created by anthropologists & other scholars documenting the cultures of the
southwest Pacific Islands.
Showing 9860 items from UC San Diego, Special Collections and Archives
Filter by
-
House-building for Rappaports: x-shaped supports being added behind palm left sidingUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Papua New Guinea
-
Copra being dried, Admiralty IslandsUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Papua New Guinea
-
Pig festival, singsing preparations, Tsembaga: young dancers in grass bustles and shell valuables singUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Papua New Guinea
-
Pig festival, singsing: Tuguma men in feather headdresses at dance groundUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Papua New Guinea
-
People in houses on stilts over waterUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Papua New Guinea
-
Buildings and bots at the shore, distant viewUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Papua New Guinea
-
Tsembaga man with shell necklaceUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Papua New Guinea
-
Aiome area: garden and large tree trunk, JamenkeUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Papua New Guinea
-
Cassowary being fedUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Papua New Guinea
-
Government-sponsored festival in Tabibuga: luluais in line, large crowd behindUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Papua New Guinea
-
Tabibuga, teacher's houseUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Papua New Guinea
-
Ritual exchange: people with pork and other food itemsUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Papua New Guinea
Results per page
UC San Diego, Special Collections and Archives
Welcome and warm Pasifik greetings
The information on this site has been gathered from our content partners.
The names, terms, and labels that we present on the site may contain images or voices of deceased persons and may also reflect the bias, norms, and perspective of the period of time in which they were created. We accept that these may not be appropriate today.
If you have any concerns or questions about an item, please contact us.