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
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An elderly Kwaio woman, her woven 'purse' over her head, wearing shell earringsUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Solomon Islands
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People around a buildingUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Solomon Islands
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Laete'eboo counting a spell with evodia over pork, in front of men's houseUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Solomon Islands
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Beach sceneUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Solomon Islands
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Skull inside of shrine made of coral slabs with shell ring offeringsUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Solomon Islands
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Nene'au So'ogeni making lalefui'olanga string figuresUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Solomon Islands
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Canoeing on a riverUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Solomon Islands
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Kaakabi "bush apples". CloseupUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Solomon Islands
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John C. Sclater and Edward Crisp Bullard at cocktail party, Grand Pacific Hotel, Suva, Fiji. Nova Expedition, July 12, 1967UC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage
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Man with necklaceUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Solomon Islands
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People in a gardenUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Solomon Islands
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A sacrificial pig is singed in a shrine--the ancestors get the smoke, and sometimes pig bristles or a piece of skinUC San Diego, Special Collections and ArchivesImage Solomon Islands
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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.