Folk Knowledge in Southern Siberia in the 1770s: Johan Peter Falck’s Ethnobiological Observations
The southern Siberian Turkic groups were mostly unknown to outsiders when the Swedish scientist Johan Peter Falck (1732–1774) visited their settlements in the early 1770s. Falck led one of the expeditions dispatched between 1768 and 1774 by the Russian Academy of Sciences to different parts of the R...
Main Authors: | Sabira Ståhlberg, Ingvar Svanberg |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Finnish Oriental Society
2021-09-01
|
Series: | Studia Orientalia Electronica |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://journal.fi/store/article/view/95535 |
Similar Items
-
Integrating depth and rigor in ethnobiological and ethnomedical research
by: Ulysses Paulino Albuquerque, et al.
Published: (2024-01-01) -
Beyond productivity: The socio-cultural role of fishing among the Baka of southeastern Cameroon
by: Sandrine Gallois, et al.
Published: (2016-12-01) -
Making the most of scarce biological resources in the desert: Loptuq material culture in Eastern Turkestan around 1900
by: Patrick Hällzon, et al.
Published: (2024-02-01) -
The use of wild plants as food in pre-industrial Sweden
by: Ingvar Svanberg
Published: (2012-12-01) -
Mushroom hunting and consumption in twenty-first century post-industrial Sweden
by: Ingvar Svanberg, et al.
Published: (2019-08-01)