Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Kroeber said that, according to most anthropometrists, the Eskimo is the most particularized sub-variety out of the American Mongoloids. Kroeber said that in the East Indies, and in particular the Philippines , there can at times be distinguished a less specifically Mongoloid strain, which has been called the " Proto- Malaysian," and a more ...
Total population; c. 10 million Regions with significant populations China 6,290,204 Mongolia 3,046,882 [1] Russia 651,355 [2] South Korea 37,963 [3] Japan 20,416 [4] United States
The Mongolic peoples are a collection of East Asian-originated ethnic groups in East, North, South Asia and Eastern Europe, who speak Mongolic languages.Their ancestors are referred to as Proto-Mongols.
Proto-Mongoloid is an outdated racial classification of human beings based on a now-disproven theory of biological race. [1] [2] [3] In anthropological theories of the 19th and 20th centuries, proto-Mongoloids were seen as the ancestors of the Mongoloid race.
The Denver metropolitan area was one of the early focal points for the new wave of Mongolian immigrants. [6] Other communities formed by recent Mongolian immigrants include ones in Chicago, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C. [3] The largest Mongolian-American community in the United States is located in Los Angeles, California.
The proto-Mongols emerged from an area that had been inhabited by humans as far back as 45,000 years ago during the Upper Paleolithic. [1] The people there went through the Bronze and Iron Ages, forming tribal alliances, peopling, and coming into conflict with early polities in the Central Plain.
Arawashi Tsuyoshi (b. 1986), professional sumo wrestler who won three kinboshi or gold stars for defeating a yokozuna, maegashira 2.; Asasekiryū Tarō (b. 1983), sumo professional wrestler, sekiwake.
Ryuta Hamada, Shintaro Kondo and Eizo Wakatsuki (1997) said, on the basis of dental traits, that Mongoloids are separated into sinodonts and sundadonts, which is supported by Christy G. Turner II (1989). [7] [8]