Aché (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Aché" in English language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank English rank
1st place
1st place
2,187th place
1,500th place
339th place
388th place
8th place
10th place
3,745th place
2,365th place
20th place
30th place
low place
8,238th place

aeon.co

  • Manvir Singh (19 April 2022). "The idea of primitive communism is as seductive as it is wrong". Aeon. Archived from the original on April 19, 2022. The Aché had among the highest infanticide and child homicide rates ever reported. Of children born in the forest, 14 per cent of boys and 23 per cent of girls were killed before the age of 10, nearly all of them orphans. An infant who lost their mother during the first year of life was always killed.

asu.edu

ihhr.asu.edu

public.asu.edu

bbc.co.uk

bbc.com

democracynow.org

ethnologue.com

  • "Aché." Ethnologue. Retrieved 20 Dec 2011.

web.archive.org

  • Callegari-Jacques, Sidia M., Shaiane G. Crossetti, Fabiana B. Kohlrausch,1 Francisco M. Salzano, Luiza T. Tsuneto, Maria Luiza Petzl-Erler, Kim Hill, A. Magdalena Hurtado, and Mara H. Hutz. The Beta-Globin Gene Cluster Distribution Revisited—Patterns in Native American Populations. Archived September 10, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  • Hill, K., J. Padwe. (2000) Sustainability of Aché hunting in the Mbaracayu Reserve, Paraguay. In Sustainability of hunting in tropical forests, J. Robinson and E. Bennet, eds. pp. 79–105. New York: Columbia University Press.[1]
  • Hill, K., K. Hawkes, A. M. Hurtado, and H. Kaplan. (1984) Seasonal variance in the diet of Aché hunter-gatherers in eastern Paraguay. Human Ecology 12: 145-180.[2]
  • Hill, K., G. McMillan and Rosalia Farina. (2003). Changes in large vertebrate densities over a five year period in the Mbaracayu Reserve, Paraguay: hunting depletion or natural factors. Conservation Biology: 17: 1312–1323.[3]
  • Hill, K., and K. Hawkes. (1983) Neotropical hunting among the Aché of Eastern Paraguay. In Adaptive Responses of Native Amazonians, R. Hames and W. Vickers, eds., pp. 139–188. New York: Academic Press.[4]
  • Hawkes, K., K. Hill and J. O'Connell (1982). Why Hunters Gather: Optimal Foraging and the Aché of Eastern Paraguay. American Ethnologist (2):379-398.[5]
  • Hill, K. (1982). Hunting and Human Evolution. Journal of Human Evolution 11:521-544.[6]
  • Hawkes, K., J. O'Connell, K. Hill and E. Charnov (1985). How Much is Enough? Hunters and Limited Needs. Ethology and Sociobiology 6:3-16.[7]
  • Hill, K. (2002) Cooperative food acquisition by Aché foragers. Human Nature,.vol 13 (1): 105-128.[8]
  • Kaplan, H. and K. Hill (1985). Food Sharing Among Aché Foragers; Tests of Explanatory Hypotheses. Current Anthropology. 26 (2):223-245.[9]
  • Gurven, M., W. Allen Arave, K. Hill, M. Hurtado (2000). "'Its a wonderful life': Signaling generosity among the Aché of Paraguay". Evolution and Human Behavior, 21:263–82 [10]
  • Gurven, M., W. Allen Arave, K. Hill, A.M. Hurtado (2001). Reservation food sharing among the Aché of Paraguay. Human Nature 12 (4): 273-298.[11]
  • Manvir Singh (19 April 2022). "The idea of primitive communism is as seductive as it is wrong". Aeon. Archived from the original on April 19, 2022. The Aché had among the highest infanticide and child homicide rates ever reported. Of children born in the forest, 14 per cent of boys and 23 per cent of girls were killed before the age of 10, nearly all of them orphans. An infant who lost their mother during the first year of life was always killed.