Name Sherburne Cook | ||
Awards Guggenheim Fellowship for Social Sciences, US & Canada People also search for Robert Heizer, Lesley Byrd Simpson, Adan Eduardo Treganza Books Essays in population history: M, The Aboriginal Populatio, Colonial Expeditions to the Inte, quantitative investigation of Indian, The Fossilization of Human | ||
Sherburne Friend Cook was a physiologist by training, and served as professor and chairman of the department of physiology at the University of California, Berkeley. He was also a noted pioneer in population studies of the native peoples of North America and Mesoamerica and in field methods and quantitative analysis in archaeology.
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Cook studied at Harvard University and served in France during World War I. He completed his Ph.D. thesis, The Toxicity of the Heavy Metals in Relation to Respiration, in 1925. He taught physiology at Berkeley from 1928 until his retirement in 1966.
Cook repeatedly returned to the problems of estimating the pre-Columbian populations of California, Mexico, and other regions, and of tracing the rate and reasons for their subsequent decline. He often arrived at higher figures for pre-contact populations than had previous scholars, and his work has not escaped criticism within this controversial field (e.g., W. Michael Mathes 2005).