Concept cluster: Biology > Biology and anthropology
n
A proponent of abiogenesis.
adj
Of or pertaining to an agonothete.
n
The comparative study of primitive, illiterate or "savage" cultures.
n
(rare) One who believes that microorganisms cause disease.
adj
Relating to anthracology.
adj
bioanthropological
n
(ecology) An anthropogenic biome (human-generated vegetation type)
adj
(geology) Relating to the Anthropocene
n
The scientific study of the relationship between human beings and the climate.
adj
(anthropology) Relating to anthropogeography
adj
(anthropology) Of or relating to anthropogeography.
n
One who studies anthropolinguistics.
n
A theologian of anthropology.
n
A practitioner of anthropometry
n
(biology) The study of human morphology.
n
Alternative form of anthropophilia [The condition of being anthropophilic]
n
(soil science) A soil that has been influenced by human cultivation
n
(dated, rare) The sum of knowledge regarding the human body, comprehending anatomy, physiology, pathology, etc.
adj
Relating to anthropotechnics.
adj
Pertaining to anthropotomy, or the dissection of human bodies.
n
One who is versed in anthropotomy, or human anatomy.
adj
Relating to archaeomusicology.
n
Alternative form of archaeolatry [Worship of an antiquity; excessive veneration of antiquity.]
adj
(urban studies) Of or pertaining to arcology.
n
Synonym of xenoarchitecture
n
(ecology) The five major extinction events since the beginning of life on Earth.
adj
Of or relating to bioanthropology.
n
Any anthropologist whose speciality is bioanthropology.
n
biological anthropology
n
A region that is the habitat of wild species.
n
(anthropology) A measure of the biological relatedness of historical or prehistoric groups of humans
n
The belief that naturally-defined regions (bioregions or ecoregions) should be the basis of political or cultural identity
n
A proponent of bioregionalism.
n
A person who does not believe climate change is happening or does not believe it is caused by human activity.
n
Alternative spelling of cosmogonist [a person who studies cosmogony]
n
(biology) The intentional spreading of life through space, in order to colonize distant worlds and create new biospheres
adj
Relating to, or characteristic of an ecofact
n
environmental history
n
One who studies ecolinguistics.
n
One who studies ecotheory.
n
(dated) ethnologist
n
The study of the relationship between birds and people.
n
One who studies ethnosociology.
adj
Relating to Etruscology.
n
A scientist working in the field of evolutionary biology.
adj
Of or relating to flamencology.
n
(ecology) The ecological impact of a human activity, machine, etc.
n
Clipping of refugium. [Any local environment that has escaped regional ecological change and therefore provides a habitat for endangered species.]
adj
Relating to geomyths or geomythology.
adj
Relating to a gnomonology.
n
(countable, biology) A place or type of site where an organism or population naturally occurs.
n
One who studies or researches history.
adj
Of or relating to August Kekulé (1829–1896), German organic chemist, the principal founder of the theory of chemical structure.
n
A person who studies games.
adj
Of or relating to a luxon or luxons.
n
Someone who studies macroevolution.
n
A historian in the field of microhistory.
n
The hypothesis that humans first arose near the beginning of the Pleistocene, two million years ago, and subsequent human evolution has been within a single, continuous human species.
adj
Alternative form of neotropical [(biology) Occurring in tropical America, i.e. the tropics of the New World.]
adj
(biology) Occurring in tropical America, i.e. the tropics of the New World.
n
A proponent of the theory of nomogeny.
n
(attributive) A model of the geographic origin and early migration of hominins (Out of Africa I) and modern humans (Homo sapiens) (Out of Africa II) that posits ancient dispersal across the globe from an origin in southern Africa.
adj
Of or relating to pantology.
adj
Relating to phylodemography
adj
Relating to the effects of plants on human populations
n
An economist who studies plutonomy.
n
(informal, evolutionary theory) The state of the Earth's oceans at a very early time in the planet's history, during the early development of multicellular organisms.
adj
Of or pertaining to psychogeography.
v
To be introduced into an ecosystem through natural processes, as opposed to deliberate introduction by people.
n
One who studies socioanthropology.
n
Someone who studies structural anthropology.
adj
Relating to Thracology.
adj
Of or relating to Alfred Wegener or his theory of continental drift.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
 Reverse Dictionary / Thesaurus   Datamuse   Word games   Spruce   Feedback   Dark mode   Random word   Help


Color thesaurus

Use OneLook to find colors for words and words for colors

See an example

Literary notes

Use OneLook to learn how words are used by great writers

See an example

Threepeat

What percentile can you get today?

Play Now

Read the latest OneLook newsletter issue: Compound Your Joy


Today's secret word is 10 letters and means "Make invalid; render null, void." Can you find it?