daabasics.blogg.se

First Farmers by Peter Bellwood
First Farmers by Peter Bellwood




First Farmers by Peter Bellwood

Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.Ĭhamberlain, A. Renfrew eds, Examining the Farming/Language Dispersal Hypothesis, pp. Demic diffusion as the basic process of human expansions. American Journal of Human Biology 16:440–51.Ĭavalli-Sforza, L.L. The questionable contribution of the Neolithic and the Bronze Age to European craniofacial form. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology.īrace, L., Seguchi, N., Quintyn, C., Fox, S., Nelson, A.R., Manolis, S, and Pan Qifeng 2006. Matthews eds, Vegeculture in Eastern Asia and Oceania, pp. Intensification of food production and land use in Papua New Guinea. Current Anthropology 47:341–65.īourke, M. Testing the hypothesis of a worldwide Neolithic demographic transition: corroboration from American cemeteries. Current Anthropology 43:637–49.īocquet-Appel, J-P. Palaeoanthropological traces of a Neolithic demographic transition. Berkeley: University of California Press.īocquet-Appel, J-P. Berkeley: University of California Press.īinford, L. Winterhalder (eds), Behavioral Ecology and the Transition to Agriculture, pp. Agriculture, archaeology, and human behavioral ecology. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.īettinger, R. Examining the Farming/Language Dispersal Hypothesis. Journal of Austronesian Studies 1:1–33.īellwood, P. The Batanes Archaeological Project and the “Out of Taiwan” hypothesis for Austronesian dispersal. Annual Review of Anthropology 30:181–207.īellwood, P. Early agriculturalist population diasporas? Farming, languages and genes. Current Anthropology 46:S109–14.īellwood, P. New World settlement evidence for a two-stage Neolithic demographic transition. American Journal of Human Genetics 75:338–45.īandy, M. A predominantly Neolithic origin for Y-chromosomal DNA variation in North Africa.






First Farmers by Peter Bellwood