54 results on '"Bebber, Michelle R."'
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2. Experimental bison butchery using replica hafted Clovis fluted points and large handheld flakes
3. Hit or miss: Do microscopic linear impact traces (MLITs) form on Clovis stone tips launched via atlatl into foliage and sediment?
4. Identifying accurate artefact morphological ranges using optimal linear estimation: Method validation, case studies, and code
5. Clovis bone versus stone weapon tip penetration: Thinking about relative costs and benefits, experimental assumptions, and archaeological unknowns at Sheriden Cave, Ohio, U.S.A
6. Hafted technologies likely reduced stone tool-related selective pressures acting on the hominin hand
7. Atlatl use equalizes female and male projectile weapon velocity
8. The Injury Costs of Knapping
9. Comparison of four ballistic and thrusting target materials: An experimental and Bayesian approach using static testing of stone and steel arrow tips
10. Antarctica as a ‘natural laboratory’ for the critical assessment of the archaeological validity of early stone tool sites
11. North American Clovis Point Form and Performance IV: An Experimental Assessment of Knife Edge Effectiveness and Wear
12. On the evolution of limestone-tempered pottery in the American Midwest: an experimental assessment of vessel weight and its relationship to other functional/mechanical properties
13. Description, Morphometrics, and Microwear of Two Paleoindian Fluted Points from Nebraska and Illinois
14. Not just for proboscidean hunting: On the efficacy and functions of Clovis fluted points
15. Relative Heating Effectiveness and the Decline of the Soapstone Cooking Vessel in Eastern North America
16. Experimental assessment of obsidian versus chert lanceolate projectile point durability and robusticity: Semi‐static fracture strength and dynamic impact
17. Refining the chronology of North America’s copper using traditions: A macroscalar approach via Bayesian modeling
18. The Mielke Clovis Site (33SH26), Western Ohio, USA, Geochemical Sourcing, Technological Descriptions, Artifact Morphometrics, and Microwear
19. Optimal Linear Estimation (OLE) Modeling Supports Early Holocene (9000–8000 RCYBP) Copper Tool Production in North America – CORRIGENDUM
20. Plains Paleoindian Projectile Point Penetration Potential
21. Another tool in the experimental toolbox: On the use of aluminum as a substitute for chert in North American prehistoric ballistics research and beyond
22. Knapping quality of local versus exotic Upper Mercer chert (Ohio, USA) during the Holocene
23. Optimal Linear Estimation (OLE) Modeling Supports Early Holocene (9000–8000 RCYBP) Copper Tool Production in North America
24. Current Evidence Supports Welling as an Outcrop-Related Base Camp
25. On the efficacy of Clovis fluted points for hunting proboscideans
26. Current Evidence Does Not Support a Hopewell Age, Provenience, or Affiliation for the Figurine Allegedly from Hopeton Earthworks or the Hopewell Mound Group
27. The Nelson stone tool cache, North-Central Ohio, U.S.A.: Assessing its cultural affiliation
28. North American Clovis Point Form and Performance II: An Experimental Assessment of Point, Haft, and Shaft Durability
29. Experimental assessment of Neo-Assyrian bronze arrowhead penetration: An initial study comparing bilobate versus trilobate morphologies
30. Validating chronograph photo sensor measurement accuracy of stone-tipped projectile velocity
31. The Role of Functional Efficiency in the Decline of North America’s Copper Culture (8000–3000 BP): an Experimental, Ecological, and Evolutionary Approach
32. Antelope Springs: A Folsom Site in South Park, Colorado
33. Description, Geometric Morphometrics, and Microwear of Five Clovis Fluted Projectile Points from Lucas and Wood Counties, Northwest Ohio, USA
34. Human behavior or taphonomy? On the breakage of Eastern North American Paleoindian endscrapers
35. The non-invention of the ceramic arrowhead in world archaeology
36. Miniaturization optimized weapon killing power during the social stress of late pre-contact North America (AD 600-1600)
37. The Effect of Heat on Lithic Microwear Traces: An Experimental Assessment
38. Experimental replication shows knives manufactured from frozen human feces do not work
39. Temper and temperament of prehistoric craft: Temper type evolution and clay body 'workability'
40. Controlled experiments support the role of function in the evolution of the North American copper tool repertoire
41. The Cerutti Mastodon site and experimental archaeology's quiet coming of age
42. The exceptional abandonment of metal tools by North American hunter-gatherers, 3000 B.P.
43. Nine-thousand years of optimal toolstone selection through the North American Holocene
44. The Black Diamond Site, Northeast Ohio, USA: a New Clovis Occupation in a Proposed Secondary Staging Area
45. Toward Recognizing the Prehistoric Butchery of Frozen Meat: An Archaeological Experiment and Stone Tool Microwear Analysis
46. Toward a functional understanding of the North American Old Copper Culture “technomic devolution”
47. Invention or diffusion: on the appearance of limestone temper in the late Holocene archeological record of southern Ohio, USA
48. Description, morphometrics, and microwear of Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene artifacts from Southwestern Kentucky, U.S.A.
49. Description and Thermoluminescence (Tl) Dating of An Alleged Hopewell Mobiliary Clay Human Figurine from Hopeton Earthworks, Ross County, Ohio
50. Hunter-gatherer gatherings: stone-tool microwear from the Welling Site (33-Co-2), Ohio, U.S.A. supports Clovis use of outcrop-related base camps during the Pleistocene Peopling of the Americas
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