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27 results on '"Rick TC"'

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1. Archaeogenomic analysis of Chesapeake Atlantic sturgeon illustrates shaping of its populations in recovery from severe overexploitation.

2. Indigenous oyster fisheries persisted for millennia and should inform future management.

3. People have shaped most of terrestrial nature for at least 12,000 years.

4. Archaeological mitogenomes illuminate the historical ecology of sea otters ( Enhydra lutris ) and the viability of reintroduction.

5. Maritime Paleoindian technology, subsistence, and ecology at an ~11,700 year old Paleocoastal site on California's Northern Channel Islands, USA.

6. Biogeographic problem-solving reveals the Late Pleistocene translocation of a short-faced bear to the California Channel Islands.

7. Leveraging legacy archaeological collections as proxies for climate and environmental research.

8. Archaeology, climate, and global change in the Age of Humans.

9. Collagen Fingerprinting and the Earliest Marine Mammal Hunting in North America.

11. Finding the first Americans.

12. Equipping the 22nd-Century Historical Ecologist.

13. δ 15 N Values in Crassostrea virginica Shells Provides Early Direct Evidence for Nitrogen Loading to Chesapeake Bay.

14. Historical ecology and the conservation of large, hermaphroditic fishes in Pacific Coast kelp forest ecosystems.

15. Ecce Homo: Science and Society Need Anthropological Collections.

16. Millennial-scale sustainability of the Chesapeake Bay Native American oyster fishery.

17. Adaptive divergence despite strong genetic drift: genomic analysis of the evolutionary mechanisms causing genetic differentiation in the island fox (Urocyon littoralis).

18. Conservation archaeogenomics: ancient DNA and biodiversity in the Anthropocene.

19. Mitochondrial genomes suggest rapid evolution of dwarf California Channel Islands foxes (Urocyon littoralis).

20. From forest fires to fisheries management: anthropology, conservation biology, and historical ecology.

21. Integrating paleobiology, archeology, and history to inform biological conservation.

22. Paleoindian seafaring, maritime technologies, and coastal foraging on California's Channel Islands.

23. Pleistocene to historic shifts in bald eagle diets on the Channel Islands, California.

24. Archaeology meets marine ecology: the antiquity of maritime cultures and human impacts on marine fisheries and ecosystems.

25. Anthropology. Coastal exploitation.

26. Fishing from past to present: continuity and resilience of red abalone fisheries on the Channel Islands, California.

27. Paleocoastal marine fishing on the Pacific Coast of the Americas: perspectives from Daisy Cave, California.

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