Search

Your search keyword '"Centre for Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology (ZBSA)"' showing total 19 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Centre for Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology (ZBSA)" Remove constraint Author: "Centre for Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology (ZBSA)"
19 results on '"Centre for Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology (ZBSA)"'

Search Results

1. New AMS 14C dates track the arrival and spread of broomcorn millet cultivation and agricultural change in prehistoric Europe

2. En Mouvement / On the Move / In BewegungMobilités des hommes, des objets et des idées pendant le Paléolithique supérieur européenMobility of people, objects and ideas during the European Upper PaleolithicMobilität von Menschen, Objekten und Ideen im europäischen Jungpaläolithikum

3. Antler tool’s biography shortens time frame of Lyngby-axes to the last stage of the Late Glacial

4. From the Atlantic to Beyond the Bug River Finding and Defining the Federmesser-Gruppen / Azilian

5. From one camp to another. First results of a comparative techno-economic analysis of the Federmesser-Gruppen lithic industries from the Central Rhineland

6. Towards a reconstruction of the techno-economic variability of the Ahrensburgian in Schleswig-Holstein

7. Preliminary technological observations on the ‘Lyngby axes’

8. Neolithic Yersinia pestis infections in humans and a dog.

9. The discovery of the church of Rungholt, a landmark for the drowned medieval landscapes of the Wadden Sea World Heritage.

10. Dietary 14 C reservoir effects and the chronology of prehistoric burials at Sakhtysh, central European Russia.

11. The prelude to industrial whaling: identifying the targets of ancient European whaling using zooarchaeology and collagen mass-peptide fingerprinting.

12. Dual ancestries and ecologies of the Late Glacial Palaeolithic in Britain.

13. A 5,000-year-old hunter-gatherer already plagued by Yersinia pestis.

14. Genome-wide study of a Neolithic Wartberg grave community reveals distinct HLA variation and hunter-gatherer ancestry.

15. Neolithic farmers or Neolithic foragers? Organic residue analysis of early pottery from Rakushechny Yar on the Lower Don (Russia).

16. Magdalenian and Epimagdalenian chronology and palaeoenvironments at Kůlna Cave, Moravia, Czech Republic.

17. Organic residue analysis shows sub-regional patterns in the use of pottery by Northern European hunter-gatherers.

18. Conservation genetics of the pond bat ( Myotis dasycneme ) with special focus on the populations in northwestern Germany and in Jutland, Denmark.

19. European bison as a refugee species? Evidence from isotopic data on Early Holocene bison and other large herbivores in northern Europe.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources