Author:
Bergin Sean,Pardo-Gordó Salvador
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Reference61 articles.
1. Altschul, J. H., Kintigh, K. W., Aldenderfer, M., Alonzi, E., Armit, I., Barceló, J. A., Beekman, C. S., Bickle, P., Bird, D. W., Ingram, S. E., Isayev, E., Kandel, A. W., Kiddey, R., Kienon-Kaboré, H. T., Niccolucci, F., Ragsdale, C. S., Scaffidi, B. K., & Ortman, S. G. (2020). Opinion: To understand how migrations affect human securities, look to the past. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117, 20342–20345. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2015146117
2. Ammerman, A. (2020). The Neolithic transition in Europe at 50 years: Working draft. ArXiv201211713 Q-BioPE.
3. Ammerman, A. J., & Cavalli-Sforza, L. L. (1973). A population model for the diffusion of early farming in Europe. In C. Renfrew (Ed.), The explanation of culture change (pp. 342–357). Duckworth.
4. Axtell, R., Epstein, J., Dean, J., Gumerman, G., Swedlund, A., Harburger, J., Chakravarty, S., Hammond, R., Parker, J., & Parker, M. (2002). Population growth and collapse in a multiagent model of the Kayenta Anasazi in Long House Valley. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 99, 7275–7279.
5. Balsera, V., Díaz-del-Río, P., Gilman, A., Uriarte, A., & Vicent, J. M. (2015). Approaching the demography of late prehistoric Iberia through summed calibrated date probability distributions (7000–2000 cal BC). Quaternary International, 386, 208–211. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2015.06.022