1. Allard, A. (2016). Communities on the move: practice and mobility in the late eighteenth-century western Great Lakes fur trade. Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota.
2. Allard, A. (2018). Communities, survivance and acts of ‘residence’ in the late eighteenth-century fur trade in Minnesota. In H. Walder & J. Yann (Eds.), Encounters, exchange, entanglements: current perspectives on intercultural interactions throughout the western Great Lakes (pp. 67–86) Midwest Archaeological Conference, Occasional Papers No. 2.
3. Allard, A., and Cipolla C. N. (2018). The view from watery places: rivers and portages in the fur trade era. Open Rivers: Rethinking Water, Place, and Community. Online publication.
4. Allard, A., and Cipolla C. N. (n.d.). Failure and colonialism in the North American fur trade: the view from a riverine assemblage. Historical Archaeology, Manuscript in process.
5. Anderson, D. L. (1994). The flow of European trade goods into the western Great Lakes region, 1715-1760. In J. S. H. Brown, W. J. Eccles, & D. P. Hedelman (Eds.), The fur trade revisited: selected papers of the 6th North American fur trade conference, Mackinac Island, Michigan, 1991 (pp. 93–115). East Lansing: Michigan State University Press.