Early and mid Holocene tool-use and processing of taro (Colocasia esculenta), yam (Dioscorea sp.) and other plants at Kuk Swamp in the highlands of Papua New Guinea
暂无分享,去创建一个
Richard Fullagar | Carol J Lentfer | Judith Field | Tim Denham | T. Denham | R. Fullagar | C. Lentfer | J. Field | Judith H. Field
[1] D. Coates,et al. Chromosome variation in taro, Colocasia esculenta: implications for origin in the Pacific. , 1988 .
[2] J. Moeyersons,et al. The Early to Middle Stone Age transition and the emergence of modern human behaviour at site 8-B-11, Sai Island, Sudan. , 2003, Journal of human evolution.
[3] Patricia Anderson. Prehistory of Agriculture: New Experimental and Ethnographic Approaches , 1999 .
[4] Carol J Lentfer,et al. Origins of Agriculture at Kuk Swamp in the Highlands of New Guinea , 2003, Science.
[5] T. Bayliss-Smith,et al. A Colocasian revolution in the New Guinea Highlands? Insights from Phase 4 at Kuk , 1992 .
[6] Richard Fullagar,et al. Integrating Phytoliths within Use-Wear/Residue Studies of Stone Tools , 1999 .
[7] P. Ucko,et al. The origins of yam cultivation. , 1969 .
[8] J. O'connell. Spoons, Knives and Scrapers: the Function of Yilugwa in Central Australia , 1974 .
[9] Simon Haberle,et al. New evidence and revised interpretations of early agriculture in Highland New Guinea , 2004, Antiquity.
[10] K. Paijmans. New Guinea vegetation , 1977 .
[11] V. Lebot,et al. Biomolecular evidence for plant domestication in Sahul , 1999, Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution.
[12] D. Piperno,et al. Opal phytoliths in Southeast Asian flora , 1998 .
[13] D. Ugent,et al. New evidence for ancient cultivation ofCanna edulis in Peru , 1984, Economic Botany.
[14] J. Golson,et al. The Appearance of Plant and Animal Domestication in New Guinea , 1980 .
[15] T. Denham,et al. Reading Early Agriculture at Kuk Swamp, Wahgi Valley, Papua New Guinea: the Archaeological Features (Phases 1–3) , 2004, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.
[16] P. Matthews. [TRANSITIONS TO AGRICULTURE IN THE PACIFIC REGION] A possible tropical wildtype taro: Colocasia esculenta var. aquatilis , 1991 .
[17] Paul Sillitoe,et al. Living Lithics: ethnoarchaeology in Highland Papua New Guinea , 2003, Antiquity.
[18] Carol J Lentfer,et al. Phytoliths and the evidence for banana cultivation at the Lapita Reber-Rakival Site on Watom Island, Papua New Guinea , 2004 .
[19] R. Fullagar,et al. Clues to Stone Tool Function Re-examined: Comparing Starch Grain Frequencies on Used and Unused Obsidian Artefacts , 1998 .
[20] Andrea Fontana,et al. Over the Edge , 1978 .
[21] Michael Haslam,et al. The decomposition of starch grains in soils: implications for archaeological residue analyses , 2004 .
[22] V. Lebot,et al. Isozyme variation in taro (Colocasia esculenta (L.) Schott) from Asia and Oceania , 1991, Euphytica.
[23] P. Matthews. Taro planthoppers (Tarophagus spp.) in Australia and the origins of taro (Colocasia esculenta) in Oceania , 2003 .
[24] D. Piperno,et al. Starch grains reveal early root crop horticulture in the Panamanian tropical forest , 2000, Nature.
[25] P. Ucko,et al. The Domestication and Exploitation of Plants and Animals , 1970 .
[26] Alphonse de Candolle. The origin of cultivated plants , 2011 .
[27] P. Swadling,et al. Papua New Guinea's Prehistory: An Introduction , 1981 .
[28] D. Yen,et al. Introduction of Taro into the Pacific: The Indications of the Chromosome Numbers , 1968 .
[29] D. Pearsall,et al. Maize in ancient Ecuador: results of residue analysis of stone tools from the Real Alto site , 2004 .
[30] G. Irwin,et al. Starch grains and xylem cells of sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) and bracken (Pteridium esculentum) in archaeological deposits from northern New Zealand , 2004 .
[31] Jack Golson,et al. Late Quaternary change in the mountains of New Guinea , 1995, Antiquity.
[32] J. Gressitt. Biogeography and Ecology of New Guinea , 1982, Monographiae Biologicae.
[33] Simon G. Haberle,et al. Identification of cultivated Pandanus and Colocasia in pollen records and the implications for the study of early agriculture in New Guinea , 1995 .
[34] D. R. Harris,et al. Foraging and Farming: The Evolution of Plant Exploitation , 1990 .
[35] W. Gagné. Staple crops in subsistence agriculture , 1982 .
[36] Samuel M. Wilson. Phytolith analysis at Kuk, an early agricultural site in Papua New Guinea , 1985 .
[37] Matthew Spriggs,et al. Direct evidence for human use of plants 28,000 years ago: starch residues on stone artefacts from the northern Solomon Islands , 1992, Antiquity.
[38] Lee A. Newsom,et al. Tropical Archaeobotany: Applications and New Developments , 1995 .
[39] D. Ugent,et al. Prehistoric remains of the sweet potato from the Casma valley of Peru , 1981 .
[40] Robin Torrence,et al. Identification of starch granules using image analysis and multivariate techniques , 2004 .
[41] K. Kuruvilla,et al. Karyotypic and electrophoretic studies on taro and its origin , 1981, Euphytica.
[42] W. Williams,et al. Evolution of Crop Plants. , 1977 .
[43] J. Golson,et al. Agriculture and Sociopolitical Organization in New Guinea Highlands Prehistory , 1990 .
[44] J. Hather. The archaeobotany of subsistence in the Pacific. , 1992, World archaeology.
[45] R. Fullagar,et al. Pleistocene seed-grinding implements from the Australian arid zone , 1997, Antiquity.
[46] P. Bellwood,et al. Prehistory of the Indo-Malaysian Archipelago , 1985 .
[47] Jim Allen,et al. Sunda and Sahul : prehistoric studies in Southeast Asia, Melanesia and Australia , 1979 .
[48] J. Powell. Plant Resources and Palaeobotanical Evidence for Plant Use in the Papua New Guinea Highlands , 1982 .
[49] D. Ugent,et al. Archaeological potato tuber remains from the casma valley of peru , 1982, Economic Botany.
[50] Huw Barton,et al. Use of Stone and Shell Artifacts at Balof 2, New Ireland, Papua New Guinea , 1993 .
[51] R. V. S. Wright,et al. Stone Tools As Cultural Markers: Change, Evolution and Complexity , 1978 .
[52] J. Bradbury,et al. Chemistry of tropical root crops : significance for nutrition and agriculture in the Pacific , 1988 .
[53] Carol J Lentfer,et al. Starch Grains and Environmental Reconstruction: a Modern Test Case from West New Britain, Papua New Guinea , 2002 .
[54] C. Gosden,et al. The Prehistory Of Food: Appetites For Change , 1999 .
[55] Linda Perry. Starch analyses reveal the relationship between tool type and function: an example from the Orinoco valley of Venezuela , 2004 .
[56] P. J. Matthews. Aroids and the Austronesians. , 1995 .
[57] Rhys Jones,et al. Residue Analysis of Ethnographic Plant-working and Other Tools from Northern Australia , 1999 .
[58] R. Fullagar. The role of silica in Polish formation , 1991 .
[59] D. Coursey. THE CIVILIZATIONS OF THE YAM: INTERRELATIONSHIPS OF MAN AND YAMS IN AFRICA AND THE INDO‐PACIFIC REGION , 1972 .
[60] F. W. Martin,et al. Intra-specific classification of Dioscorea alata. , 1977 .
[61] D. Yen. The development of Sahul agriculture with Australia as bystander , 1995, Antiquity.
[62] Dolores R. Piperno,et al. The presence of starch grains on prehistoric stone tools from the humid neotropics : Indications of early tuber use and agriculture in Panama , 1998 .
[63] R. Fullagar,et al. Australian Museum starch reference collection , 1997 .
[64] T. Denham. Archaeological Evidence for Mid-Holocene Agriculture in the Interior of Papua New Guinea: A Critical Review , 2003 .