Intentional cranial modification from the Houtaomuga Site in Jilin, China: Earliest evidence and longest in situ practice during the Neolithic Age.
暂无分享,去创建一个
Lixin Wang | P. Liu | Hui-Yuan Yeh | Hong Zhu | Quanchao Zhang | Qian Wang | Qun Zhang | Xingyu Man | Peng Liu
[1] Xijun Ni,et al. Earliest-known intentionally deformed human cranial fossil from Asia and the initiation of hereditary hierarchy in the early Holocene , 2019, bioRxiv.
[2] C. Ramsey,et al. Re-dating Zhoukoudian Upper Cave, northern China and its regional significance. , 2018, Journal of human evolution.
[3] Lixin Wang,et al. Radiocarbon dating and dietary reconstruction of the Early Neolithic Houtaomuga and Shuangta sites in the Song-Nen Plain, Northeast China , 2017 .
[4] A. Popov,et al. A metric assessment of evidence for artificial cranial modification at the Boisman 2 Neolithic cemetery (ca. 5800–5400 14C BP), Primorye, Russian Far East , 2016 .
[5] Arthur C. Durband. Brief communication: Artificial cranial modification in Kow Swamp and Cohuna. , 2014, American journal of physical anthropology.
[6] H. Ge,et al. Increasing breadth of the frontal lobe but decreasing height of the human brain between two Chinese samples from a Neolithic site and from living humans. , 2014, American journal of physical anthropology.
[7] V. Tiesler. The Bioarchaeology of Artificial Cranial Modifications , 2014 .
[8] P. Brown. Nacurrie 1: Mark of ancient Java, or a caring mother's hands, in terminal Pleistocene Australia? , 2010, Journal of human evolution.
[9] E. Sandberg. The human skeletons , 2010 .
[10] Arthur C. Durband. Artificial cranial deformation in Kow Swamp 1 and 5: a response to Curnoe (2007). , 2008, Homo : internationale Zeitschrift fur die vergleichende Forschung am Menschen.
[11] M. Wolpoff,et al. Identifying artificially deformed crania , 2007 .
[12] K. Croucher,et al. Artificial cranial modification in prehistoric Iran: Evidence from crania and figurines , 2007 .
[13] Christina TorresRouff,et al. Cranial Vault Modification and Ethnicity in Middle Horizon San Pedro de Atacama, Chile1 , 2002, Current Anthropology.
[14] 教育部人文社会科学重点研究基地吉林大学边疆考古研究中心. 边疆考古研究 : 中国北方长城地带青铜文化考古国际研讨会论文集 = Research of China's frontier archaeology , 2002 .
[15] M. Özbek. Cranial deformation in a subadult sample from Değirmentepe (Chalcolithic, Turkey). , 2001 .
[16] Charlotte Roberts,et al. The Cambridge encyclopedia of human paleopathology , 2000, Medical History.
[17] C. Hall,et al. Developmental Juvenile Osteology , 2000 .
[18] S. Antón,et al. Artificial cranial deformation and fossil Australians revisited. , 1999, Journal of human evolution.
[19] E. Trinkaus,et al. A New Reconstruction of the Shanidar 5 Cranium , 1999 .
[20] C. White. Sutural effects of fronto-occipital cranial modification. , 1996, American journal of physical anthropology.
[21] D. Ubelaker,et al. Standards for Data Collection from Human Skeletal Remains , 1994 .
[22] J. Zias. Artificial cranial deformation in the Proto-neolithic and Neolithic Near East and its possible origin : a reply , 1993 .
[23] C. Meiklejohn,et al. Artificial cranial deformation in the Proto-neolithic and Neolithic Near East and its possible origin : Evidence from four sites. , 1992 .
[24] S. Brooks,et al. Skeletal age determination based on the os pubis: A comparison of the Acsádi-Nemeskéri and Suchey-Brooks methods , 1990 .
[25] S. Antón,et al. Intentional cranial vault deformation and induced changes of the cranial base and face. , 1989, American journal of physical anthropology.
[26] E. Trinkaus. Artificial Cranial Deformation in the Shanidar 1 and 5 Neandertals , 1982, Current Anthropology.
[27] P. Brown. Artificial Cranial Deformation: a component in the variation in Pleistocene Australian Aboriginal crania , 1981 .
[28] Donald J. Ortner,et al. Identification of Pathological Conditions in Human Skeletal Remains , 1981 .
[29] P. Mortensen. Three New "Early Neolithic" Sites in Western Iran , 1980, Current Anthropology.
[30] D. Brothwell. Possible evidence of a cultural practice affecting head growth in some late pleistocene east Asian and Australasian populations , 1975 .
[31] K. V. Flannery,et al. Prehistory and Human Ecology of the Deh Luran Plain: An Early Village Sequence from Khuzistan, Iran , 1970 .
[32] X. Wu. STUDY ON THE UPPER CAVE MAN OF CHOUKOUTIEN , 1961 .
[33] M. Moss. The pathogenesis of artificial cranial deformation. , 1958, American journal of physical anthropology.
[34] R. Solecki,et al. Dating of Zawi Chemi, an Early Village Site at Shanidar, Northern Iraq , 1958, Science.
[35] B. Blackwood,et al. A Study of Artificial Cranial Deformation in New Britain , 1955 .
[36] Makoto Suzuki. Djalainor Skull No. II , 1950 .
[37] E. Snorrason. Cranial deformation in the reign of Akhnaton. , 1946, Bulletin of the history of medicine.
[38] R. Endo. On the Djalainor Skulls , 1945 .
[39] G. Neumann. Types of Artificial Cranial Deformation in the Eastern United States , 1942, American Antiquity.
[40] G. E. Smith. Artificial Cranial Deformation: a Contribution to the Study of Ethnic Mutilations , 1932, Nature.
[41] G. Hatt. ARTIFICIAL MOULDING OF THE INFANT'S HEAD AMONG THE SCANDINAVIAN LAPPS , 1915 .
[42] O. T. Mason. INDIAN CRADLES AND HEAD-FLATTENING. , 1887, Science.