Early foraging settlement of the Tibetan Plateau highlands
暂无分享,去创建一个
P. Brantingham | Charles Perreault | D. Madsen | Yongjuan Sun | David Rhode | M. Yi | K. Brunson | Katherine Brunson
[1] P. Visscher,et al. Genetic signatures of high-altitude adaptation in Tibetans , 2017, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[2] M. Aldenderfer,et al. Permanent human occupation of the central Tibetan Plateau in the early Holocene , 2017, Science.
[3] David Rhode. Wood Charcoal From Archaeological Sites in the Qinghai Lake Basin, Western China: Implications For Human Resource Use and Anthropogenic Environmental Change , 2016, Journal of Ethnobiology.
[4] Li Jin,et al. Ancestral Origins and Genetic History of Tibetan Highlanders. , 2016, American journal of human genetics.
[5] F. Chen,et al. MtDNA analysis reveals enriched pathogenic mutations in Tibetan highlanders , 2016, Scientific Reports.
[6] Fahu Chen,et al. History and possible mechanisms of prehistoric human migration to the Tibetan Plateau , 2016, Science China Earth Sciences.
[7] D. Madsen. Conceptualizing the Tibetan Plateau: Environmental constraints on the peopling of the “Third Pole” , 2016 .
[8] L. Barton. The cultural context of biological adaptation to high elevation Tibet , 2016 .
[9] L. Jorde,et al. Adaptive genetic changes related to haemoglobin concentration in native high‐altitude Tibetans , 2015, Experimental physiology.
[10] Qidi Feng,et al. A 3.4-kb Copy-Number Deletion near EPAS1 Is Significantly Enriched in High-Altitude Tibetans but Absent from the Denisovan Sequence. , 2015, American journal of human genetics.
[11] Fahu Chen,et al. Agriculture facilitated permanent human occupation of the Tibetan Plateau after 3600 B.P. , 2015, Science.
[12] P. Jeffrey Brantingham,et al. Mind the gaps: testing for hiatuses in regional radiocarbon date sequences , 2014 .
[13] C. Beall. Adaptation to High Altitude: Phenotypes and Genotypes , 2014 .
[14] R. Bettinger,et al. The early appearance of Shuidonggou core-and-blade technology in north China: Implications for the spread of Anatomically Modern Humans in northeast Asia? , 2014 .
[15] P. Robbins,et al. Human adaptation to the hypoxia of high altitude: the Tibetan paradigm from the pregenomic to the postgenomic era , 2013, Journal of applied physiology.
[16] P. Brantingham,et al. Late Occupation of the High‐Elevation Northern Tibetan Plateau Based on Cosmogenic, Luminescence, and Radiocarbon Ages , 2013 .
[17] Yi Wang,et al. Genetic evidence of paleolithic colonization and neolithic expansion of modern humans on the tibetan plateau. , 2013, Molecular biology and evolution.
[18] Yi Peng,et al. Identification of a Tibetan-specific mutation in the hypoxic gene EGLN1 and its contribution to high-altitude adaptation. , 2013, Molecular biology and evolution.
[19] S. Kuhn,et al. Re-examination of the dates of large blade technology in China: a comparison of Shuidonggou Locality 1 and Locality 2. , 2013, Journal of human evolution.
[20] R. Bettinger,et al. Glacial cycles and Palaeolithic adaptive variability on China's Western Loess Plateau , 2011, Antiquity.
[21] P. Brantingham,et al. Epipaleolithic/early Neolithic settlements at Qinghai Lake, western China , 2007 .
[22] P. Brantingham,et al. The Late Upper Paleolithic occupation of the northern Tibetan Plateau margin , 2006 .
[23] J. Overpeck,et al. Holocene variations in the Asian monsoon inferred from the geochemistry of lake sediments in central Tibet , 2006, Quaternary Research.
[24] M. Caffee,et al. Uniform postglacial slip-rate along the central 600 km of the Kunlun Fault (Tibet), from 26Al, 10Be, and 14C dating of riser offsets, and climatic origin of the regional morphology , 2002 .
[25] C. Buck,et al. IntCal13 and Marine13 Radiocarbon Age Calibration Curves 0–50,000 Years cal BP , 2013, Radiocarbon.
[26] Jianquan Liu,et al. Tree endurance on the Tibetan Plateau marks the world's highest known tree line of the Last Glacial Maximum. , 2010, The New phytologist.
[27] P. Brantingham,et al. A short chronology for the peopling of the Tibetan Plateau , 2007 .
[28] U. Herzschuh. Palaeo-moisture evolution in monsoonal Central Asia during the last 50,000 years , 2006 .