| Beyond art: The internal archaeological context in Paleolithic decorated caves |
12 |
| Pre-Neolithic evidence for dog-assisted hunting strategies in Arabia |
9 |
| Recentering the rural: Lidar and articulated landscapes among the Maya |
9 |
| Isotopic perspectives on pastoralist mobility in the Late Bronze Age South Caucasus |
9 |
| Dogs were domesticated in the Arctic: Culling practices and dog sledding at Ust'-Polui |
8 |
| Isotopes and human burials at Viking Age Birka and the Malaren region, east central Sweden |
7 |
| Change and continuity in the long-distance exchange networks between western/central Anatolia, northern Levant and northern Mesopotamia, c.3200-1600 BCE |
7 |
| Integration of Linearbandkeramik cattle husbandry in the forested landscape of the mid-Holocene climate optimum: Seasonal-scale investigations in Bohemia |
7 |
| Collective action, state building, and the rise of the Calusa, southwest Florida, USA |
7 |
| Animal penning and open area activity at Neolithic Catalhoyuk, Turkey |
7 |
| Close companions: Early evidence for dogs in northeast Jordan and the potential impact of new hunting methods |
6 |
| Toward archaeological predictive modeling in the Bosutswe region of Botswana: Utilizing multispectral satellite imagery to conceptualize ancient landscapes |
6 |
| Historical ecology, human niche construction and landscape in pre-Columbian Amazonia: A case study of the geoglyph builders of Acre, Brazil |
5 |
| Skilled people or specialists? Knowledge and expertise in copper age vessels from central Italy |
5 |
| Feeding a third millennium BC mega-site: Bioarchaeological analyses of palaeodiet and dental disease at Marroquies (Jaen, Spain) |
5 |
| A behavioral approach to cumulative palimpsests: An example from Weereewaa (Lake George), Australia |
4 |
| The organization of stingless beekeeping (Meliponiculture) at Mayapan, Yucatan, Mexico |
4 |
| Settlement location models, archaeological survey data and social change in Bronze Age Crete |
4 |
| The use of cave art through graphic space, visibility and cave transit: A new methodology |
4 |
| The origins and early development of plant food production and farming in Colombian tropical forests |
4 |
| The earliest occurrence of a newly described domesticate in Eastern North America: Adena/Hopewell communities and agricultural innovation |
4 |
| In Pursuit of Maori Warfare: New archaeological research on conflict in pre-European contact New Zealand |
4 |
| Animal husbandry and food provisioning at the Kura-Araxes settlement of Kohne Shahar in Northwestern Iran |
4 |
| Building wooden houses: The political economy of plankhouse construction on the southern Northwest Coast of North America |
4 |
| Water, dust, and agro-pastoralism: Modeling socio-ecological co-evolution of landscapes, farming, and human society in southeast Kazakhstan during the mid to late Holocene |
4 |
| Building ecological resistance: Late intermediate period farming in the south-central highland Andes (CE 1100-1450) |
4 |
| Zones of refuge: Resisting conquest in the northern Philippine highlands through environmental practice |
4 |
| Ritual economy and ancient Maya bloodletting: Obsidian blades from Actun Uayazba Kab (Handprint Cave), Belize |
4 |
| Hounds follow those who feed them: What can the ethnographic record of hunter-gatherers reveal about early human-canid partnerships? |
4 |
| The persistence of place: Hunter-gatherer mortuary practices and land-use in the Trent Valley, Ontario |
4 |
| Supply and demand in prehistory? Economics of Neolithic mining in northwest Europe |
4 |
| Testing an ethnographic analogy through geometric morphometrics: A comparison between ethnographic arrows and archaeological projectile points from Late Holocene Fuego-Patagonia |
4 |
| The prevalence and importance of niche construction in agricultural development in Polynesia |
4 |
| Reconsidering sex and gender in relation to health and disease in bioarchaeology |
3 |
| Assessing continuity in the ancestral territory of the Tsleil-Waututh-Coast Salish, southwest British Columbia, Canada |
3 |
| The time is ripe for a change. The evolution of harvesting technologies in Central Dalmatia during the Neolithic period (6th millennium cal BC) |
3 |
| Animal domestication in the high Arctic: Hunting and holding reindeer on the <(IA)over arc>mal peninsula, northwest Siberia |
3 |
| Dietary variation among indigenous Nicaraguan horticulturalists and their dogs: An ethnoarchaeological application of the Canine Surrogacy Approach |
3 |
| Rock art landscapes. A systematic study of images, topographies and visibility in south-central Patagonia (Argentina) |
3 |
| Rock art, performance and Palaeolithic cognitive systems. The example of the Grand Panel palimpsest of Cussac Cave, Dordogne, France |
3 |
| Ancient monetization: The case of Classic Maya textiles |
3 |
| Expressions of ritual in the Paleoindian record of the Eastern Woodlands: Exploring the uniqueness of the Dalton cemetery at Sloan, Arkansas |
3 |
| New tools, new human niches: The significance of the Dalton adze and the origin of heavy-duty woodworking in the Middle Mississippi Valley of North America |
3 |
| Native acquisition of obsidian in colonial-era central California: Implications from Mission San Jose |
3 |
| Walking the desert, paddling the sea: Comcaac mobility in time |
3 |
| Ancient coin designs encoded increasing amounts of economic information over centuries |
3 |
| The hydrosocial empire: The Karakum River and the Soviet conquest of Central Asia in the 20th century |
3 |
| De-Neolithisation in southern Norway inferred from statistical modelling of radiocarbon dates |
3 |
| Settling into the country: Comparison of Clovis and Folsom lithic networks in western North America shows increasing redundancy of toolstone use |
2 |
| Advances in the analysis of households in the early neolithic groups of the Iberian Peninsula: Deciphering a partial archaeological record |
2 |