Organized into three sections- The First Settlers, The Trail to the Americas, and The Land and People Transformed - The Settlement of the American Continents: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Human Biogeography is one of the latest edited volumes on the subject of the peopling of the Americas. Between the editors\u27 introduction and closing, chapters by a number of authors offer diverse views of the early peopling event from the disciplines of physical anthropology, linguistics, genetics, ecological anthropology/archaeology, and paleontology. The volume is well edited, containing copious notes and a good bibliography
Review of: The Shaping of America: A Geographical Perspective on 500 Years of History. Vol. 2: Conti...
In this compact book, the outgrowth, or reprint, of his dissertation, Douglas Bamforth focuses his a...
Between 1970 and 1990 there was a burst of paleoethnobotanical research into prehistoric Native Amer...
Organized into three sections- The First Settlers, The Trail to the Americas, and The Land and P...
A Continent Comprehended is the final volume in a trilogy on North American exploration that began w...
A Continent Defined is the second of three volumes on North American discovery edited by geographer ...
This collection of nineteen articles presents up-to-date regional or topical syntheses of the best d...
Boal and Royle, geographers from Belfast\u27s Queen\u27s University, have assembled a volume consist...
This volume is a capstone of George W. Gill’s long and productive (and continuing) career at the Uni...
Review of: North American Exploration. Vol. 3: A Continent Comprehended. Allen, John Logan, ed
For a little over 75 years, Colorado has played host to important discoveries regarding the peopling...
First paragraph: The editors and contributors to this large, impressive volume present thirty-two ch...
Wild Animals and Settlers on the Great Plains is an informative but flawed book. As an example of en...
This is the latest of many efforts over the past century to classify North America\u27s natural, und...
In 1962 Lewis Binford (American Antiquity, 28 [2]:217-25) classified archaeological objects into tec...
Review of: The Shaping of America: A Geographical Perspective on 500 Years of History. Vol. 2: Conti...
In this compact book, the outgrowth, or reprint, of his dissertation, Douglas Bamforth focuses his a...
Between 1970 and 1990 there was a burst of paleoethnobotanical research into prehistoric Native Amer...
Organized into three sections- The First Settlers, The Trail to the Americas, and The Land and P...
A Continent Comprehended is the final volume in a trilogy on North American exploration that began w...
A Continent Defined is the second of three volumes on North American discovery edited by geographer ...
This collection of nineteen articles presents up-to-date regional or topical syntheses of the best d...
Boal and Royle, geographers from Belfast\u27s Queen\u27s University, have assembled a volume consist...
This volume is a capstone of George W. Gill’s long and productive (and continuing) career at the Uni...
Review of: North American Exploration. Vol. 3: A Continent Comprehended. Allen, John Logan, ed
For a little over 75 years, Colorado has played host to important discoveries regarding the peopling...
First paragraph: The editors and contributors to this large, impressive volume present thirty-two ch...
Wild Animals and Settlers on the Great Plains is an informative but flawed book. As an example of en...
This is the latest of many efforts over the past century to classify North America\u27s natural, und...
In 1962 Lewis Binford (American Antiquity, 28 [2]:217-25) classified archaeological objects into tec...
Review of: The Shaping of America: A Geographical Perspective on 500 Years of History. Vol. 2: Conti...
In this compact book, the outgrowth, or reprint, of his dissertation, Douglas Bamforth focuses his a...
Between 1970 and 1990 there was a burst of paleoethnobotanical research into prehistoric Native Amer...