Pollen grains of primitive varieties of Hordeum vulgare collected by the Gene Bank of the Crop Research Institute, Prague, are compared to pollen of native Glyceria species of the United Kingdom with a view to establishing separation criteria. It is found that a separation of Hordeum vulgare from both Glyceria maxima and Glyceria fluitans is possible according to annular characteristics in combination with grain size as dependent variables. These findings have implications for the identification of cereal-type pollen grains that could be evidence for early cultivation in the Terminal Mesolithic of north-west Europe, and for the use of palynology as a reliable source of palaeobotanical data, particularly in its inland areas. A phase of veget...
The transition to early agriculture on the North European Plain is a much debated issue in which emp...
Pollen analysis provides a powerful tool for understanding past human activity and its impact on the...
The grass family (Poaceae) is one of the most economically important plant groups in the world today...
The transition from Mesolithic hunter-gatherers to Neolithic agriculturalists was one of the most im...
Multi-proxy palaeoecological data from two peat profiles at Esklets on the North York Moors upland p...
The introduction of agriculture is a key defining element of the Neolithic, yet considerable debate ...
This paper presents the results of palynological investigations on the limestone Tabular Hills of th...
Pollen grains are highly suitable for radiocarbon dating as they contain a closed pool of carbon der...
Thirty years after the discovery of an Early Neolithic timber hall at Balbridie in Scotland was repo...
Palynological data from three radiocarbon dated peat profiles at Rishworth Moor in the Pennine hills...
Pollen and non-pollen palynomorph analyses conducted on archaeological sediments from ditches and pi...
The uniform morphology of different species of Poaceae (grass) pollen means that identification to b...
This chapter synthesizes the most common processing techniques applied to palynomorphs and their kno...
This paper critically assesses the recent claim (Stevens and Fuller 2012) that cereal agriculture wa...
The transition to early agriculture on the North European Plain is a much debated issue in which emp...
Pollen analysis provides a powerful tool for understanding past human activity and its impact on the...
The grass family (Poaceae) is one of the most economically important plant groups in the world today...
The transition from Mesolithic hunter-gatherers to Neolithic agriculturalists was one of the most im...
Multi-proxy palaeoecological data from two peat profiles at Esklets on the North York Moors upland p...
The introduction of agriculture is a key defining element of the Neolithic, yet considerable debate ...
This paper presents the results of palynological investigations on the limestone Tabular Hills of th...
Pollen grains are highly suitable for radiocarbon dating as they contain a closed pool of carbon der...
Thirty years after the discovery of an Early Neolithic timber hall at Balbridie in Scotland was repo...
Palynological data from three radiocarbon dated peat profiles at Rishworth Moor in the Pennine hills...
Pollen and non-pollen palynomorph analyses conducted on archaeological sediments from ditches and pi...
The uniform morphology of different species of Poaceae (grass) pollen means that identification to b...
This chapter synthesizes the most common processing techniques applied to palynomorphs and their kno...
This paper critically assesses the recent claim (Stevens and Fuller 2012) that cereal agriculture wa...
The transition to early agriculture on the North European Plain is a much debated issue in which emp...
Pollen analysis provides a powerful tool for understanding past human activity and its impact on the...
The grass family (Poaceae) is one of the most economically important plant groups in the world today...