This paper critically assesses the recent claim (Stevens and Fuller 2012) that cereal agriculture was abandoned in the Late Neolithic of the British Isles. The Scottish archaeobotanical dataset is considered in detail to test the universal applicability of the model proposed by Stevens and Fuller (2012) and a series of alternative hypotheses are suggested to explain the nature of the current evidence. It is argued that the importance of arable agriculture probably varied on a local as well as a regional scale and that caution should be exercised when attempting to apply unitary models to complex datasets
Little synthesis of evidence for Middle Neolithic food and farming in Wiltshire, particularly in and...
The Bronze Age in Britain was a time of major social and cultural changes, reflected in the division...
Multi-proxy palaeoecological data from two peat profiles at Esklets on the North York Moors upland p...
<div><p></p><p>This paper critically assesses the recent claim (Stevens and Fuller 2012) that cereal...
In response to the critique in this volume (Bishop 2015), Stevens and Fuller (2015) have modified th...
Thirty years after the discovery of an Early Neolithic timber hall at Balbridie in Scotland was repo...
The introduction of agriculture is a key defining element of the Neolithic, yet considerable debate ...
Early agriculture in north-west Europe was highly diverse. Sometimes it spread rapidly, at other tim...
The transition from Mesolithic hunter-gatherers to Neolithic agriculturalists was one of the most im...
This paper considers the timing and mechanisms of deforestation in the Western Isles of Scotland, fo...
Archaeobotanical research on prehistoric crops in Britain has primarily focussed on cereals and the ...
A Mesolithic human presence in the Outer Hebrides has long been postulated by palynologists but arch...
In the years since the last volume on plant domesticates in Ireland and Britain in the fourth millen...
<div><p></p><p>In response to the critique in this volume (Bishop 2015), Stevens and Fuller (2015) h...
Little synthesis of evidence for Middle Neolithic food and farming in Wiltshire, particularly in and...
Little synthesis of evidence for Middle Neolithic food and farming in Wiltshire, particularly in and...
The Bronze Age in Britain was a time of major social and cultural changes, reflected in the division...
Multi-proxy palaeoecological data from two peat profiles at Esklets on the North York Moors upland p...
<div><p></p><p>This paper critically assesses the recent claim (Stevens and Fuller 2012) that cereal...
In response to the critique in this volume (Bishop 2015), Stevens and Fuller (2015) have modified th...
Thirty years after the discovery of an Early Neolithic timber hall at Balbridie in Scotland was repo...
The introduction of agriculture is a key defining element of the Neolithic, yet considerable debate ...
Early agriculture in north-west Europe was highly diverse. Sometimes it spread rapidly, at other tim...
The transition from Mesolithic hunter-gatherers to Neolithic agriculturalists was one of the most im...
This paper considers the timing and mechanisms of deforestation in the Western Isles of Scotland, fo...
Archaeobotanical research on prehistoric crops in Britain has primarily focussed on cereals and the ...
A Mesolithic human presence in the Outer Hebrides has long been postulated by palynologists but arch...
In the years since the last volume on plant domesticates in Ireland and Britain in the fourth millen...
<div><p></p><p>In response to the critique in this volume (Bishop 2015), Stevens and Fuller (2015) h...
Little synthesis of evidence for Middle Neolithic food and farming in Wiltshire, particularly in and...
Little synthesis of evidence for Middle Neolithic food and farming in Wiltshire, particularly in and...
The Bronze Age in Britain was a time of major social and cultural changes, reflected in the division...
Multi-proxy palaeoecological data from two peat profiles at Esklets on the North York Moors upland p...