The first Neolithic settlements in Southwest Asia began with a dual commitment to plant cultivation and a sedentary lifestyle. The benefits that foragers-turned-farmers gained from this commitment came with some inescapable constraints, setting new evolutionary pathways for human social and economic activities. We explore the developmental process at the early Pre-Pottery Neolithic site of Asikli Hoyuk in central Anatolia (Turkey), specifically the relationship between internal dynamics and external influences in early village formation. Feedback mechanisms inherent to the community were responsible for many of the unique developments there, including domestication of a variant of free-threshing wheat and the early evolution of caprine mana...
In the beginning of the 8th millennium BCE, the people of As,ikli Ho center dot yak dramatically cha...
Southeast Anatolia is home to some of the earliest and most spectacular Neolithic sites associated w...
A wide range of rapid innovations are associated with the shift from mobile communities to sedentism...
Intensive archaeobotanical investigations at Çatalhöyük have created a unique opportunity to explore...
The Anatolian Neolithic, one of the most fascinating episodes in the socio-economic history of the N...
This paper explores the explanations for, and consequences of, the early appearance of food producti...
The archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatolia is no...
This research uses quantitative and qualitative data collected from ten Neolithic and Early Chalcoli...
A history of agricultural production is proposed for Neolithic Catalhoyuk East, central Turkey, usin...
SummaryThe archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatoli...
This thesis investigates the development of early farming societies in Western Anatolia and Southeas...
The origins of agriculture in the Near East has been associated with a 'core area', located in south...
Exploring the Early Holocene Occupation of North-Central Anatolia: New Approaches for studying Archa...
The archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatolia is no...
The Late Pleistocene - Early Holocene is considered to be the transitional phase of a new formation ...
In the beginning of the 8th millennium BCE, the people of As,ikli Ho center dot yak dramatically cha...
Southeast Anatolia is home to some of the earliest and most spectacular Neolithic sites associated w...
A wide range of rapid innovations are associated with the shift from mobile communities to sedentism...
Intensive archaeobotanical investigations at Çatalhöyük have created a unique opportunity to explore...
The Anatolian Neolithic, one of the most fascinating episodes in the socio-economic history of the N...
This paper explores the explanations for, and consequences of, the early appearance of food producti...
The archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatolia is no...
This research uses quantitative and qualitative data collected from ten Neolithic and Early Chalcoli...
A history of agricultural production is proposed for Neolithic Catalhoyuk East, central Turkey, usin...
SummaryThe archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatoli...
This thesis investigates the development of early farming societies in Western Anatolia and Southeas...
The origins of agriculture in the Near East has been associated with a 'core area', located in south...
Exploring the Early Holocene Occupation of North-Central Anatolia: New Approaches for studying Archa...
The archaeological documentation of the development of sedentary farming societies in Anatolia is no...
The Late Pleistocene - Early Holocene is considered to be the transitional phase of a new formation ...
In the beginning of the 8th millennium BCE, the people of As,ikli Ho center dot yak dramatically cha...
Southeast Anatolia is home to some of the earliest and most spectacular Neolithic sites associated w...
A wide range of rapid innovations are associated with the shift from mobile communities to sedentism...