The online Archaeobotanical Literature Database (ArchbotLit) is an important tool for getting targeted access to archaeobotanical publications. It offers the opportunity for archaeobotanists, archaeologists, freelancers, students and an interested public to easily obtain information about cultivated plants and their development. In addition it increases the visibility of archaeobotanical studies beyond the inner circle and supports teaching in environmental archaeology. The ArchbotLit database builds upon the efforts of Jürgen Schultze-Motel, Gatersleben, and Helmut Kroll, Kiel, who have collected offprints of papers from archaeobotanists worldwide since the 1980s. The content was transferred into referenced plant lists that were published ...
This paper provides a brief overview of the history and main achievements of archaeobotanical work i...
Among the sciences applied in archaeology, archaeobotany fills a crucial piece of the Cultural Herit...
In 2015, a paper on the archaeobotany as a key tool ‘for the understanding of the biocultural diver...
The Archaeobotanical Computer Database is an electronic compilation of information about remains of ...
Plant remains may be found preserved in various types of deposits of natural or human origin. Archae...
Difficulty in accessing high quality reference materials has been a limiting factor in the advanceme...
The BRAIN (Botanical Records of Archaeobotany Italian Network) database and networkwas developed by ...
“The Archaeobotanical Archive: plants used by man (which, where, how, when?)” - The web-site for the...
Archaeobotanical data are often a mixture of material of different origins. The formation process of...
The BRAIN (Botanical Records of Archaeobotany Italian Network) database and network was developed b...
The BRAIN (Botanical Records of Archaeobotany Italian Network) database and network was developed by...
The purpose of the thesis is to describe the possibilities of embedding the practice of studying gat...
Scope This database compiles, from published sources, the sample records of archaeobotanical (plant)...
The Old Wood in a New Light database project focuses on the digitization and accessibility of the re...
This history is reconstructed throughout the study of Holocene pollen, recorded in a variety of depo...
This paper provides a brief overview of the history and main achievements of archaeobotanical work i...
Among the sciences applied in archaeology, archaeobotany fills a crucial piece of the Cultural Herit...
In 2015, a paper on the archaeobotany as a key tool ‘for the understanding of the biocultural diver...
The Archaeobotanical Computer Database is an electronic compilation of information about remains of ...
Plant remains may be found preserved in various types of deposits of natural or human origin. Archae...
Difficulty in accessing high quality reference materials has been a limiting factor in the advanceme...
The BRAIN (Botanical Records of Archaeobotany Italian Network) database and networkwas developed by ...
“The Archaeobotanical Archive: plants used by man (which, where, how, when?)” - The web-site for the...
Archaeobotanical data are often a mixture of material of different origins. The formation process of...
The BRAIN (Botanical Records of Archaeobotany Italian Network) database and network was developed b...
The BRAIN (Botanical Records of Archaeobotany Italian Network) database and network was developed by...
The purpose of the thesis is to describe the possibilities of embedding the practice of studying gat...
Scope This database compiles, from published sources, the sample records of archaeobotanical (plant)...
The Old Wood in a New Light database project focuses on the digitization and accessibility of the re...
This history is reconstructed throughout the study of Holocene pollen, recorded in a variety of depo...
This paper provides a brief overview of the history and main achievements of archaeobotanical work i...
Among the sciences applied in archaeology, archaeobotany fills a crucial piece of the Cultural Herit...
In 2015, a paper on the archaeobotany as a key tool ‘for the understanding of the biocultural diver...