Vegetation History and Archaeobotany

Title Publication Date Language Citations
Effects of the sampling design and selection of parameter values on pollen-based quantitative reconstructions of regional vegetation: a case study in southern Sweden using the REVEALS model2008/04/02English80
Cultivation as slow evolutionary entanglement: comparative data on rate and sequence of domestication2011/11/01English79
Economy and environment of Bronze Age settlements – Terramaras – on the Po Plain (Northern Italy): first results from the archaeobotanical research at the Terramara di Montale2006/02/21English79
Mid- and late-Holocene vegetation and fire history at Biviere di Gela, a coastal lake in southern Sicily, Italy2009/01/31English78
Cannabis in Eurasia: origin of human use and Bronze Age trans-continental connections2016/06/27English78
Vegetation history of the SE section of the Zagros Mountains during the last five millennia; a pollen record from the Maharlou Lake, Fars Province, Iran2008/08/27English77
Between domestication and civilization: the role of agriculture and arboriculture in the emergence of the first urban societies2019/04/20English77
Some problems of forest transformation at the transition to the oligocratic/ Homo sapiens phase of the Holocene interglacial in northern lowlands of central Europe2003/12/0176
Pollen and non-pollen palynomorph evidence of medieval farming activities in southwestern Greenland2010/05/26English76
Vegetation of the Lago de Sanabria area (NW Iberia) since the end of the Pleistocene: a palaeoecological reconstruction on the basis of two new pollen sequences2004/03/0175
Quantitative time series reconstruction of Eemian temperature at three European sites using pollen data2003/12/0173
Macro-botanical evidence for plant use at Neolithic Çatalhöyük south-central Anatolia, Turkey2002/06/01English72
Experiments on the effects of carbonization on some cultivated plant seeds2008/06/13English71
Plant economy of hunter-gatherer groups at the end of the last Ice Age: plant macroremains from the cave of Santa Maira (Alacant, Spain) ca. 12000–9000 b.p.2005/10/28English70
Crop growing and gathering in the northern German Neolithic: a review supplemented by new results2011/10/30English69
Quantitative landscape dynamics in Denmark through the last three millennia based on the Landscape Reconstruction Algorithm approach2010/08/01English68
From foraging to farming in the southern Levant: the development of Epipalaeolithic and Pre-pottery Neolithic plant management strategies2011/11/13English68
Changes in forest cover in China during the Holocene2006/10/27English66
Late Glacial and early Holocene environment in the middle Lahn river valley (Hessen, central-west Germany) and the local impact of early Mesolithic people?pollen and macrofossil evidence2003/06/0166
Stable isotopes in archaeobotanical research2014/10/31English66
The spread of Abies throughout Europe since the last glacial period: combined macrofossil and pollen data2004/10/15English66
A methodological approach to the study of archaeological cereal meals: a case study at Çatalhöyük East (Turkey)2017/03/16English64
Prehistory of plant growing and collecting in northern Italy, based on seed remains from the early Neolithic to the Chalcolithic (c. 5600–2100 cal b.c.)2008/01/16English64
Quaternary refugia of the sweet chestnut (Castanea sativa Mill.): an extended palynological approach2004/08/20English64
Pollen dispersal and deposition characteristics of Abies alba, Fagus sylvatica and Pinus sylvestris, Roztocze region (SE Poland)2009/11/10English63
Ancient plant DNA in archaeobotany2007/08/10English63
Anthropogenic indicators in pollen diagrams in eastern France: a critical review2010/11/04English62
The earliest finds of cultivated plants in Armenia: evidence from charred remains and crop processing residues in pisé from the Neolithic settlements of Aratashen and Aknashen2008/05/21English62
Early plant domestications in southern India: some preliminary archaeobotanical results2004/05/25English61
A re-analysis of agricultural production and consumption: implications for understanding the British Iron Age2006/03/18English61