Search Results
How to mark specific references of interest for your List collections
Type | Year | Authors | Title | Source | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Journal Article | 2005 | Rabett, Ryan J. | The early exploitation of Southeast Asian mangroves: bone technology from caves and open sites | Asian Perspectives (2005) | [Rabett, 2005 #30559] |
Book Section | 2006 | Rabett, Ryan J. | Bones from 'Hell': preliminary results of new work on the Harrisson faunal assemblage from the deepest part of Niah Cave, Sarawak | Uncovering Southeast Asia's past: selected papers from the 10th International Conference of the European Association of Southeast Asian Archaeologists | [Rabett, 2006 #24067] |
Journal Article | 2008 | Piper, Philip J. | Using community, composition and structural variation in terminal Pleistocene vertebrate assemblages to identify human hunting behaviour at the Niah caves, Borneo | Bulletin of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association | [Piper, 2008 #29480] |
Book Section | 2011 | Rabett, Ryan J. | Techno-modes, techno-facies, and palaeo-cultures: change and continuity in the Pleistocene of southeast, central and north Asia | Investigating archaeological cultures: material culture, variability, and transmission | [Rabett, 2011 #23003] |
Book | 2012 | Rabett, Ryan J. | Human adaptation in the Asian Palaeolithic: hominin dispersal and behaviour during the late Quaternary | [Rabett, 2012 #19834] | |
Book Section | 2012 | Rabett, Ryan J. | Eating your tools: early butchery and craft modification of primate bones in tropical Southeast Asia | Bones for tools—tools for bone: the interplay between objects and objectives | [Rabett, 2012 #22477] |
Journal Article | 2012 | Rabett, Ryan J. | The emergence of bone technologies at the end of the Pleistocene in Southeast Asia: regional and evolutionary implications | Cambridge Archaeological Journal | [Rabett, 2012 #27821] |
Book Section in a Series | 2013 | Barker, Graeme | The Niah Caves, the 'human revolution', and foraging/farming transitions in island Southeast Asia | Rainforest foraging and farming in island Southeast Asia: the archaeology of the Niah Caves, Sarawak | [Barker, 2013 #25479] |
Book Section in a Series | 2013 | Lloyd-Smith, Lindsay | 'Neolithic' societies <i>c</i>. 4000-2000 years ago: Austronesian farmers? | Rainforest foraging and farming in island Southeast Asia: the archaeology of the Niah Caves, Sarawak | [Lloyd-Smith, 2013 #25481] |
Book Section in a Series | 2013 | Rabett, Ryan J. | Landscape transformations and human responses, <i>c</i>. 11,500-<i>c</i>. 4500 years ago | Rainforest foraging and farming in island Southeast Asia: the archaeology of the Niah Caves, Sarawak | [Rabett, 2013 #25482] |
Book Section in a Series | 2013 | Barton, Huw | Late Pleistocene foragers, <i>c</i>. 35,000-11,500 years ago | Rainforest foraging and farming in island Southeast Asia: the archaeology of the Niah Caves, Sarawak | [Barton, 2013 #25483] |
Book Section in a Series | 2013 | Reynolds, Tim | The first modern humans at Niah, <i>c</i>. 50,000-35,000 years ago | Rainforest foraging and farming in island Southeast Asia: the archaeology of the Niah Caves, Sarawak | [Reynolds, 2013 #25484] |
Book Section in a Series | 2013 | Barker, Graeme | Archaeological investigations in the Niah Caves, 1954-2004 | Rainforest foraging and farming in island Southeast Asia: the archaeology of the Niah Caves, Sarawak | [Barker, 2013 #25486] |
Book Section | 2014 | Piper, Philip J. | Late Pleistocene subsistence strategies in island Southeast Asia and their implications for understanding the development of modern human behaviour | Southern Asia, Australia, and the search for human origins | [Piper, 2014 #22527] |
Book Section | 2017 | Rabett, Ryan J. | The early human occupation of East and Southeast Asia | Handbook of East and Southeast Asian Archaeology | [Rabett, 2017 #22301] |