All Stories

  1. A quantitative analysis of Final Palaeolithic/earliest Mesolithic cultural taxonomy and evolution in Europe
  2. Cultural heritage and climate adaptation: a cultural evolutionary perspective for the Anthropocene
  3. Possible Wild Boar Management during the Ertebølle Period. A Carbon and Nitrogen Isotope Analysis of Mesolithic Wild Boar from Fannerup F, Denmark
  4. Volcanic Activity
  5. Towards a science of past disasters
  6. The Resettlement of Northern Europe
  7. Editorial
  8. The taphonomy of fallow deer (Dama dama) skeletons from Denmark and its bearing on the pre-Weichselian occupation of northern Europe by humans
  9. Tephra, tephrochronology and archaeology – a (re-)view from Northern Europe
  10. A Laacher See-eruption supplement to Tephrabase. A revised tephra fallout map and new geochemical data
  11. The Laacher See-eruption (c. 13ky BP) and societal change amongst peripheral Late Glacial hunter-gatherers in southern Scandinavia
  12. Editorial
  13. Bayesian radiocarbon models for the cultural transition during the Allerød in southern Scandinavia
  14. A Laacher See-eruption supplement to Tephrabase: Investigating distal tephra fallout dynamics
  15. Adaptation and niche construction in human prehistory: a case study from the southern Scandinavian Late Glacial
  16. Steps Towards Operationalising an Evolutionary Archaeological Definition of Culture
  17. Why isn't archaeology (more) Darwinian? A historical perspective
  18. Testing the ‘Laacher See hypothesis’: tephra as dental abrasive
  19. Climate and Demography in Early Prehistory: Using Calibrated 14 C Dates as Population Proxies
  20. Testing the ‘Laacher See hypothesis’: a health hazard perspective
  21. Towards an archaeology of pedagogy: learning, teaching and the generation of material culture traditions
  22. The Laacher See-eruption (12,920 BP) and material culture change at the end of the Allerød in Northern Europe
  23. Increasing the relevance of mathematical approaches to demographic history
  24. The Scandinavian Connection: The Roots of Darwinian Archaeology in 19th-Century Scandinavian Archaeology