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310 results on '"Sedentism"'

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1. Re-Territorializing the Neolithic: Architecture and Rhythms in Early Sedentary Societies of the Near East.

2. Dwelling architecture and flexible land-use strategies in the Prehispanic Sierras de Córdoba, Argentina

3. Settling down at Ceibal and Cuello: variation in the transition to sedentism across the Maya lowlands.

4. Ceramic production and the transition to agriculture in Northeast China: Neolithic pottery technology in the Fuxin Region.

5. Dwelling architecture and flexible land-use strategies in the Prehispanic Sierras de Cordoba, Argentina.

6. Sedentist Epidemiology: COVID-19 Policies and Pastoral Mobility in Turkana County, Kenya

7. Schooled Tuaregs’ Engagement with Mobile Pastoralism in the Agadez Region (Niger): Avoidable Sedentism and Alternative Forms of Cooperation

8. Seeing Cattle like a State: Sedentist Assumptions of the Namibian Livestock Identification and Traceability System

9. No Option but to Settle! The Community Land Act, Devolution and Pastoralism in Samburu County, Kenya

10. Settling down at Ceibal and Cuello: variation in the transition to sedentism across the Maya lowlands

11. Reevaluating Mobility and Sedentism in Classic Mimbres and Salado Villages, Southwest New Mexico.

12. NO OPTION BUT TO SETTLE! THE COMMUNITY LAND ACT, DEVOLUTION AND PASTORALISM IN SAMBURU COUNTY, KENYA.

13. SCHOOLED TUAREGS' ENGAGEMENT WITH MOBILE PASTORALISM IN THE AGADEZ REGION (NIGER): AVOIDABLE SEDENTISM AND ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF COOPERATION.

14. SEDENTIST EPIDEMIOLOGY: COVID-19 POLICIES AND PASTORAL MOBILITY IN TURKANA COUNTY, KENYA.

15. SEEING CATTLE LIKE A STATE: SEDENTIST ASSUMPTIONS OF THE NAMIBIAN LIVESTOCK IDENTIFICATION AND TRACEABILITY SYSTEM.

16. Human consumption of large herbivore digesta and its implications for foraging theory.

17. Lithic Analysis of Andean Sedentary Societies: A Case Study from the Chachapoyas Region, Peru, and Potential Applications.

18. Settling down in Southwest Asia: the Epipalaeolithic-Neolithic transformation

19. Take a load off: skeletal implications of sedentism in the feet of modern body donors.

20. Human social organization during the Late Pleistocene: Beyond the nomadic-egalitarian model.

21. From foraging to farming: Domesticating landscapes in the Midsouth three thousand years ago.

22. Early intensive millet-pig agriculture in the high-elevation Tibetan Plateau.

23. Experimental evidence that physical activity inhibits osteoarthritis: Implications for inferring activity patterns from osteoarthritis in archeological human skeletons.

24. Considerations on the mechanisms of integration of the dead in the early sedentary societies of the Near East (Natufian, 15-11.6 ka cal BP)

26. Palaeo or Neo? Bataille, Lévi-Strauss and the Rewriting of Prehistory.

27. Liminality in the Ethnohistory, Culture, and Kinship of the Nagaibaks

28. Dwelling the hill: Traces of increasing sedentism in hunter-gatherers societies at Checua site, Colombia (9500-5052 cal BP).

29. Another Look at Expedient Technologies, Sedentism, and the Bow and Arrow.

30. CLOTTING NOMADIC SPACES: ON SEDENTISM AND NOMADISM.

32. Building blocks of agriculture

34. Physical inactivity and knee osteoarthritis in guinea pigs.

35. Lithic Technological Organization and Hafting in Early Villages.

36. A Quantitative Dwelling-Scale Approach to the Social Implications of Maize Horticulture in New England.

37. Jemberang and Alam Melayu : Crossing the Straits of Melaka, Singapore and Riau.

40. Systemic patterns of trabecular bone across the human and chimpanzee skeleton.

41. Eels, Beavers, and Horses: Human Niche Construction in the European Late Upper Palaeolithic.

42. NARRATIVE OF THE HOME IN THE CULTURE OF SEDENTISM AND NOMADISM

43. Becoming sedentary? The seasonality of food resource exploitation in the Mesolithic-Neolithic Danube Gorges

45. Monsoon forced evolution of savanna and the spread of agro-pastoralism in peninsular India

47. The Sedanthropocene: Nomadism, Ecology, Hypernormalization: Toward Reimagining the Holocene

48. Shoreline Displacement, Coastal Environments and Human Subsistence in the Hanö Bay Region during The Mesolithic

49. Origins of house mice in ecological niches created by settled hunter-gatherers in the Levant 15,000 y ago.

50. Signals of sedentism: Faunal exploitation as evidence of a delayed-return economy at Norje Sunnansund, an Early Mesolithic site in south-eastern Sweden.

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