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Start Over You searched for: Topic archaeological dating Remove constraint Topic: archaeological dating Publication Year Range Last 50 years Remove constraint Publication Year Range: Last 50 years Region europe Remove constraint Region: europe
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1. Mesolithic projectile variability along the southern North Sea basin (NW Europe): Hunter-gatherer responses to repeated climate change at the beginning of the Holocene.

2. The Middle-to-Upper Paleolithic transition occupations from Cova Foradada (Calafell, NE Iberia).

3. The Times of Their Lives: from Chronological Precision to Kinds of History and Change.

4. Explaining population booms and busts in Mid-Holocene Europe.

5. Back to the future: The advantage of studying key events in human evolution using a new high resolution radiocarbon method.

6. Dating the emergence of dairying by the first farmers of Central Europe using 14C analysis of fatty acids preserved in pottery vessels.

7. Archaeomagnetic dating of archaeological sites from Switzerland and Bulgaria

8. How old are the towns and villages in Central Europe? Archaeological data reveal the size of bias in dating obtained from traditional historical sources.

9. Mashes to Mashes, Crust to Crust. Presenting a novel microstructural marker for malting in the archaeological record.

10. The earliest lead ore processing in Europe. 5th millennium BC finds from Pietrele on the Lower Danube.

11. Radiocarbon dating and isotope analysis on the purported Aurignacian skeletal remains from Fontana Nuova (Ragusa, Italy).

12. Early Upper Paleolithic colonization across Europe: Time and mode of the Gravettian diffusion.

13. The Neolithic Demographic Transition in Europe: Correlation with Juvenility Index Supports Interpretation of the Summed Calibrated Radiocarbon Date Probability Distribution (SCDPD) as a Valid Demographic Proxy.

14. The reconstruction of the first copper-smelting processes in Europe during the 4th and the 3rd millennium BC: where does the oxygen come from?

15. A new radiocarbon revolution and the dispersal of modern humans in Eurasia.