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101. Sedentism, pottery and inland fishing in Late Glacial Japan: a reassessment of the Maedakochi site

102. Calling Time on Oronsay: Revising Settlement Models Around the Mesolithic–Neolithic Transition in Western Scotland, New Evidence from Port Lobh, Colonsay

103. Evolutionary Origins of the Differences in Osteoporosis Risk in US Populations

104. Lithic Technological Organization and Hafting in Early Villages

105. In defense of porridge: perspectives on domestication from the North

106. Distinctive local tradition of plant-tempered Gosan-ri-type pottery on Jeju Island in the Neolithic Korean Peninsula

107. RANCHO BAJO: PRIMERAS EVIDENCIAS DEL PRECERÁMICO TERMINAL EN QUITO (Rancho Bajo: First Evidence of the Terminal Preceramic in Quito)

108. Storage defense: Expansive and intensive territorialism in hunter-gatherer delayed return economies

109. Shellfish, Geophytes, and Sedentism on Early Holocene Santa Rosa Island, Alta California, USA

110. Human mobility and early sedentism: the Late Neolithic landscape of southern Azerbaijan

111. Landscapes of Strategic Mobility in Central America

112. Increased Sedentism and Signaling during the Late Archaic

113. Local Technological Traditions in the Early and Middle Epipaleolithic of Ein Gev Area

114. The origins of sedentism: Climate, population, and technology.

115. Treponemal Disease, Tuberculosis and Subsistence-settlement Pattern in the Late Woodland Period West-central Illinois.

116. Revisiting the economy and mobility of southern proto-Jê (Taquara-Itararé) groups in the southern Brazilian highlands: starch grain and phytoliths analyses from the Bonin site, Urubici, Brazil.

117. Development of sedentary communities in the Maya lowlands: Coexisting mobile groups and public ceremonies at Ceibal, Guatemala.

118. Sedentism, Settlements, and Radiocarbon Dates of Neolithic Korea.

119. Recent origin of low trabecular bone density in modern humans.

120. Early Neolithic occupation of the lowlands of south-western Iran:New evidence from Tapeh Mahtaj

122. Early mesolithic fishing in Southern Scandinavia : About a sedentary lifestyle during the mesolithic

123. Sustainable Resources in Pre-hispanic Coastal Ecuador: Their Associated Iconography and Symbolism

124. Health and Nutrition in Pre-Hispanic Mesoamerica.

125. A Biohistory of Health and Behavior in the Georgia Bight: The Agricultural Transition and the Impact of European Contact.

126. Reconstructing Health Profiles from Skeletal Remains.

127. Stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes as indicators of sedentism and territoriality in late Holocene South Australia.

128. Mesolithic occupation patterns at Auneau “Le Parc du Château” (Eure-et-Loir – France): contribution of zooarchaeological analysis from two main pits to the understanding of type and length of occupation.

129. Settlement archaeology and the contextualization of domestic artefacts

130. Mass procurement and prey rankings: insights from the European rabbit

131. Implications of Engaging in Regular Exercise and Reducing Sedentary Behavior During a Global Pandemic: An Immuno-metabolic Perspective in Patients with Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes

132. Microblade–Based Societies in North China at the End of the Ice Age

133. Fire mosaics and habitat choice in nomadic foragers

134. Human domestication and the roles of human agency in human evolution

135. Malthusian Cycles among Complex Fisher-Hunter-Gatherers: The Socio-economic and Demographic History of Housepit 54, Bridge River site, British Columbia

136. Clotting nomadic spaces : on sedentism and nomadism

137. Food resources in the economy and ritual practices of the Northern Mesopotamia population during the transition to the Neolithic

138. The Interpretation of Mesolithic Structures in Britain: New Evidence from Criet Dubh, Isle of Mull, & Alternative Approaches to Chronological Analysis for Inferring Occupation Tempos & Settlement Patterns

139. Pre-Pottery Clay Innovation in the Zagros Foothills

140. Epipaleolithic human appendicular remains from Ein Gev I, Israel

141. 12. The Ideal Free Distribution, Food Production, and the Colonization of Oceania

142. Stone age disease in the north – Human intestinal parasites from a Mesolithic burial in Motala, Sweden

143. Ungulate skeletal element profiles: A possible marker for territorial contraction and sedentism in the Levantine Epipaleolithic

144. On Inclusions and Exclusions

145. Climate and environmental reconstruction of the Epipaleolithic Mediterranean Levant (22.0–11.9 ka cal. BP)

146. Evolutionary Medicine and Future of Humanity: Will Evolution Have the Final Word?

147. Lithic Technological Organization and Hafting in Early Villages

148. A Minimum Analytical Nodule Analysis (MANA) Based Study : Mobility and sedentism during the Middle and Late Mesolithic in Sweden

150. Herding, Settlement, and Chronology in the Balkan Neolithic.

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