# | Title | Journal | Year | Citations |
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1 | Reconstructing Woodland Vegetation and its Exploitation by Past Societies, based on the Analysis and Interpretation of Archaeological Wood Charcoal Macro-Remains | Environmental Archaeology | 2005 | 277 |
2 | The archaeobotany of Indian pulses: identification, processing and evidence for cultivation | Environmental Archaeology | 2006 | 203 |
3 | Fodder From Dung: the Recognition and Interpretation of Dung-Derived Plant Material from Archaeological Sites | Environmental Archaeology | 1998 | 102 |
4 | New Plant Foods in Roman Britain — Dispersal and Social Access | Environmental Archaeology | 2008 | 101 |
5 | Reassessing the evidence for the cultivation of wild crops during the Younger Dryas at Tell Abu Hureyra, Syria | Environmental Archaeology | 2010 | 98 |
6 | Evidence for long-term averaging of strontium in bovine enamel using TIMS and LA-MC-ICP-MS strontium isotope intra-molar profiles | Environmental Archaeology | 2010 | 90 |
7 | Stable isotope insights (δ18O,δ13C) into cattle and sheep husbandry at Bercy (Paris, France, 4th millennium BC): birth seasonality and winter leaf foddering | Environmental Archaeology | 2012 | 84 |
8 | Fuel Fodder and Faeces: An Ethnographic and Botanical Study of Dung Fuel Use in Central Anatolia | Environmental Archaeology | 1998 | 77 |
9 | Oxygen isotopes in Molluscan shell: Applications in environmental archaeology | Environmental Archaeology | 2016 | 76 |
10 | Tephrochronology, Environmental Change and the Norse Settlement of Iceland | Environmental Archaeology | 2000 | 75 |
11 | Size and shape of the Eurasian wild boar (Sus scrofa), with a view to the reconstruction of its Holocene history | Environmental Archaeology | 2009 | 72 |
12 | Archaeobotanical results from Sarazm, Tajikistan, an Early Bronze Age Settlement on the edge: Agriculture and exchange | Environmental Archaeology | 2013 | 70 |
13 | An Investigation of Agricultural Consumption and Production Models for Prehistoric and Roman Britain | Environmental Archaeology | 2003 | 69 |
14 | The expansion ofAraucariaforest in the southern Brazilian highlands during the last 4000 years and its implications for the development of the Taquara/Itararé Tradition | Environmental Archaeology | 2007 | 68 |
15 | Declining oaks, increasing artistry, and cultivating rice: the environmental and social context of the emergence of farming in the Lower Yangtze Region | Environmental Archaeology | 2010 | 68 |
16 | An integrated perspective on farming in the early Neolithic lakeshore site of La Draga (Banyoles, Spain) | Environmental Archaeology | 2014 | 59 |
17 | The impact of human activities on the natural environment of the Canary Islands (Spain) during the pre-Hispanic stage (3rd–2nd Century BC to 15th Century AD): an overview | Environmental Archaeology | 2009 | 56 |
18 | Stable isotope evidence for seasonal consumption of marine seaweed by modern and archaeological sheep in the Orkney archipelago (Scotland) | Environmental Archaeology | 2009 | 54 |
19 | Diversity in foddering strategy and herd management in late Bronze Age Britain: An isotopic investigation of pigs and other fauna from two midden sites | Environmental Archaeology | 2012 | 54 |
20 | Fragmentation: The Zonation Method Applied to Fragmented Human Remains from Archaeological and Forensic Contexts | Environmental Archaeology | 2004 | 53 |
21 | Species identification of archaeological dung remains: A critical review of potential methods | Environmental Archaeology | 2013 | 53 |
22 | They did not Live by Grass Alone: the Politics and Palaeoecology of Animal Fodder in the North Atlantic Region | Environmental Archaeology | 1998 | 50 |
23 | Age at death in cattle: methods, older cattle and known-age reference material | Environmental Archaeology | 2012 | 50 |
24 | The Origins of Metallurgy in the Central Balkans based on the Analysis of Cut Marks on Animal Bones | Environmental Archaeology | 2000 | 48 |
25 | What goes in does not always come out: The impact of the ruminant digestive system of sheep on plant material, and its importance for the interpretation of dung-derived archaeobotanical assemblages | Environmental Archaeology | 2013 | 48 |
26 | Hesitant hunters: a review of the introduction of agriculture in western Norway | Environmental Archaeology | 2006 | 47 |
27 | Production risk, inter-annual food storage by households and population-level consequences in seasonal prehistoric agrarian societies | Environmental Archaeology | 2015 | 47 |
28 | Methods for the examination of cattle, sheep and goat dung in prehistoric wetland settlements with examples of the sites Alleshausen-Täschenwiesen and Alleshausen-Grundwiesen (around cal 2900 BC) at Lake Federsee, south-west Germany | Environmental Archaeology | 2013 | 46 |
29 | Ancient Fires on Southern Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada: A Change in Causal Mechanisms at about 2,000 ybp | Environmental Archaeology | 2002 | 44 |
30 | Short climatic fluctuations and their impact on human economies and societies: the potential of the Neolithic lake shore settlements in the Alpine foreland | Environmental Archaeology | 2010 | 44 |
31 | The Neolithic refrigerator on a Friday night: How many people are coming to dinner and just what should I do with the slimy veggies in the back of the fridge? | Environmental Archaeology | 2015 | 44 |
32 | Storage in traditional farming communities of the western Mediterranean: Ethnographic, historical and archaeological data | Environmental Archaeology | 2015 | 44 |
33 | Coastal connections, local fishing, and sustainable egg harvesting: patterns of Viking Age inland wild resource use in Mývatn district, Northern Iceland | Environmental Archaeology | 2006 | 43 |
34 | Holocene environmental change and the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in north-west Europe: revisiting two models | Environmental Archaeology | 2010 | 43 |
35 | Beyond means to meaning: using distributions of shell shapes to reconstruct past collecting strategies | Environmental Archaeology | 2008 | 41 |
36 | Preliminary ethnoarchaeological research on modern animal husbandry in Bestansur, Iraqi Kurdistan: Integrating animal, plant and environmental data | Environmental Archaeology | 2015 | 41 |
37 | Microwear in Modern Rooting and Stall-fed Pigs: the Potential of Dental Microwear Analysis for Exploring Pig Diet and Management in the Past | Environmental Archaeology | 1999 | 40 |
38 | Neolithic and Bronze Age Agriculture in Southern Scandinavia – Recent Archaeobotanical Evidence from Denmark | Environmental Archaeology | 2003 | 40 |
39 | Puffins, Pigs, Cod and Barley: Palaeoeconomy at Undir Junkarinsfløtti, Sandoy, Faroe Islands | Environmental Archaeology | 2005 | 40 |
40 | Zooarchaeology in the Neolithic and Chalcolithic of Southern Portugal | Environmental Archaeology | 2014 | 40 |
41 | On bad terms: Problems and solutions within zooarchaeological bone surface modification studies | Environmental Archaeology | 2015 | 40 |
42 | Carbon and nitrogen stable isotope values in freshwater, brackish and marine fish bone collagen from Mesolithic and Neolithic sites in central and northern Europe | Environmental Archaeology | 2016 | 40 |
43 | Charting the Emergence of Cereal and Pulse Domestication in South-west Asia | Environmental Archaeology | 1999 | 39 |
44 | The dating of Doggerland – post-glacial geochronology of the southern North Sea | Environmental Archaeology | 2006 | 38 |
45 | Comparing Levels of Subsistence Stress amongst Norse Settlers in Iceland and Greenland using Levels of Bone Fat Exploitation as an Indicator | Environmental Archaeology | 2003 | 37 |
46 | The Food Economies of Atlantic Island Monasteries: The Documentary and Archaeo-Environmental Evidence | Environmental Archaeology | 2004 | 37 |
47 | 'Islands' in Holocene Forests: Implications for Forest Openness, Landscape Clearance and 'Culture-Steppe' Species | Environmental Archaeology | 2004 | 37 |
48 | Landscape transformation and economic practices among the first farming societies in Lake Banyoles (Girona, Spain) | Environmental Archaeology | 2014 | 37 |
49 | The emergence of agropastoralism: Accelerated ecocultural change on the Andean altiplano, ∼3540–3120 cal BP | Environmental Archaeology | 2015 | 37 |
50 | Phytoliths of Rice detected in the Neolithic Sites in the Valley of the Taihu Lake in China | Environmental Archaeology | 2003 | 36 |