Www.WorldHistory.Biz
Login *:
Password *:
     Register

 

19-03-2015, 17:10

Further Reading

AdovasioJ (2002) The FirstAmericans, New York: Random House.

Anderson DG and Sassaman K (eds.) (1996) The Paleoindian and Early Archaic Southeast. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.

Bryan AL (1973) Paleoenvironments and cultural diversity in Late Pleistocene South America. Quaternary Research 3: 237-256.

Dillehay DT (1999) Monte Verde: A Late Pleistocene Settlement in Chile, Volume 2: The Archaeological Context and Interpretation. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institute Press.

Dillehay TD (2000) The Settlement of the Americas: A New Prehistory. New York: Basic Books.

Dixon J (1999) Bones, Boats and Bison. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.

Meltzer D (2004) Peopling of North America. Developments in Quaternary Science 1: 539-563.

Nichols J (2002) The first American languages. In: Jablonski N (ed.) Memoirs of the California Academy of Science Number 27: The First Americans, The Pleistocene Colonization of the New World, pp. 273-293. San Francisco: University of California Press.

Schurr T (2004) Molecular genetic diversity in Siberians and native Americans suggests an early colonization of the New World. In: Madsen D (ed.) Entering America: Northeast Asia and Beringia Before the Last Glacial Maximum. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.

Stanford D and Bradley B (2002) ‘Ocean Trails and Prairie Paths: Thoughts on the Origins of Clovis.’ In: Jablonski N (ed.) Memoirs of the California Academy of Sciences Number 27: The First Americans, The Pleistocene Colonization of the New World, pp. 255-272. San Francisco: University of California Press.

Steele G and Powell J (2002) ‘Facing the past: A view of the North American human fossil record’. In: Jablonski N (ed.) Memoirs of the California Academy ofSciences Number 27: The First Americans, The Pleistocene Colonization of the New World, pp. 93-122. San Francisco: California Academy of Sciences.



 

html-Link
BB-Link