کلمات کلیدی مربوط به کتاب پویایی جمعیت در ماقبل تاریخ و تاریخ اولیه. رویکردهای جدید با استفاده از ایزوتوپ های پایدار و ژنتیک: رشته های تاریخی، باستان شناسی
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Population Dynamics in Prehistory and Early History. New Approaches by Using Stable Isotopes and Genetics به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب پویایی جمعیت در ماقبل تاریخ و تاریخ اولیه. رویکردهای جدید با استفاده از ایزوتوپ های پایدار و ژنتیک نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 2012. — 353 pp. — (Topoi. Berlin
Studies of the Ancient World. Vol. 5). — ISBN
978-3-11-026630-6.
Migrations and population dynamics
are considered very problematic topics in the fields of ancient
studies. Recent scholarship in (pre)historical population has
generated new impulses by using scientific approaches using
radiogenic and stable isotopes, and palaeogenetics, as well as
computer simulation. As a result, the state of migration
research has undergone rapid change. Several research groups
presented papers at a conference held in Berlin in 2010,
addressing specific historical aspects of population dynamics
and migration, with no chronological or geographical
restrictions, in the light of cutting-edge bio-archaeological
research. This volume, divided into three larger thematic
sections (isotope analysis, population genetics, and modelling
and computer simulation), presents experiences and insights
about methodological approaches, research results and prospects
for future research in this area in a varied collection of
papers. Scholars from widely diverse scientific disciplines
present their approaches, findings and interpretations to an
audience far broader than the circles of the individual
disciplines.
Genetics.
Mathias Currat. Consequences of population expansions on
European genetic diversity.
Pascale Gerbault, Michela Leonardi, Adam Powell, Christine
Weber, Norbert Benecke, Joachim Burger, Mark G. Thomas.
Domestication and migrations: Using mitochondrial DNA to infer
domestication processes of goats and horses.
Greger Larson. Using pigs as a proxy to reconstruct patterns of
human migration.
Ingrid Wiechmann. Poor DNA preservation in bovine remains
excavated at Pre-Pottery Neolithic Göbekli Tepe (Southeast
Turkey): Brief communication.
Amelie Scheu, Christina Geörg, Anna Schulz, Joachim Burger,
Norbert Benecke. The arrival of domesticated animals in
South-Eastern Europe as seen from ancient DNA.
Lars Fehren-Schmitz. Population dynamics, cultural evolution
and climate change in pre-Columbian western South
America.
Stable isotopes and genetics.
Malcolm C. Lillie, Inna Potekhina, Chelsea Budd, Alexey G.
Nikitin. Prehistoric populations of Ukraine: Migration at the
later Mesolithic to Neolithic transition.
Vyacheslav I. Molodin, Alexander S. Pilipenko, Aida G.
Romaschenko, Anton A. Zhuravlev, Rostislav O. Trapezov, Tatiana
A. Chikisheva, Dmitriy V. Pozdnyakov. Human migrations in the
southern region of the West Siberian Plain during the Bronze
Age: Archaeological, palaeogenetic and anthropological
data.
Christina Sofeso, Marina Vohberger, Annika Wisnowsky, Bernd
Päffgen, Michaela Harbeck. Verifying archaeological hypotheses:
Investigations on origin and genealogical lineages of a
privileged society in Upper Bavaria from Imperial Roman times
(Erding, Kletthamer Feld).
Stable isotopes.
Marek Zvelebil, Malcolm C. Lillie, Janet Montgomery, Alena
Lukes, Paul Pettitt, Mike P. Richards. The emergence of the
LBK: Migration, memory and meaning at the transition to
agriculture.
Rouven Turck, B. Kober, J. Kontny, F. Haack, Andrea Zeeb-Lanz.
“Widely travelled people” in Herxheim? Sr-isotopes as
indicators of mobility.
Claudia Gerling, Volker Heyd, Alistair Pike, Eszter Bánffy,
János Dani, Kitti Köhler, Gabriella Kulcsár, Elke Kaiser,
Wolfram Schier. Identifying kurgan graves in Eastern Hungary: A
burial mound in the light of strontium and oxygen isotope
analysis.
Natalia Shishlina, Vyacheslav Sevastyanov, Robert E.M. Hedges.
Isotope ratio study of Bronze Age samples from the Eurasian
Caspian Steppes.
Johanna Irrgeher, Maria Teschler-Nicola, Katrin Leutgeb,
Christopher Weiss, Daniela Kern, Thomas Prohaska. Migration and
mobility in the latest Neolithic of the Traisen Valley, Lower
Austria: Sr isotope analysis.
Daniela Kern. Migration and mobility in the latest Neolithic of
the Traisen Valley, Lower Austria: Archaeology.
Julia K. Koch, Katharina Kupke. Life-course reconstruction for
mobile individuals in an Early Bronze Age society in Central
Europe: Concept of the project and first results for the
cemetery of Singen (Germany).
Argyro Nafplioti. Late Minoan IB destructions and cultural
upheaval on Crete: A bioarchaeological perspective.
Elisabeth Stephan, Corina Knipper, Kristine Schatz, T. Douglas
Price, Ernst Hegner. Strontium isotopes in faunal remains:
Evidence of the strategies for land use at the Iron Age site
Eberdingen-Hochdorf (Baden-Württemberg, Germany).
Corina Knipper, Anne-France Maurer, Daniel Peters, Christian
Meyer, Michael Brauns, Stephen G. Galer, Uta von Freeden, Bernd
Schöne, Harald Meller, Kurt W. Alt. Mobility in Thuringia or
mobile Thuringians: A strontium isotope study from early
medieval Central Germany.
T. Douglas Price, Karin Margarita Frei, Vera Tiesler, Hildur
Gestsdóttir. Isotopes and mobility: Case studies with large
samples.
Gisela Grupe, Sabine Eickhoff, Anja Grothe, Bettina Jungklaus,
Alexander Lutz. Missing in action during the Thirty Years’ War:
Provenance of soldiers from the Wittstock battlefield, October
4, 1636. An investigation of stable strontium and oxygen
isotopes.
Jason E. Laffoon, Menno L. P. Hoogland. Migration and mobility
in the circum-Caribbean: Integrating archaeology and isotopic
analysis.