1.
Scarre, Christopher. The human past: world prehistory & the development of human societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
2.
Scarre, Christopher & Fagan, Brian M. Ancient civilizations. (Prentice Hall, 2003).
3.
Edwards, I. E. S., Gadd, C. J., & Hammond, N. G. L. The Cambridge ancient history: Vol.1: Prolegomena and prehistory. (Cambridge University Press, 1970).
4.
Boardman, John. The Cambridge ancient history: Vol.3: The prehistory of the Balkans. (Cambridge University Press, 1982).
5.
MacGregor, Neil. A history of the world in 100 objects. (Allen Lane, 2010).
6.
Diamond, J. M. Prologue: Yali’s question. in Guns, germs and steel: a short history of everybody for the last 13,000 years 13–32 (Vintage, 1998).
7.
Morris, I. Introduction. in Why the West rules - for now: the patterns of history and what they reveal about the future 3–36 (Profile Books, 2010).
8.
Sherratt, A. Reviving the Grand Narrative: Archaeology and Long-Term Change<BR> The Second David L. Clarke Memorial Lecture. Journal of European Archaeology 3, 1–32 (1995).
9.
Scarre, Christopher. The Human Past: World Prehistory and the Development of Human Societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
10.
Mcbrearty, S. & Brooks, A. S. The revolution that wasn’t: a new interpretation of the origin of modern human behavior. Journal of Human Evolution 39, 453–563 (2000).
11.
OGAP - Olduvai Geochronology and Archaeology Project. http://www.olduvai-gorge.org/.
12.
Blumenschine, R. J., Stanistreet, I. G. & Masao, F. T. Olduvai Gorge and the Olduvai Landscape Paleoanthropology Project. Journal of Human Evolution 63, 247–250 (2012).
13.
Cole, Sonia Mary. Leakey’s luck: the life of Louis Seymour Bazett Leakey, 1903-1972. (Collins, 1975).
14.
De la Torre, I., McHenry, L., Njau, J. & Pante, M. The Origins of the Acheulean at Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania): A New Paleoanthropological Project in East Africa. Archaeology International 15, (2012).
15.
Scarre, Christopher. The Human Past: World Prehistory and the Development of Human Societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
16.
Mithen, Steven J. After the Ice: A Global Human History, 20,000-5000 BC. (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2003).
17.
The Azraq Basin Project. https://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/research/projects/azraq.
18.
Bar-Yosef, O. The Natufian culture in the Levant, threshold to the origins of agriculture. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews 6, 159–177 (1998).
19.
Gerrard, A., Baird, D. & Byrd, B. The chronological basis and significance of the Late Palaeolithic and Neolithic sequence in the Azray Basin, Jordan,. in Late Quaternary chronology and paleoclimates of the eastern Mediterranean 177–199 (RADIOCARBON, Dept. of Geosciences, University of Arizona, 1994).
20.
Garrard, Andrew N. & Byrd, Brian F. Beyond the fertile crescent: late Palaeolithic and Neolithic communities of the Jordanian Steppe, Volume 1: The Azraq Basin project. vol. Levant supplementary series.
21.
Maher, L. A., Richter, T. & Stock, J. T. The Pre-Natufian Epipaleolithic: Long-term Behavioral Trends in the Levant. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews 21, 69–81 (2012).
22.
Soffer, O., Vandiver, P., Klima, B. & Svoboda, J. The pyrotechnology of performance art: Moravian Venuses and wolverines. in Before Lascaux: the complex record of the Early Upper Paleolithic 259–275 (CRC Press, 1993).
23.
Wright, K. I. Ground-Stone Tools and Hunter-Gatherer Subsistence in Southwest Asia: Implications for the Transition to Farming. American Antiquity 59, 238–263 (1994).
24.
Wright, K. I. The social origins of cooking and dining in early villages of western Asia. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 66, 89–121.
25.
Wright, K. & Garrard, A. Social identities and the expansion of stone bead-making in Neolithic Western Asia: new evidence from Jordan. Antiquity 77, 267–284 (2003).
26.
Diamond, J. Evolution, consequences and future of plant and animal domestication. Nature 418, 700–707 (2002).
27.
Fuller, D. Q. An Emerging Paradigm Shift in the Origins of Agriculture. General Anthropology 17, 1–12 (2010).
28.
Scarre, Christopher. The Human Past: World Prehistory and the Development of Human Societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
29.
Zeder, M. A. The Origins of Agriculture in the Near East. Current Anthropology 52, S221–S235 (2011).
30.
Colledge, S. & Conolly, J. Reassessing the evidence for the cultivation of wild crops during the Younger Dryas at Tell Abu Hureyra, Syria. Environmental Archaeology 15, 124–138 (2010).
31.
Colledge, S., Conolly, J. & Shennan, S. Archaeobotanical Evidence for the Spread of Farming in the Eastern Mediterranean. Current Anthropology 45, S35–S58 (2004).
32.
Fuller, D. Q. Contrasting Patterns in Crop Domestication and Domestication Rates: Recent Archaeobotanical Insights from the Old World. Annals of Botany 100, 903–924 (2007).
33.
Willcox, G. The beginings of cereal cultivation and domestication in Southwest Asia. in A companion to the archaeology of the ancient Near East vol. Blackwell companions to the ancient world 163–180 (Wiley-Blackwell, 2012).
34.
Fuller, D. Q., Willcox, G. & Allaby, R. G. Cultivation and domestication had multiple origins: arguments against the core area hypothesis for the origins of agriculture in the Near East. World Archaeology 43, 628–652 (2011).
35.
Early Rice Project. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/research/directory/early_rice_fuller.
36.
UCL Discovery - Pathways to Asian civilizations: Tracing the origins and spread of rice and rice cultures. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1348002/.
37.
Fuller, D. Q. & Qin, L. Water management and labour in the origins and dispersal of Asian rice. World Archaeology 41, 88–111 (2009).
38.
Fuller, D. Q. & Qin, L. Declining oaks, increasing artistry, and cultivating rice: the environmental and social context of the emergence of farming in the Lower Yangtze Region. Environmental Archaeology 15, 139–159 (2010).
39.
Bettinger, R. L., Barton, L. & Morgan, C. The origins of food production in north China: A different kind of agricultural revolution. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews 19, 9–21 (2010).
40.
Fuller, D. Q. Finding Plant Domestication in the Indian Subcontinent. Current Anthropology 52, S347–S362 (2011).
41.
Scarre, Christopher. The Human Past: World Prehistory and the Development of Human Societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
42.
Liu, X., Jones, M. K., Zhao, Z., Liu, G. & O’Connell, T. C. The earliest evidence of millet as a staple crop: New light on neolithic foodways in North China. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 149, 283–290 (2012).
43.
Zhao, Z. New Archaeobotanic Data for the Study of the Origins of Agriculture in China. Current Anthropology 52, S295–S306 (2011).
44.
Çatalhöyük Research Project. http://www.catalhoyuk.com/.
45.
A Bone to Pick | by Scott D. Haddow. http://scotthaddow.wordpress.com/.
46.
Farid, S. Çatalhöyük comes Home. Archaeology International 13, (2011).
47.
Hodder, Ian. Çatalhöyük: the leopard’s tale : revealing the mysteries of Turkey’s ancient ‘town’. (Thames & Hudson, 2006).
48.
Richards, M. P., Pearson, J. A., Molleson, T. I., Russell, N. & Martin, L. Stable Isotope Evidence of Diet at Neolithic Çatalhöyük, Turkey. Journal of Archaeological Science 30, 67–76 (2003).
49.
Russell, N. & Martin, L. The Catalhoyuk mammal remains. in Inhabiting Çatalhöyük: reports from the 1995-99 seasons vol. McDonald Institute monographs 33–98 (McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, 2005).
50.
Cultural Evolution of Neolithic Europe. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/research/directory/euroevol_shennan.
51.
Colledge, S. The Evolution of Neolithic Farming from SW Asian Origins to NW European Limits. European Journal of Archaeology 8, 137–156 (2005).
52.
Conolly, J. et al. Meta-analysis of zooarchaeological data from SW Asia and SE Europe provides insight into the origins and spread of animal husbandry. Journal of Archaeological Science 38, 538–545 (2011).
53.
Shennan, S. Demographic Continuities and Discontinuities in Neolithic Europe: Evidence, Methods and Implications. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 20, 300–311 (2013).
54.
Whittle, A. W. R., Cummings, Vicki, & British Academy. Going over: the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in north-west Europe. vol. Proceedings of the British Academy (Oxford University Press for the British Academy, 2007).
55.
Fiona Marshall and Elisabeth Hildebrand. Cattle Before Crops: The Beginnings of Food Production in Africa. Journal of World Prehistory 16, 99–143 (2002).
56.
Scarre, Christopher. The human past: world prehistory & the development of human societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
57.
Arroyo-Kalin, M. The Amazonian Formative: Crop Domestication and Anthropogenic Soils. Diversity 2, 473–504 (2010).
58.
Amazonian Archaeology - Annual Review of Anthropology, 38(1):251. http://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev-anthro-091908-164310.
59.
Lombardo, U. et al. Early and Middle Holocene Hunter-Gatherer Occupations in Western Amazonia: The Hidden Shell Middens. PLoS ONE 8, (2013).
60.
Saunaluoma, S. Geometric earthworks in the state of Acre, Brazil: excavations at the Fazenda Atlantica and Quinaua sites. Latin American antiquity: a journal of the Society for American Archaeology 23, 565–583.
61.
Walker, J. H. Social implications from agricultural taskscapes in the Southwestern Amazon. Latin American antiquity: a journal of the Society for American Archaeology 22, 275–296.
62.
Ounjougou Archeology. http://www.ounjougou.org/sec_arc/arc_main.php?lang=en&sec=ac&sous_sec=neo&art=neo&art_titre=concept.
63.
Fuller, D. Q. Early domesticated pearl millet in Dhar Nema (Mauritania):evidence of crop-processing waste as ceramic temper. in Fields of change: progress in African archaeobotany vol. Groningen archaeological studies 71–76 (Barkhuis, 2007).
64.
University of Cambridge. Dept. of Archaeology. Mobility amongst LSA Sahelian pastoral groups. A view from the Lower Tilemsi Valley, Eastern Mali. Archaeological review from Cambridge 23, 125–145.
65.
Allsworth-Jones, P. A developmental history of West African agriculture. in West African archaeology: new developments, new perspectives vol. BAR international series 43–52 (Archaeopress, 2010).
66.
Manning, K., Pelling, R., Higham, T., Schwenniger, J.-L. & Fuller, D. Q. 4500-Year old domesticated pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum) from the Tilemsi Valley, Mali: new insights into an alternative cereal domestication pathway. Journal of Archaeological Science 38, 312–322 (2011).
67.
Fiona Marshall and Elisabeth Hildebrand. Cattle Before Crops: The Beginnings of Food Production in Africa. Journal of World Prehistory 16, 99–143 (2002).
68.
Sereno, P. C. et al. Lakeside Cemeteries in the Sahara: 5000 Years of Holocene Population and Environmental Change. PLoS ONE 3, (2008).
69.
Sutton, J. E. G. The African aqualithic. Antiquity 51, 25–34 (1977).
70.
Anderson, A. The origins and development of seafaring: towards a global approach. in The global origins and development of seafaring vol. McDonald Institute monographs 3–16 (McDonald Institute for Archeological Research, 2010).
71.
Renfrew, C. What contact did they have ? Trade and exchange. in Archaeology: theories, methods and practice 357–390 (Thames & Hudson, 2008).
72.
Christopher P. Thornton and Benjamin W. Roberts. Introduction: The Beginnings of Metallurgy in Global Perspective. Journal of World Prehistory 22, 181–184 (2009).
73.
The rise of metallurgy in Eurasia. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/research/directory/rise-metallurgy-eurasia.
74.
Radivojević, M. et al. On the origins of extractive metallurgy: new evidence from Europe. Journal of Archaeological Science 37, 2775–2787 (2010).
75.
EBSCOhost: Development of metallurgy in Eurasia.
76.
Broodbank, Cyprian. An island archaeology of the early Cyclades. (Cambridge University Press, 2000).
77.
Broodbank, C. The Early Bronze Age in the Cyclades. in The Cambridge companion to the Aegean Bronze Age 47–76 (Cambridge University Press, 2008).
78.
Broodbank, C. The devil and the deep blue sea. in The making of the Middle Sea: a history of the Mediterranean from the beginning to the emergence of the Classical world 325–344 (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
79.
Knappett, C. Introduction: Why networks? in Network analysis in archaeology: new approaches to regional interaction 3–15 (Oxford University Press, 2013).
80.
Knappett, C., Evans, T. & Rivers, R. Modelling maritime interaction in the Aegean Bronze Age. Antiquity 82, 1009–1024 (2008).
81.
Anthony, D. W. & Brown, D. R. The Secondary Products Revolution, Horse-Riding, and Mounted Warfare. Journal of World Prehistory 24, 131–160 (2011).
82.
Sherratt, A. Plough and pastoralism: Aspects of the secondary products revolution. in Pattern of the past: studies in honour of David Clarke 261–305 (Cambridge University Press, 1981).
83.
Sherratt, A. Cash-crops before cash: organic consumables and trade. in The prehistory of food: appetites for change vol. One world archaeology 13–34 (Routledge, 1999).
84.
Morris, I. Cultural complexity. in The Oxford handbook of archaeology vol. Oxford handbooks 519–554 (Oxford University Press, 2009).
85.
Scarre, Christopher. The human past: world prehistory & the development of human societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
86.
Yoffee, Norman. Myths of the archaic state: evolution of the earliest cities, states and civilizations. (Cambridge University Press, 2005).
87.
Kemp, B. J. Old Kingdom, Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period c. 2686-1552 BC. in Ancient Egypt: a social history 71–182 (Cambridge University Press, 1983).
88.
Trigger, B. G. The unique and the general. in Early civilizations: ancient Egypt in context 1–26 (American University in Cairo Press, 1995).
89.
Wengrow, D. What makes civilization?: the ancient Near East and the future of the West. (Oxford University Press, 2010).
90.
Cultures of Commodity Branding. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/research/directory/branding_wengrow.
91.
Were Mesopotamians the first brand addicts? - life - 25 April 2008 - New Scientist. http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg19826533.700-were-mesopotamians-the-first-brand-addicts.html#.UmFaDlv1D6U.
92.
Bevan, A. & Wengrow, D. Making and marking relationships: Bronze Age brandings and Mediterranean commodities. in Cultures of commodity branding vol. Publications of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London 35–86 (Left Coast, 2010).
93.
Collon, Dominique & British Museum. 7000 years of seals. (British Museum Press for the Trustees of the British Museum, 1997).
94.
Elephantine | Deutsches Archäologisches Institut. http://www.dainst.org/en/project/elephantine?ft=all.
95.
Kemp, B. The dynamics of culture. in Ancient Egypt: anatomy of a civilization 111–160 (Routledge, 2006).
96.
Seidlmayer, S. J. Town and state in the early Old Kingdom: A view from Elephantine. in Ancient Egypt: anatomy of a civilization 108–127 (Routledge, 2006).
97.
Kohl, Philip L. The making of bronze age Eurasia. vol. Cambridge world archaeology (Cambridge University Press, 2007).
98.
Sheratt, A. What would a Bronze Age system look like? Relations between temperate Europe and the Mediterranean in later prehistory. Journal of European archaeology: journal of the European Association of Archaeologists 1, 1–57 (1993).
99.
Sherratt, S. The trans-Eurasian exchange: the prehistory of Chinese relations with the West. in Contact and exchange in the ancient world vol. Perspectives on the global past 30–61 (University of Hawaii Press, 2006).
100.
Sherratt, A. G. Reviving the grand narrative: archaeology and long-term change. Journal of European archaeology: journal of the European Association of Archaeologists 3, 1–32 (1995).
101.
McAnany, Patricia Ann & Yoffee, Norman. Questioning collapse: human resilience, ecological vulnerability, and the aftermath of empire. (Cambridge University Press, 2010).
102.
Sherratt, A. What would a Bronze age system look like? Relations between temperate Europe and the Mediterranean in late prehistory. Journal of European archaeology: journal of the European Association of Archaeologists 1, 1–57 (1993).
103.
Wengrow, D. What makes civilization?: the ancient Near East and the future of the West. (Oxford University Press, 2010).
104.
Broodbank, Cyprian. The making of the Middle Sea: a history of the Mediterranean from the beginning to the emergence of the Classical world. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
105.
Sherratt, A. G. & Sherratt, E. S. From luxuries to commodities: the nature of Mediterranean Bronze Age trading systems. in Bronze age trade in the Mediterranean: papers presented at the Conference held at Rewley House, Oxford, in December 1989 vol. Studies in Mediterranean archaeology 351–386 (Åstrom, 1991).
106.
Bedford, P. R. The Neo-Assyrian empire. in The dynamics of ancient empires: state power from Assyria to Byzantium vol. Oxford studies in early empires 30–66 (Oxford University Press, 2009).
107.
Scarre, Christopher. The human past: world prehistory & the development of human societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
108.
Susan and Andrew Sherratt. The Growth of the Mediterranean Economy in the Early First Millennium BC. World Archaeology 24, 361–378 (1993).
109.
Altaweel, M. The roads of Ashur and Nineveh. Akkadica 124, 221–228.
110.
Grayson, A. K. Assyrian rule of conquered territory in ancient Western Asia. in Civilizations of the ancient Near East vol. 2 959–968 (Hendrickson, 2000).
111.
Wilkinson, T. & Barbanes, E. Settlement patterns in the Syrian Jazirah during the Iron Age. in Essays on Syria in the Iron Age vol. Ancient Near Eastern studies 397–422 (Peeters, 2000).
112.
Cadogan, Gerald, Hatzaki, Eleni, Vasilakēs, Antōnēs, British School at Athens Conference and Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities of Herakleion Ephoreia, & British School at Athens. Knossos: palace, city, state ; proceedings of the conference in Herakleion organised by the British School at Athens and the 23rd Ephoreia of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities of Herakleion, in November 2000, for the Centenary of Sir Arthur Evan’s excavations at Knossos. vol. British School at Athens studies (British School at Athens, 2004).
113.
Branigan, K. From sites to communities: defining the human dimensions of Minoan urbanism. in Urbanism in the Aegean Bronze Age vol. Sheffield studies in Aegean archeology 15–37 (Sheffield Academic Press, 2001).
114.
Whitelaw, T. Collecting cities: some problems and prospects. in Archaeological survey and the city vol. University of Cambridge Museum of Classical Archaeology monograph 70–106 (Oxbow Books, 2013).
115.
Whitelaw, T., Bredaki, M. & Vasilakis, A. The Knossos Urban Landscape Project: investigating the long-term dynamics of an urban landscape. Archaeology International 10, (2006).
116.
Mattingly, D. Being Roman: expressing identity in a provincial setting. Journal of Roman archaeology 17, 5–25 (2004).
117.
Woolf, G. The Whole Story. in Rome: an empire’s story 1–12 (Oxford University Press, 2012).
118.
CBA Community Archaeology Forum: Caerleon Legionary Fortress. http://www.britarch.ac.uk/caf/wikka.php?wakka=CaerleonLegionaryFortress.
119.
Gardner, A. & Guest, P. Exploring Roman Caerleon: new excavations at the legionary fortress of Isca. Archaeology International 12, (2008).
120.
Gardner, Andrew. An archaeology of identity: soldiers and society in late Roman Britain. vol. Publications of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London (Left Coast Press, 2007).
121.
Fluid frontiers:cultural interaction on the edge of empire. http://www.learningace.com/doc/2410630/f7993f383ad4d989275e9ada508543f5/03gardner.
122.
Mattingly, D. J. An imperial possession: Britain in the Roman Empire, 54 BC-AD 409. vol. Penguin history of Britain (Allen Lane, 2006).
123.
Beard, M. & Henderson, J. Sizing up Power: Masters of Art. in Classical art: from Greece to Rome vol. Oxford history of art 147–204 (Oxford University Press, 2001).
124.
Coulston, J. C., Dodge, Hazel, & Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). Ancient Rome: the archaeology of the eternal city. vol. Oxford University School of Archaeology (Oxford University School of Archaeology, 200AD).
125.
Elsner, Jaś. Imperial Rome and Christian triumph: the art of the Roman Empire, AD 100-450. vol. Oxford history of art (Oxford University Press, 1998).
126.
Allchin, F. R. The Mauryan state and empire. in The archaeology of early historic South Asia: the emergence of cities and states 187–221 (Cambridge University Press, 1995).
127.
Nylan, Michael & Loewe, Michael. China’s early empires: a re-appraisal. vol. University of Cambridge Oriental publications (Cambridge University Press, 2010).
128.
Scarre, Christopher. The human past: world prehistory & the development of human societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
129.
Imperial Logistics: The Making of the Terracotta Army. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/terracotta-army.
130.
Martinón-Torres, M. et al. Making Weapons for the Terracotta Army. Archaeology International 13, (2011).
131.
Portal, Jane & British Museum. The first emperor: China’s Terracotta Army. (British Museum, 2007).
132.
Conningham, R. The archaeology of Buddhism. in Archaeology and world religion 60–95 (Routledge, 2001).
133.
Erdosy, G. City states of north India and Pakistan at the time of the Buddha. in The archaeology of early historic South Asia: the emergence of cities and states 99–122 (Cambridge University Press, 1995).
134.
Shaw, J. Landscape, water and religion in ancient India. Archaeology International 9, (2005).
135.
Shaw, Julia. Buddhist landscapes in central India: Sanchi Hill and archaeologies of religious and social change, c. third century BC to fifth century AD. (British Association for South Asian Studies, the British Academy, 2007).
136.
Shaw, J. Archaeologies of Buddhist propagation in ancient India: ‘ritual’ and ‘practical’ models of religious change. World Archaeology 45, 83–108 (2013).
137.
Shaw, J. & Sutcliffe, J. Ancient Dams and Buddhist Landscapes in the Sanchi area: New evidence on Irrigation, Land use and Monasticism in Central India. South Asian Studies 21, 1–24 (2005).
138.
McCormick, Michael. Origins of the European economy: communications and commerce A.D. 300-900. (Cambridge University Press, 2001).
139.
Milwright, Marcus. An introduction to Islamic archaeology. vol. The new Edinburgh Islamic surveys (Edinburgh University Press, 2010).
140.
What is ‘Islamic’ archaeology?
141.
Collins, Roger. The Arab conquest of Spain, 710-797. vol. A history of Spain (Blackwell, 1994).
142.
Collins, Roger. Visigothic Spain, 409-711. vol. A history of Spain (Blackwell Pub, 2004).
143.
Escalona, Julio & Reynolds, Andrew. Scale and scale change in the early Middle Ages: exploring landscape, local society, and the world beyond. vol. The medieval countryside (Brepols, 2011).
144.
Gilchrist, Roberta, Reynolds, Andrew, & Society for Medieval Archaeology. Reflections: 50 years of medieval archaeology, 1957-2007. vol. Society for Medieval Archaeology monograph (Maney Publishing, 2009).
145.
Wickham, Chris. Framing the early Middle Ages: Europe and the Mediterranean 400-800. (Oxford University Press, 2005).
146.
Ancient Merv Project. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/merv.
147.
Dani, Ahmad Hasan et al. History of civilizations of Central Asia. vol. Multiple history series (Unesco, 1992).
148.
Corbishley, M. Ancient Cities of Merv: A handbook for teachers. (2005).
149.
Williams, T. The City of Sultan Kala, Merv, Turkmenistan: Communities, Neighbourhoods and Urban Planning from the Eighth to the Thirteenth Century. in Cities in the pre-modern Islamic world: the urban impact of religion, state and society vol. SOAS/Routledge studies on the Middle East 42–62 (Routledge, 2007).
150.
Williams, T. The landscapes of Islamic Merv, Turkmenistan: Where to draw the line? Archaeology International 25, (2008).
151.
Williams, T. Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Photography: Exploring the Medieval City of Merv, on the Silk Roads of Central Asia. Archaeology International 15, (2012).
152.
Golden, Peter B. Central Asia in world history. vol. The new Oxford world history (Oxford University Press, 2011).
153.
Connah, Graham. African civilizations: an archaeological perspective. (Cambridge University Press, 2001).
154.
Scarre, Christopher. The human past: world prehistory & the development of human societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
155.
MacDonald, K. C. & Camara, S. Segou, slavery and Sifinso. in Power and landscape in Atlantic West Africa: archaeological perspectives 169–190 (Cambridge University Press, 2012).
156.
McIntosh, S. K. & McIntosh, R. J. Cities without citadels: understanding urban origins along the Middle Niger. in The archaeology of Africa: food, metals and towns vol. One world archaeology 622–642 (Routledge, 1993).
157.
Mattingly, D. & MacDonald, K. Africa. in The Oxford handbook of cities in world history vol. Oxford handbooks 66–82 (Oxford University Press, 2013).
158.
Munson, P. J. Archaeology and the prehistoric origins of the Ghana empire. The Journal of African History 21, (1980).
159.
S. Terry Childs and David Killick. Indigenous African Metallurgy: Nature and Culture. Annual Review of Anthropology 22, 317–337 (1993).
160.
Humphris, J., Martinón-Torres, M., Rehren, T. & Reid, A. Variability in single smelting episodes – a pilot study using iron slag from Uganda. Journal of Archaeological Science 36, 359–369 (2009).
161.
De Maret, P. The power of symbols and the symbols of power through time: probing the Luba past. in Beyond chiefdoms: pathways to complexity in Africa vol. New directions in archaeology 151–156 (Cambridge University Press, 1999).
162.
Pauketat, T. R. Breaking the law of cultural dominance. in Chiefdoms and other archaeological delusions vol. Issues in Eastern Woodlands archaeology 53–79 (Altamira Press, 2007).
163.
Scarre, Christopher. The human past: world prehistory & the development of human societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
164.
Gibson, Jon L. The ancient mounds of Poverty Point: place of rings. vol. Native peoples, cultures, and places of the southeastern United States (University Press of Florida, 2001).
165.
Scarre, Christopher. The human past: world prehistory & the development of human societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
166.
Kenneth E. Sassaman. Complex Hunter-Gatherers in Evolution and History: A North American Perspective. Journal of Archaeological Research 12, 227–280 (2004).
167.
Kenneth E. Sassaman. Poverty Point as Structure, Event, Process. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 12, 335–364 (2005).
168.
Alcock, Susan E. Empires: perspectives from archaeology and history. (Cambridge University Press, 2001).
169.
Sabloff, Jeremy A. The cities of ancient Mexico: reconstructing a lost world. (Thames and Hudson, 1997).
170.
Bauer, Brian S. Ancient Cuzco: heartland of the Inca. vol. Joe R. and Teresa Lozano Long series in Latin American and Latino art and culture (University of Texas Press, 2004).
171.
Hyslop, John. Inka settlement planning. (University of Texas Press, 1990).
172.
My State or Yours? Wari "Labor Camps” and The Inka Cult of Viracocha at Raqchi, Cuzco, Peru - Latin American Antiquity - Volume 24, Number 1 / March 2013 - Society for American Archaeology. http://saa.metapress.com/content/vp520v0314qp1302/.
173.
Sillar, B. The building and rebuilding of walls: Aspirations, commitments and tensions within an Andean community and the archaeological monument they inhabit. Journal of Material Culture 18, 27–51 (2013).
174.
Sillar, B. Intentionality matters: Creativity and interpretation in the development of the Inka State. in Evolutionary and interpretive archaeologies: a dialogue vol. Publications of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London (Left Coast, 2011).
175.
Graham, E. Maya cities and the character of a tropical urbanism. in The Development of Urbanism from a Global Perspective (2000).
176.
Graham, E. Stone cities, green cities. in Complex polities in the ancient tropical world vol. Archeological papers of the American Anthropological Association 185–194 (American Anthropological Association, 1999).
177.
Graham, E. Collapse, conquest and Maya survival at Lamanai, Belize. Archaeology International 4, (2000).
178.
Graham, E. Lamanai reloaded. in Archaeological investigations in the eastern Maya lowlands: papers of the 2003 Belize Archaeology Symposium vol. Research reports in Belizean archaeology 223–241 (Institute of Archaeology, National Institute of Culture and History, 2004).
179.
Graham, E. & Pendergast, D. M. Cays to the Kingdom (Series 2). Archaeological newsletter 18,.
180.
Graham, Elizabeth. Excavations at the Marco Gonzalez Site, Ambergris Caye, Belize, 1986. 16, 1–16.
181.
Pendergast, D. M. Lamanai, Belize: Summary of Excavation Results, 1974–1980. Journal of Field Archaeology 8, 29–53 (1981).
182.
Pendergast, D. M. An Island paradise? Marco Gonzalez 1990 (Series 2). Archaeological newsletter 41,.
183.
Archaeology, history and the uttermost ends of the earth- Tasmania, Tierra del Fuego and the Cape.
184.
Hood, B. C. The circumpolar zone. in The Oxford handbook of archaeology vol. Oxford handbooks 812–840 (Oxford University Press, 2009).
185.
Scarre, Christopher. The human past: world prehistory & the development of human societies. (Thames & Hudson, 2013).
186.
Rapa Nui Landscapes of Construction. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/research/projects/rapanui.
187.
Bahn, Paul G. & Flenley, John. Easter Island, Earth Island. (Thames and Hudson, 1992).
188.
Hamilton, S. Rapa Nui (Easter Island)’s Stone Worlds. Archaeology International 16, (2013).
189.
Hamilton, S., Seager Thomas, M. & Whitehouse, R. Say it with stone: constructing with stones on Easter Island. World Archaeology 43, 167–190 (2011).
190.
Hunt, T. L. Rethinking Easter Island’s ecological catastrophe. Journal of Archaeological Science 34, 485–502 (2007).
191.
Mapping prehistoric statue roads on Easter Island. http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/external?sid=bd798003-7310-4931-aeea-da1faec38910%40sessionmgr113&vid=2&hid=18.
192.
Van Tilburg, JoAnne. Easter Island: archaeology, ecology and culture. (British Museum Press, 1994).
193.
Murray, T. Contact archaeology and the landscapes of pastoralism in the North of Australia. in The archaeology of contact in settler societies vol. New directions in archaeology 109–143 (Cambridge University Press, 2004).
194.
Harrison, Rodney & New South Wales. Shared landscapes: archaeologies of attachment and the pastoral industry in New South Wales. vol. Studies in the cultural construction of open space (UNSW Press, 2004).
195.
Harrison, Rodney & Williamson, Christine. After Captain Cook: the archaeology of the recent indigenous past in Australia. vol. Indigenous archaeologies (AltaMira, 2004).
196.
Hall, M. Pacific encounters or beyond the islands of history. in Historical archaeology vol. Blackwell studies in global archaeology 293–312 (Blackwell, 2006).
197.
Paterson, Alistair. The lost legions: culture contact in colonial Australia. vol. Indigenous archaeologies series (AltaMira Press, 2008).
198.
Crosby, Alfred W. Ecological imperialism: the biological expansion of Europe, 900-1900. vol. Studies in environment and history (Cambridge University Press, 1986).
199.
Diamond, Jared M. Guns, germs and steel: a short history of everybody for the last 13,000 years. (Vintage, 1998).
200.
Díaz del Castillo, Bernal. The conquest of New Spain. (Snowball Publishing).
201.
Kelly, K. G. The African diaspora starts here: historical archaeology of coastal West Africa. in African historical archaeologies vol. Contributions to global historical archaeology 219–244 (Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, 2004).
202.
Ferguson, Leland G. Uncommon ground: archaeology and early African America, 1650-1800. (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1992).
203.
Lane, Paul & MacDonald, Kevin C. Slavery in Africa: archaeology and memory. vol. Proceedings of the British Academy (Oxford University Press for the British Academy, 2011).
204.
Morgan, P. D. Archaeology and history in the study of African Americans. in African re-genesis: confronting social issues in the diaspora vol. One world archaeology 53–61 (UCL Press, 2006).
205.
MacDonald, K. C. African earthen structures in colonial Louisiana: architecture from the Coincoin plantation (1787-1816). Antiquity 86, 161–177 (2012).
206.
Morgan, David & MacDonald, Kevin. Teaching Collection (Archaeology / ARCL 3052): Colonoware in western colonial Louisiana: Makers and meaning. (2011).
207.
Singleton, T. A. An archaeological framework for slavery and emancipation,1740-1880. in The Recovery of meaning: historical archaeology in the eastern United States vol. Anthropological Society of Washington series 345–370 (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1988).
208.
Diamond, Jared M. Guns, germs and steel: a short history of everybody for the last 13,000 years. (Vintage, 1998).
209.
Diamond, Jared M. Collapse: how societies choose to fail or survive. vol. Penguin history (Penguin Books, 2006).
210.
Morris, Ian. Why the West rules - for now: the patterns of history and what they reveal about the future. (Profile Books, 2010).