1.
Bradley, Richard: The prehistory of Britain and Ireland. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2007).
2.
Cooney, Gabriel: Landscapes of Neolithic Ireland. Routledge, London (2000).
3.
Malone, Caroline: Neolithic Britain and Ireland. Tempus, Stroud (2001).
4.
Parker Pearson, M.: The earlier Bronze Age. In: The archaeology of Britain: an introduction from the Upper Palaeolithic to the Industrial Revolution. pp. 77–94. Routledge, London (1999).
5.
Pollard, Joshua: Neolithic Britain. Shire Publications, Princes Risborough, Bucks (1997).
6.
Pollard, Joshua: Prehistoric Britain. Blackwell, Malden, MA (2008).
7.
Whittle, A.: The Neolithic. In: The archaeology of Britain: an introduction from the Upper Palaeolithic to the Industrial Revolution. pp. 58–76. Routledge, London (1999).
8.
Cooney, Gabriel, Grogan, Eoin: Irish prehistory: a social perspective. Wordwell, Dublin (1999).
9.
Mitchell, G. Frank, Mitchell, G. Frank, Mitchell, G. Frank, Ryan, Michael: Reading the Irish landscape. Town House and Country House, Dublin (1997).
10.
Waddell, John: The prehistoric archaelogy of Ireland. Galway University Press, Galway (1998).
11.
Barrett, John C.: Fragments from antiquity: an archaeology of social life in Britain, 2900-1200 BC. Blackwell, Cambridge, Mass (1993).
12.
Bradley, Richard: The social foundations of prehistoric Britain: themes and variations in the archaeology of power. Longman, London (1984).
13.
Brophy, Kenneth, Barclay, Gordon, Neolithic Studies Group: Defining a regional Neolithic: the evidence from Britain and Ireland. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2009).
14.
Burrow, Stephen: The neolithic culture of the Isle of Man: a study of the sites and pottery. Archaeopress, Oxford (1997).
15.
Cummings, Vicki: A view from the west: the Neolithic of the Irish Sea zone. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2009).
16.
Cummings, Vicki, Pannett, Amelia: Set in stone: new approaches to Neolithic monuments in Scotland. Oxbow, Oxford (2005).
17.
Gibson, Alex M.: Prehistoric pottery in Britain & Ireland. Tempus, Stroud (2002).
18.
Lynch, Frances, Davies, J. L., Aldhouse-Green, Stephen: Prehistoric Wales. Sutton, Stroud (2000).
19.
Noble, Gordon: Neolithic Scotland: timber, stone, earth and fire. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (2006).
20.
Patton, Mark: Neolithic communities of the Channel Islands. Tempus Reparatum, Oxford (1995).
21.
Sebire, Heather: The archaeology and early history of the Channel Islands. Tempus, Stroud (2005).
22.
Bradley, Richard: The prehistory of Britain and Ireland. Cambridge University Press, New York (2007).
23.
Rowley‐Conwy, P.: How the West Was Lost: A Reconsideration of Agricultural Origins in Britain, Ireland, and Southern Scandinavia. Current Anthropology. 45, S83–S113 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1086/422083.
24.
Thomas, J.: Beyond the economic system. In: Understanding the Neolithic. pp. 7–33. Routledge, London (1999).
25.
Whittle, Alasdair: The Neolithic. In: The archaeology of Britain: an introduction from the Upper Palaeolithic to the Industrial Revolution. Routledge, London (1999).
26.
Barclay, G., Gordon, J.: Scotland cannot have been an inviting country for agricultural settlement: a history of the Neolithic in Scotland. In: Scotland in ancient Europe: the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age of Scotland in their European context. , Edinburgh (2004).
27.
Cooney, Gabriel: Recognising regionality in the Irish Neolithic. In: New agendas in Irish prehistory: papers in commemoration of Liz Anderson. Wordwell, Bray, Co. Wicklow (2000).
28.
Piggott, Stuart: The neolithic cultures of the British Isles: a study of the stone-using agricultural communities of Britain in the second millennium B.C. Cambridge University Press, London (1954).
29.
Pluciennik, M: Deconstructing the ‘Neolithic’ in the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition. In: Understanding the Neolithic. Routledge, London (1999).
30.
Thomas, J.: Thoughts on the ‘Repacked’ Neolithic Revolution. Antiquity. 77, 67–74 (2003).
31.
Zvelebil, M: What’s in a name? In: Understanding the Neolithic. Routledge, London (1999).
32.
Barton, N., Roberts, A.: The Mesolithic period in England: current perspectives and new research. In: Mesolithic Scotland and its neighbours: the early Holocene prehistory of Scotland, its British and Irish context, and some Northern European perspectives. pp. 339–358. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Edinburgh (2004).
33.
Mithen, Steven: Hunter-gatherers of the Mesolithic. In: The archaeology of Britain: an introduction from the Upper Palaeolithic to the Industrial Revolution. Routledge, London (1999).
34.
Bailey, G. N., Spikins, Penny: Mesolithic Europe. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
35.
David, A., Walker, E.A: Wales during the Mesolithic period. In: Mesolithic Scotland and its neighbours: the early Holocene prehistory of Scotland, its British and Irish context, and some Northern European perspectives. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Edinburgh (2004).
36.
Woodman, Peter C., Anderson, Liz, Finlay, N.: Excavations at Ferriter’s Cove, 1983-95: last foragers, first farmers in the Dingle Peninsula. Wordwell, Bray, Co. Wicklow (1999).
37.
Bell, Martin, Council for British Archaeology: Prehistoric coastal communities: the Mesolithic in western Britain. Council for British Archaeology, York (2007).
38.
Conneller, Chantal, Warren, Graeme: Mesolithic Britain and Ireland: new approaches. Tempus, Stroud (2006).
39.
Conneller, J: Moving beyond sites: Mesolithic technology in the landscape. In: Mesolithic studies at the beginning of the 21st century. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2005).
40.
Costa, L.J.: Microlith to macrolith: the reasons behind the transformation of production in the Irish Mesolithic. Antiquity. 79, 19–33.
41.
Finlay, N: Microliths in the making. In: Mesolithic lifeways: current research from Britain and Ireland. School of Archaeological Studies, University of Leicester, Leicester (2000).
42.
Kozłowski, Stefan Karol: Thinking mesolithic. Oxbow, Oxford (2009).
43.
Mithen, Steven, Thomas, Julian: A cybernetic wasteland? Rationality, emotion and Mesolithic foraging. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 57, (1991).
44.
Saville, A.: Orkney and Scotland before the Neolithic period. In: Neolithic Orkney in its European context. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, Cambridge (2000).
45.
Saville, Alan, Society of Antiquaries of Scotland: Mesolithic Scotland and its neighbours: the early Holocene prehistory of Scotland, its British and Irish context, and some Northern European perspectives. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Edinburgh (2004).
46.
Schulting, R., et al: Radiocarbon dating of Mesolithic human remains in Great Britain. Mesolithic Miscellany. 21,.
47.
Wickham-Jones, C. R., Historic Scotland: Scotland’s first settlers. Batsford/Historic Scotland, London (1994).
48.
Marek Zvelebil: Plant use in the Mesolithic and its role in the transition to farming. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 60, (1994).
49.
Chambers, F. M.: Climate change and human impact on the landscape: studies in palaeoecology and environmental archaeology. Chapman & Hall, London (1993).
50.
Davies, P.: Woodland clearance in the Mesolithic: the social aspects. Antiquity. 79, 280–288 (2005).
51.
Edwards, K.J: Pollen, archaeology and burdens of proof. In: Mesolithic lifeways: current research from Britain and Ireland. School of Archaeological Studies, University of Leicester, Leicester (2000).
52.
Fitch, Simon, Gaffney, Vincent L., Smith, David: Europe’s lost world: the rediscovery of Doggerland. Council for British Archeology, York (2009).
53.
Gaffney, Vincent L., Thomson, Kenneth, Fitch, Simon: Mapping Doggerland: the Mesolithic Landscapes of the Southern North Sea. Archaeopress, Oxford (2007).
54.
Anderson, Liz, Desmond, Angela: New agendas in Irish prehistory: papers in commemoration of Liz Anderson. Wordwell, Bray, Co. Wicklow (2000).
55.
Shennan, I., Horton, B.: Holocene land- and sea-level changes in Great Britain. Journal of Quaternary Science. 17, 511–526 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1002/jqs.710.
56.
Simmons, I. G., University of Durham: The environmental impact of later Mesolithic cultures on the moorlands of Britain. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (1996).
57.
Miracle, Preston T.: Mesolithic meals from Mesolithic middens. In: Consuming passions and patterns of consumption. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge (2002).
58.
Schulting, R.: Mesolithic-Neolithic transitions: an isotopic tour through Europe. In: Human bioarchaeology of the transition to agriculture. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester (2011).
59.
Schulting, R.: Holocene environmental change and the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in north-west Europe: revisiting two models. Environmental Archaeology. 15, 160–172 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1179/146141010X12640787648586.
60.
Schulting, R.: Foodways and social economies from the early Mesolithic to the early Bronze Age. In: Prehistoric Britain. Blackwell, Malden, Mass (2008).
61.
Schulting, R: The use of staple isotopes in studies of subsistence and seasonality in the British Mesolithic. In: Mesolithic lifeways: current research from Britain and Ireland. School of Archaeological Studies, University of Leicester, Leicester (2000).
62.
Griffitts, J., Bonsall, C.: Experimental determination of the function of antler and bone ‘bevel-edged’ tools from prehistoric shell middens in western Scotland, http://www.academia.edu/295889/Experimental_determination_of_the_function_of_antler_and_bone_bevel-ended_tools_from_prehistoric_shell_middens_in_western_Scotland_2001_, (2001).
63.
Mellars, Paul, Andrews, M. V.: Excavations on Oronsay: prehistoric human ecology on a small island. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (1987).
64.
Mellars, Paul, Andrews, M. V.: Excavations on Oronsay: prehistoric human ecology on a small island. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (1987).
65.
Mithen, Steven J.: Hunter-gatherer landscape archaeology: the Southern Hebrides Mesolithic project, 1988-1998. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge (2000).
66.
S.J. Mithen, B. Finlayson: Red deer hunters on Colonsay? The implications for the interpretation of the Oronsay middens. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 57, (1991).
67.
O’Sullivan, A: Last foragers or first farmers? Interpreting an early prehistoric wetland occupation site on the Shannon estuary, Republic of Ireland. In: Mesolithic lifeways: current research from Britain and Ireland. School of Archaeological Studies, University of Leicester, Leicester (2000).
68.
Palmer, Susann, Thomas, Kenneth D.: Culverwell Mesolthic habitation site, Isle of Portland, Dorset: excavation report and research studies. Archaeopress, Oxford (1999).
69.
Waddington, C.: A Mesolithic site at Howick, Northumberland: a preliminary report. Archaeologia aeliana. (1822).
70.
Waddington, Clive, Bailey, G. N.: Mesolithic settlement in the North Sea Basin: a case study from Howick, North-East England. Oxbow, Oxford (2007).
71.
Wickham-Jones, C. R., Clarke, A., Butler, S., Society of Antiquaries of Scotland: Rhum: Mesolithic and later sites at Kinloch excavations 1984-1986. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Edinburgh (1990).
72.
Barker, Graeme: Transitions to farming in Europe: ex oriente lux ? In: The agricultural revolution in prehistory: why did foragers become farmers? Oxford University Press, Oxford (2006).
73.
Gebauer, Anne, Birgitte, Price, T. Douglas: The final frontier: first farmers in northern Europe. In: Transitions to agriculture in prehistory. Prehistory Press, Madison, Wis (1992).
74.
Midgley, M: Settlement in north-west Europe: an overview. In: Scotland in ancient Europe: the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age of Scotland in their European context. , Edinburgh (2004).
75.
Milisauskas, Sarunas: Middle Neolithic continuity, diversity, innovations and greater complexity, 5500/5000-3500/3000BC. In: European prehistory: a survey. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York (2002).
76.
Whittle, A.W.R.: Beginnings: houses transformed; ditched enclosures, social arenas. In: Europe in the Neolithic: the creation of new worlds. pp. 248-251-266–284. Cambridge University Press, New York (1996).
77.
Andersen, Niels H.: Sarup: Vol.1: The Sarup enclosures: the funnel beaker culture of the Sarup site including two causewaysed camps compared to the contemporary settlements in the area and other European enclosures. Jysk Arkæologisk Selskab, Moesgaard (1997).
78.
Midgley, Magdalena S: Social dimension of TRB culture. In: T.R.B. culture: first farmers of the North European plain. pp. 475–485. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (1992).
79.
Lars Larsson: The Mesolithic of Southern Scandinavia. Journal of World Prehistory. 4, 257–309.
80.
Lars Larsson: The Mesolithic of Southern Scandinavia. Journal of World Prehistory. 4, 257–309.
81.
Madsen, T.: Earthen long barrows and timber structures: aspects of early Neolithic mortuary practices in Denmark. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. (1979).
82.
Meyer, M.: Palisaded enclosures in the German Neolithic. In: Behind wooden walls: Neolithic palisaded enclosures in Europe. Archaeopress, Oxford (2002).
83.
Midgley, Magdalena S.: The monumental cemeteries of prehistoric Europe. Tempus, Stroud (2005).
84.
Thomas, J.: The descent of the British Neolithic. In: Time, culture and identity: an interpretative archaeology. Routledge, New York (1996).
85.
Topping, Peter, Varndell, Gillian: Enclosures in Neolithic Europe: essays on Causewayed and non-causewayed sites. Oxbow, Oxford (2002).
86.
Brown, A.: Dating the onset of cereal cultivation in Britain and Ireland: the evidence from charred cereal grains. Antiquity. 81, 1042–1052 (2007).
87.
Jones, G., Rowley-Conwy, P.: On the importance of cereal cultivation in the British Neolithic. In: The origins and spread of domestic plants in southwest Asia and Europe. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, CA (2007).
88.
Monk, M.: Seeds and soils of discontent: an environmental archaeological contribution to the nature of the early Neolithic. In: New agendas in Irish prehistory: papers in commemoration of Liz Anderson. Wordwell, Bray, Co. Wicklow (2000).
89.
Richards, M.P.: The early Neolithic in Britain: new insights from biomolecular archaeology. In: Scotland in ancient Europe: the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age of Scotland in their European context. , Edinburgh (2004).
90.
Woodman, P.: Getting back to basics: transitions to farming in Ireland and Britain. In: Europe’s first farmers. Cambridge University press, Cambridge (2000).
91.
Schulting, R.: Radiocarbon dates and stable isotope values on human remains. In: On the fringe of Neolithic Europe: excavation of a chambered cairn on the Holm of Papa Westray, Orkney. pp. 66–74. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Edinburgh (2009).
92.
Warren, G.: The start of the Neolithic in Scotland. In: Scotland in ancient Europe: the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age of Scotland in their European context. , Edinburgh (2004).
93.
Allen, T. et al.: Opening the wood, making the land: the study of a Neolithic landscape in the Dorney area of the Middle Thames Valley. In: Towards a new Stone Age: aspects of the Neolithic in South-East England. Council for British Archaeology, York (2003).
94.
Brown, T.: Clearances and Clearings: Deforestation in Mesolithic/Neolithic Britain. Oxford Journal of Archaeology. 16, 133–146 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0092.00030.
95.
Copley, M.S., Berstan, R., Dudd, S.N., Docherty, G., Mukherjee, A.J., Straker, V., Payne, S., Evershed, R.P.: Direct chemical evidence for widespread dairying in prehistoric Britain. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 100, 1524–1529 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0335955100.
96.
Copley, M.S., Berstan, R., Straker, V., Payne, S., Evershed, R.P.: Dairying in antiquity. II. Evidence from absorbed lipid residues dating to the British Bronze Age. Journal of Archaeological Science. 32, 505–521 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2004.07.005.
97.
Entwhistle, R., Grant, A.: The evidence for cereal cultivation and animal husbandry in the southern British Neolithic and Bronze Age. In: The beginnings of agriculture. B.A.R, Oxford, England (1989).
98.
Fairbairn, Andrew S., Neolithic Studies Group: Plants in neolithic Britain and beyond. Oxbow, Oxford (2000).
99.
Grigson, C.: Porridge and pannage: pig husbandry in Neolithic Britain. In: Archaeological aspects of woodland ecology. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford (1982).
100.
Milner, N.: Oysters, cockles and kitchenmiddens: changing practices at the Mesolithic/Neolithic transition. In: Consuming passions and patterns of consumption. pp. 89–96. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge (2002).
101.
O’Sullivan, Aidan, Royal Irish Academy: Foragers, farmers and fishers in a coastal landscape: an intertidal archaeological survey of the Shannon estuary. Royal Irish Academy, Dublin (2001).
102.
Richards, M.P.: Explaining the dietary isotope evidence for the rapid adoption of the Neolithic in Britain. In: Food, culture and identity in the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age. pp. 31–36. Archaeopress, Oxford (2003).
103.
Schulting, R.: Foodways and social economies from the early Mesolithic to the early Bronze Age. In: Prehistoric Britain. Blackwell, Malden, Mass (2008).
104.
SCHULTING, R.J., SEBIRE, H., ROBB, J.E.: ON THE ROAD TO PARADIS: NEW INSIGHTS FROM AMS DATES AND STABLE ISOTOPES AT LE DÉHUS, GUERNSEY, AND THE CHANNEL ISLANDS MIDDLE NEOLITHIC. Oxford Journal of Archaeology. 29, 149–173 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0092.2010.00343.x.
105.
Iversen, J: Stone Age Man’s transformation and exploitation of the primeval fores. In: The Neolithisation of Denmark: 150 years of debate. J.R.Collis, Sheffield (2002).
106.
Troels-Smith, J: Ivy, mistletoe and elm. Climate indicators - fodder plants. In: The Neolithisation of Denmark: 150 years of debate. J.R.Collis, Sheffield (2002).
107.
Case, H.: Neolithic explanations. Antiquity. 43, 176–186 (1969).
108.
Cleal, R.J.: The dating and diversity of the earliest ceramics on Wessex and south-west England. In: Monuments and material culture: papers in honour of an Avebury archaeologist: Isobel Smith. Hobnob Press, Salisbury (2004).
109.
Collard, M., Edinborough, K., Shennan, S., Thomas, M.G.: Radiocarbon evidence indicates that migrants introduced farming to Britain. Journal of Archaeological Science. 37, 866–870 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2009.11.016.
110.
Cooney, G.: Parallel worlds or multi-stranded identities? Considering the process of ‘going over’ in Ireland and the Irish Sea zone. In: Going over: the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in north-west Europe. Oxford University Press for the British Academy, Oxford (2007).
111.
Kinnes, I.A.: Trans-manche: l’Entente Cordiale ou vive la difference? In: Towards a new Stone Age: aspects of the Neolithic in South-East England. pp. 191–195. Council for British Archaeology, York (2003).
112.
Sheridan, A.: Achnacreebeag and its French connections: vive the ‘auld’ alliance. In: The prehistory and early history of Atlantic Europe: papers from a session held at the European Association of Archaeologists Fourth Annual Meeting in Göteborg 1998. pp. 1–15. Archaeopress, Oxford (2000).
113.
Sheridan, A.: French connections 1: spreading the marmites thinly. In: Neolithic settlement in Ireland and Western Britain. pp. 3–17. Oxbow, Oxford (2003).
114.
Sheridan, A.: Neolithic connections along and across the Irish Sea. In: The neolithic of the Irish Sea: materiality and traditions of practice. Oxbow, Oxford (2004).
115.
Sheridan, A: From Picardie to Pickering and Pencraig Hill? New information on the ’carinated bowl Neolithic. In: Going over: the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in north-west Europe. Oxford University Press for the British Academy, Oxford (2007).
116.
Sheridan, A.: The Neolithization of Britain and Ireland: the ’Big Picture. In: Landscapes in transition. Oxbow, Oxford (2010).
117.
Thomas, J.: Thoughts on the ‘Repacked’ Neolithic Revolution. Antiquity. 77, 67–74 (2003).
118.
Whittle, A. W. R., Cummings, Vicki, British Academy: Going over: the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in north-west Europe. Oxford University Press for the British Academy, Oxford (2007).
119.
Woodman, Peter C., Anderson, Liz, Finlay, N.: Excavations at Ferriter’s Cove, 1983-95: last foragers, first farmers in the Dingle Peninsula. Wordwell, Bray, Co. Wicklow (1999).
120.
Bonsall, C., Macklin, M.G., Anderson, D.E., Payton, R.W.: Climate change and the adoption of agriculture in north-west europe. European Journal of Archaeology. 5, 9–23 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1179/eja.2002.5.1.9.
121.
Bonsall, C., Macklin, M.G., Anderson, D.E., Payton, R.W.: Climate change and the adoption of agriculture in north-west europe. European Journal of Archaeology. 5, 9–23 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1179/eja.2002.5.1.9.
122.
Mithen, S. et al.: The Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in western Scotland: a review and new evidence from Tiree. In: Going over: the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in north-west Europe. Oxford University Press for the British Academy, Oxford (2007).
123.
Pailler, Y., Sheridan, A.: Everything you always wanted to know about.....La Neolithisation de la Grande-Bretagne et d’Irlande. Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française. (2009).
124.
SEBIRE, H., RENOUF, J.: SEA CHANGE: NEW EVIDENCE FOR MESOLITHIC AND EARLY NEOLITHIC PRESENCE IN THE CHANNEL ISLANDS WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO GUERNSEY AND THE RISING HOLOCENE SEA. Oxford Journal of Archaeology. 29, 361–386 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0092.2010.00353.x.
125.
Thomas, J: Recent debates on the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Britain and Ireland. Documenta praehistorica: Poročilo o raziskovanju paleolitika, neolitika in eneolitika v Sloveniji. 31, 113–130 (2004).
126.
Tresset, A., Vigne, J.-D.: Substitution of species, techniques and symbols at the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Western Europe. In: Going over: the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in north-west Europe. Oxford University Press for the British Academy, Oxford (2007).
127.
Tresset, Anne, Marchand, Grégor, Société préhistorique française: Unité et diversité des processus de néolithisation sur la façade atlantique de l’Europe: 6e-4e millénaires avant J-C. Table ronde de Nantes, 26-27 avril 2002. Société préhistorique française, Paris (2005).
128.
Grogan, E.: The implications of Irish Neolithic houses. In: Scotland in ancient Europe: the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age of Scotland in their European context. , Edinburgh (2004).
129.
Armit, Ian: Neolithic settlement in Ireland and Western Britain. Oxbow, Oxford (2003).
130.
Brophy, K.: From big houses to cult houses: early Neolithic timber halls in Scotland. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. (2007).
131.
Coles, Bryony, Coles, J. M.: Sweet Track to Glastonbury: the Somerset levels in prehistory. Thames and Hudson, London (1986).
132.
Darvill, Timothy, Thomas, Julian: Neolithic houses in northwest Europe and beyond. Oxbow, Oxford (1996).
133.
Ritchie, A.: Excavations of a Neolithic farmstead at Knap of Howar, Papa Westray, Orkney. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. 113, (1983).
134.
Armit, Ian: The drowners: permanence and transience in the Hebridean Neolithic. In: Neolithic settlement in Ireland and Western Britain. Oxbow, Oxford (2003).
135.
Barclay, G.J.: A Neolithic building at Claish Farm, near Callander, Stirling Council, Scotland, UK. Antiquity. 76, 23–24.
136.
Fairweather et al., A.D.: The Neolithic timber hall at Balbridie, Grampian Region, Scotland: The building, the date, the plant macrofossils. Antiquity. 67, 313–323 (1993).
137.
Cormac McSparron: Have You No Homes to Go to? Archaeology Ireland. 22, 18–21.
138.
Noble, Gordon: Burning down the house, the destruction of timber structures. In: Neolithic Scotland: timber, stone, earth and fire. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (2003).
139.
Ritchie, A.: Excavation of a Neolithic farmstead at Knap of Howar, Papa Westray, Orkney. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. 113, 40–121 (1983).
140.
Selkirk, A: Whitehorse Stone, a Neolithic longhouse. Current archaeology. 168, 450–453 (2000).
141.
Smyth, J.: The Role of the House in Early Neolithic Ireland. European Journal of Archaeology. 9, 229–257 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1177/1461957107086125.
142.
Tilley, Christopher Y.: Interpreting causewayed enclosures in the past and the present. In: Interpretative archaeology. Berg, Oxford, UK (1992).
143.
Field, David: Earthen long barrows: the earliest monuments in the British Isles. Tempus, Stroud (2006).
144.
Oswald, Alastair, Dyer, Carolyn, Barber, Martyn, English Heritage: The creation of monuments: neolithic causewayed enclosures in the British Isles. English Heritage, Swindon (2001).
145.
Cummings, V.: Tombs with a view: Landscape, monuments and trees. Antiquity. 77, 255–266 (2003).
146.
Darvill, Timothy: Long barrows of the Cotswolds and surrounding areas. Tempus, Stroud (2004).
147.
Green, M., Allen, M.J.: An Early Prehistoric Shaft on Cranborne Chase. Oxford Journal of Archaeology. 16, 121–132 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0092.00029.
148.
Kinnes, Ian, British Museum: Non-Megalithic long barrows and allied structures in the British Neolithic. British Museum Press, London (1992).
149.
Mercer, R. J.: Hambledon Hill: a neolithic landscape. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (1980).
150.
Smith, Martin, Brickley, Megan: People of the long barrows: life, death and burial in the earlier neolithic. History Press, Stroud (2009).
151.
Allen, M. J. et al.: Neolithic causewayed enclosures and later prehistoric farming. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 74, 235–322 (2008).
152.
Barrett, John C., Bradley, Richard, Hall, Melanie: Papers on the prehistoric archaeology of Cranborne Chase. Oxbow, Oxford (1991).
153.
Histories of the dead: building chronologies for five southern British long barrows. Cambridge Archaeological Journal.
154.
Brophy, K.: The searchers. The quest for causewayed enclosures in the Irish Sea. In: The neolithic of the Irish Sea: materiality and traditions of practice. Oxbow, Oxford (2004).
155.
Histories of the dead: building chronologies for five southern British long barrows. Cambridge Archaeological Journal.