1.
Bradley, Richard: The prehistory of Britain and Ireland. Cambridge University Press, New York (2007).
2.
Darvill, Timothy: Prehistoric Britain. Routledge, London (1996).
3.
Parker-Pearson, M.: The earlier Bronze Age. In: Ralston, I. and Hunter, J. (eds.) The archaeology of Britain: an introduction from the Upper Palaeolithic to the Industrial Revolution. pp. 77–94. Routledge, London (1999).
4.
Parker Pearson, Michael, Parker Pearson, Michael: Bronze Age Britain. B.T. Batsford, London (2005).
5.
Parker Pearson, Michael, Stonehenge Riverside Project (England): Stonehenge: exploring the greatest stone age mystery. Simon & Schuster, London (2012).
6.
Pollard, Joshua: Prehistoric Britain. Blackwell, Malden, Mass (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.
Atkinson, R. J. C.: Stonehenge. Penquin Books in association with Hamish Hamilton, Harmondsworth (1960).
9.
Burl, Aubrey: Stonehenge: a new history of the world’s greatest stone circle. Constable, London (2006).
10.
Chippindale, Christopher: Stonehenge complete. Thames & Hudson, [London] (2004).
11.
Cleal, Rosamund, Walker, K. E., Montague, R., English Heritage: Stonehenge in its landscape: twentieth-century excavations. English Heritage, London (1995).
12.
Darvill, Timothy: Stonehenge: the biography of a landscape. Tempus, Stroud (2006).
13.
Pitts, Michael W.: Hengeworld. Century, London (2000).
14.
Richards, Julian C.: Stonehenge: the story so far. English Heritage, Swindon (2006).
15.
Bradley, Richard, Edmonds, M. R.: Interpreting the axe trade: production and exchange in Neolithic Britain. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1993).
16.
Brophy, K.: From big houses to cult houses: early Neolithic timber halls in Scotland. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 73, 1042–1052 (2007).
17.
Brown, A.: Dating the onset of cereal cultivation in Britain and Ireland: the evidence from charred cereal grains. Antiquity. 81, 1042–1052 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00096101.
18.
Cleal, R.M.: The dating and diversity of the earliest ceramics in Wessex and south-west England. In: Monuments and material culture: papers in honour of an Avebury archaeologist: Isobel Smith. pp. 164–192. Hobnob Press, Salisbury (2004).
19.
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.
20.
Copley, M.S., Berstan, R., Mukherjee, A.J., Dudd, S.N., Straker, V., Payne, S., Evershed, R.P.: Dairying in antiquity. III. Evidence from absorbed lipid residues dating to the British Neolithic. Journal of Archaeological Science. 32, 523–546 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2004.08.006.
21.
Darvill, Timothy, Thomas, Julian: Neolithic houses in northwest Europe and beyond. Oxbow, Oxford (1996).
22.
Entwistle, R., Grant, A.: The evidence for cereal cultivation and animal husbandry in the southern British Neolithic and Bronze Age. In: The beginnings of agriculture. pp. 203–215. B.A.R, Oxford, England (1989).
23.
Fairbairn, Andrew S., Neolithic Studies Group: Plants in neolithic Britain and beyond. Oxbow, Oxford (2000). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvh1dtbb.
24.
Field, David: Earthen long barrows: the earliest monuments in the British Isles. Tempus, Stroud (2006).
25.
Garrow, D., Sturt, F.: Grey waters bright with Neolithic argonauts? Maritime connections and the Mesolithic-Neolithic transitions within the ‘western seaways’ of Britain, c. 5000-3500 BC. Antiquity. 85, 59–72 (2011).
26.
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. pp. 391–419. Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek, CA (2007).
27.
Mercer, R.: The origins of warfare in the British Isles. In: Ancient warfare: archaeological perspectives. pp. 143–156. Sutton, Stroud (1999).
28.
Oswald, Alastair, Dyer, Carolyn, Barber, Martyn, English Heritage: The creation of monuments: neolithic causewayed enclosures in the British Isles. English Heritage, Swindon (2001). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.5284/1028203.
29.
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. pp. 83–90. , Edinburgh.
30.
Richards, M.P., Schulting, R.J., Hedges, R.E.M.: Archaeology: Sharp shift in diet at onset of Neolithic. Nature. 425, 366–366 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1038/425366a.
31.
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.
32.
Russell, Miles: Flint mines in neolithic Britain. Tempus, Stroud (2000).
33.
Schulting, R., Wysocki, M.: ‘In this chambered tumulus were found cleft skulls...’: an assessment of the evidence for cranial trauma in the British Neolithic. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 71, 107–138 (2005).
34.
Sheridan, A.: The Neolithization of Britain and Ireland: the ‘big picture’. In: Landscapes in transition. pp. 89–105. Oxbow, Oxford (2010).
35.
Smith, Martin, Brickley, Megan: People of the long barrows: life, death and burial in the earlier neolithic. History Press, Stroud (2009).
36.
Thomas, J.: Beyond the economic system. In: Understanding the Neolithic. pp. 7–33. Routledge, London (1999).
37.
Thomas, J.: Thoughts on the ‘repacked’ Neolithic revolution. Antiquity. 77, 67–74 (2003).
38.
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). https://doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264140.001.0001.
39.
Whittle, A., Barclay, A., Bayliss, A., McFadyen, L., Schulting, R., Wysocki, M.: Building for the Dead: Events, Processes and Changing Worldviews from the Thirty-eighth to the Thirty-fourth Centuries cal. BC in Southern Britain. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 17, (2007). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774307000200.
40.
Whittle, A. W. R., Bayliss, Alexandra, Healy, Frances: Gathering time: dating the early Neolithic enclosures of southern Britain and Ireland. Oxbow, Oxford (2011).
41.
Atkinson, R. J. C., Sandars, N. K., Piggott, C. M.: Excavations at Dorchester, Oxon: 1st report: Sites I, II, IV, V and VI ; with a chapter on henge monuments by R. J. C. Atkinson. Ashmolean Museum, Oxford (1951).
42.
Harding, Jan, Barclay, Alistair, Neolithic Studies Group: Pathways and ceremonies: the cursus monuments of Britain and Ireland. Oxbow, Oxford (1999). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvh1dpqv.
43.
Bradley, Richard, Society of Antiquaries of Scotland: Altering the earth: the origins of monuments in Britain and continental Europe. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Edinburgh (1993).
44.
Bradley, Richard: The significance of monuments: on the shaping of human experience in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe. Routledge, London (1998).
45.
Brophy, K.: Water coincidence? Cursus monuments and rivers. In: Neolithic Orkney in its European context. pp. 59–70. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, Cambridge (2000).
46.
Burrow, S.: The formative henge: speculations drawn from the circular traditions of Wales and adjacent counties. In: Round mounds and monumentality in the British Neolithic and beyond. pp. 182–196. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2010).
47.
Cotton, J.: Two decorated Peterborough bowls from the Thames at Mortlake and their London context. In: Towards a new Stone Age: aspects of the Neolithic in South-East England. pp. 128–147. Council for British Archaeology, York (2003).
48.
Eogan, George: Knowth and the passage-tombs of Ireland. Thames and Hudson, London (1986).
49.
Eogan, G.: Scottish and Irish passage tombs: some comparisons and contrasts. In: Vessels for the Ancestors: Neolithic of Britain and Ireland. pp. 120–127. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (1992).
50.
Eogan, G.: Aspects of passage tomb settlement in Ireland. In: Studien zur Megalithik: Forschungsstand und ethnoarchäologische Perspektiven. pp. 347–360. Beier & Beran, Mannheim (1999).
51.
Jones, Carleton: Temples of stone: exploring the megalithic tombs of Ireland. Collins, Cork (2007).
52.
Gibson, A., Aldhouse-Green, S.H.R., Brownsett, M., Burl, H.A.W., Debenham, N., Hook, D., Morgan, G.C., Stead, S., Vince, A.: Excavations at the Sarn-y-bryn-caled cursus complex, Welshpool, Powys, and the timber circles of Great Britain and Ireland. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 60, 143–223 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0079497X00003431.
53.
Gibson, A., Bayliss, A.: Recent research at Duggleby Howe, North Yorkshire. Archaeological Journal. 166, 39–78 (2009). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1080/00665983.2009.11078220.
54.
Gibson, A., Kinnes, I.: On the urns of a dilemma: radiocarbon and the Peterborough problem. Oxford Journal of Archaeology. 16, 65–72 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0092.00025.
55.
Harding, Jan: Henge monuments of the British Isles. Tempus, Stroud (2003).
56.
Loveday, Roy: Inscribed across the landscape: the cursus enigma. Tempus, Stroud (2006).
57.
Thomas et. al., J.S.: The date of the Greater Stonehenge Cursus. Antiquity. 83, 40–53 (2009).
58.
Stout, Geraldine: Newgrange and the Bend of the Boyne. Cork University Press, Cork (2002).
59.
Gibson, Alex M.: Stonehenge and timber circles. Tempus, Stroud (2005).
60.
Gillings, Mark, Pollard, Joshua: Avebury. Duckworth, London (2004).
61.
Andrew Jones: The World on a Plate: Ceramics, Food Technology and Cosmology in Neolithic Orkney. World Archaeology. 31, 55–77 (1999).
62.
Leary, Jim, Field, David: The story of Silbury Hill. English Heritage, Swindon (2010).
63.
Millican, K.: Turning in circles: a new assessment of the Neolithic timber circles of Scotland. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 137, 5–34 (2007).
64.
Noble, G., Brophy, K.: Big Enclosures: The Later Neolithic Palisaded Enclosures of Scotland in their Northwestern European Context. European Journal of Archaeology. 14, 60–87 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1179/146195711798369346.
65.
Noble, G., Brophy, K.: Ritual and remembrance at a prehistoric ceremonial complex in central Scotland: excavations at Forteviot, Perth and Kinross. Antiquity. 85, 787–804 (2011).
66.
Pollard, Joshua, Reynolds, Andrew: Avebury: the biography of a landscape. Tempus, Stroud (2002).
67.
Richards, C.: Monumental choreography: Architecture and spatial representation in later Neolithic Orkney. In: Interpretative archaeology. pp. 143–178. Berg, Oxford, UK (1992).
68.
Richards, C.: Henges and Water: Towards an Elemental Understanding of Monumentality and Landscape in Late Neolithic Britain. Journal of Material Culture. 1, 313–336 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1177/135918359600100303.
69.
Whittle, A. W. R., Wainwright, G. J., Best, J.: Sacred mound, holy rings: Silbury Hill and the West Kennet Palisade enclosures : a later Neolithic complex in north Wiltshire. Oxbow Books, Oxford (1997).
70.
Allen, Michael J., Gardiner, Julie, Sheridan, Alison, Prehistoric Society (London, England): Is there a British Chalcolithic?: people, place and polity in the later 3rd millennium. Prehistoric Society and Oxbow Books, Oakville, CT (2012).
71.
Willigen, Samuel van, Benz, Marion, Archéologie et gobelets (Association): Some new approaches to the Bell Beaker ‘phenomenon’: lost paradise-- ? : proceedings of the 2nd Meeting of the ‘Association Archéologie et gobelets,’ Feldberg (Germany), 18th-20th April 1997. J. and E. Hedges, Oxford, England (1998). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.30861/9780860549284.
72.
Brodie, Neil: The Neolithic-Bronze Age transition in Britain: a critical review of some archaeological and craniological concepts. B.A.R., Oxford (1994). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.30861/9780860547716.
73.
Case, H.: Beakers and the Beaker culture. In: Similar but different: bell beakers in Europe. pp. 11–34. Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan (2004).
74.
Evans, J.G.: Stonehenge - the environment in the late Neolithic and early Bronze Age and a Beaker-Age burial. Wiltshire archaeological and natural history magazine. 78, 7–30 (1984).
75.
Fitzpatrick, Andrew P., Barclay, Alistair: The Amesbury Archer and the Boscombe Bowmen: Bell Beaker burials on Boscombe Down, Amesbury, Wiltshire. Wessex Archaeology, Salisbury (2011).
76.
Gibson, A.: Burials and beakers: seeing beneath the veneer in late Neolithic Britain. In: Similar but different: bell beakers in Europe. pp. 173–192. Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan (2004).
77.
Needham, S.: Transforming Beaker culture in north-west Europe: processes of fusion and fission. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 71, 107–138 (2005).
78.
Nicolis, Franco, International Colloquium on Bell Beakers Today: Bell beakers today: pottery, people, culture, symbols in prehistoric Europe ; proceedings of the International Colloquium, Riva del Garda (Trento, Italy) 11-16 May 1998. Provincia Autonoma di Trento, Servizio Beni Culturali, Ufficio Beni Archeologici, Trento, Italy (2001).
79.
O’Brien, W.: Ross Island and the origins of Irish-British metallurgy. In: Ireland in the Bronze Age: proceedings of the Dublin conference, April 1995. pp. 38–48. The Stationery Office, Dublin (1995).
80.
Vander Linden, M.: Polythetic networks, coherent people: a new historical hypothesis for the Bell Beaker phenomenon. In: Similar but different: bell beakers in Europe. pp. 35–62. Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan (2004).
81.
Vander Linden, M.: What linked the Bell Beakers in third millennium BC Europe? Antiquity. 81, 343–352 (2007).
82.
Sheridan, A.: Towards a fuller, more nuanced narrative of Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age Britain 2500-1500 BC. Bronze Age Review. 1, 57–78 (2008).
83.
Simpson, D. D. A., Gregory, R. A., Murphy, Eileen M.: Excavations at Northton, Isle of Harris. Archaeopress, Oxford (2006). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.30861/9781841719368.
84.
Thorpe, I.J., Richards, C.: The decline of ritual authority and the introduction of beakers into Britain. In: Neolithic studies: a review of some current research. pp. 67–84. B.A.R., Oxford (1984).
85.
Colin Richards: Monuments as Landscape: Creating the Centre of the World in Late Neolithic Orkney. World Archaeology. 28, 190–208.
86.
Richards, C.: A choreography of constructions: monuments, mobilization and social organization in Neolithic Orkney. In: Explaining social change: studies in honour of Colin Renfrew. pp. 103–114. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge (2004).
87.
Richards, Colin, Ashmore, P. J., McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research: Dwelling among the monuments: the Neolithic village of Barnhouse, Maeshowe passage grave and surrounding monuments at Stenness, Orkney. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge (2005).
88.
Richards, C.: Building the great stone circles of the north: questions of materiality and social identity. In: Materialitas: working stone, carving identity. pp. 54–63. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2010).
89.
Ritchie, Anna: Prehistoric Orkney. B.T. Batsford, London (1995).
90.
Ritchie, Anna, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research: Neolithic Orkney in its European context. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, Cambridge (2000).
91.
Scarre, Christopher: The megalithic monuments of Britain & Ireland. Thames & Hudson, London (2007).
92.
Sharples, N.: Individual and community: the changing role of megaliths in the Orcadian Neolithic. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 51, 59–74 (1985). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0079497X00007039.
93.
Wickham-Jones, C. R.: Between the wind and the water: World Heritage Orkney. Windgather, Bollington (2006).
94.
Burgess, Colin: The age of Stonehenge. J.M. Dent & Sons, London (1980).
95.
Clarke, D. V., Cowie, Trevor G., Foxon, Andrew, Barrett, John C., National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland: Symbols of power at the time of Stonehenge. National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland, Edinburgh (1985).
96.
Kristiansen, Kristian, Larsson, Thomas B.: The rise of Bronze Age society: travels, transmissions and transformations. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2005).
97.
Last, Jonathan: Beyond the grave: new perspectives on barrows. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2007).
98.
Needham, S.: Power pulses across a cultural divide: cosmologically driven exchange between Armorica and Wessex. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 66, 151–207 (2000).
99.
Needham, S., Lawson, A.J., Woodward, A.: ‘A Noble Group of Barrows’: Bush Barrow and the Normanton Down Early Bronze Age Cemetery Two Centuries On. The Antiquaries Journal. 90, 1–39 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003581510000077.
100.
Needham, Stuart, Parfitt, Keith, Birchenough, Aaron, Varndell, Gillian: The Ringlemere Cup: precious cups and the beginning of the channel bronze age. British Museum, London (2006).
101.
Needham et. al., S.: A first ‘Wessex I’ date from Wessex. Antiquity. 84, 363–373 (2010). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00066631.
102.
Piggott, S.: The Early Bronze Age in Wessex. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 4, 52–106 (1938).
103.
Timberlake, S.: Copper mining and metal production at the beginning of the British Bronze Age. In: Bronze Age connections: cultural contact in prehistoric Europe. pp. 94–121. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2009).
104.
Woodward, Ann: British barrows: a matter of life and death. Tempus, Stroud, Gloucestershire (2000).
105.
Milner, Nicki, Albarella, Umberto, Miracle, Preston T.: A passion for pork: meat consumption at the British Late Neolithic site of Durrington Walls. In: Consuming passions and patterns of consumption. pp. 33–49. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge (2002).
106.
Darvill et. al., T.: Stonehenge remodelled. Antiquity. 86, 1021–1040 (2012).
107.
French, C., Scaife, R., Allen, M.J., Parker Pearson, M., Pollard, J., Richards, C., Thomas, J., Welham, K.: Durrington Walls to West Amesbury by way of Stonehenge: a major transformation of the Holocene landscape. The Antiquaries Journal. 92, 1–36 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003581512000704.
108.
Larsson, Mats, Parker Pearson, Michael: From Stonehenge to the Baltic: living with cultural diversity in the third millennium BC. Archaeopress, Oxford (2007). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.30861/9781407301303.
109.
Lawson, Andrew J.: Chalkland: an archaeology of Stonehenge and its region. The Hobnob Press, Salisbury (2007).
110.
Parker-Pearson, M.: Stonehenge and the beginning of the British Neolithic. In: Image, memory and monumentality: archaeological engagements with the material world : a celebration of the academic achievements of Professor Richard Bradley. pp. 18–28. Oxbow, Oxford (2012).
111.
Parker-Pearson, M., Ramilisonina: Stonehenge for the ancestors: the stones pass on the message. Antiquity. 72, 308–326 (1998).
112.
Parker Pearson et. al., M.: Who was buried at Stonehenge? Antiquity. 83, 23–39 (2009).
113.
Parker Pearson et. al., M.: The age of Stonehenge. Antiquity. 81, 617–639 (2007).
114.
Pollard, J., Ruggles, C.: Shifting Perceptions: Spatial Order, Cosmology, and Patterns of Deposition at Stonehenge. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 11, (2001). https://doi.org/10.1017/S095977430100004X.
115.
Richards, Julian C., Allen, Mike, English Heritage: The Stonehenge environs project. Historical Buildings & Monuments Commission for England, London (1990).
116.
Ruggles, C.: Astronomy and Stonehenge. In: Science and Stonehenge. pp. 203–229. Oxford University Press for the British Academy, Oxford (1997).
117.
Viner, S., Evans, J., Albarella, U., Parker Pearson, M.: Cattle mobility in prehistoric Britain: strontium isotope analysis of cattle teeth from Durrington Walls (Wiltshire, Britain). Journal of Archaeological Science. 37, 2812–2820 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2010.06.017.
118.
Wainwright, G. J., Longworth, I. H.: Durrington Walls excavations, 1966-1968. Society of Antiquaries, London (1971).
119.
Bevins, R.E., Pearce, N.J.G., Ixer, R.A.: Stonehenge rhyolitic bluestone sources and the application of zircon chemistry as a new tool for provenancing rhyolitic lithics. Journal of Archaeological Science. 38, 605–622 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2010.10.014.
120.
Green, C.P.: Pleistocene river gravels and the Stonehenge problem. Nature. 243, 214–216 (1973).
121.
Ixer, R.A., Bevins, R.E.: The petrography, affinity and provenance of lithics from the Cursus Field, Stonehenge. Wiltshire archaeological and natural history magazine. 103, 1–15 (2010).
122.
Ixer, R.A., Bevins, R.E.: The detailed petrography of six orthostats from the bluestone circle, Stonehenge. Wiltshire archaeological and natural history magazine. 104, 1–14 (2011).
123.
Ixer, R.A., Bevins, R.E.: Craig Rhos-y-felin, Pont Saeson is the dominant source of the Stonehenge rhyolitic ‘debitage’. Archaeology in Wales. 50, 21–32 (2011).
124.
Ixer, R.A., Turner, P.: A detailed re-examination of the petrography of the Altar Stone and other non-sarsen sandstones from Stonehenge as a guide to their provenance. Wiltshire archaeological and natural history magazine. 99, 1–9 (2006).
125.
Kellaway, G.A.: Glaciation and the stones of Stonehenge. Nature. 33, 30–35 (1971).
126.
Meyrick, O.: The Broadstones. Wiltshire archaeological and natural history magazine. 56, 192–193 (1955).
127.
Meyrick, O.: The Broadstones. Wiltshire archaeological and natural history magazine. 57, (1958).
128.
Piggott, S.: Destroyed megaliths in north Wiltshire. Wiltshire archaeological and natural history magazine. 52, 390–392 (1948).
129.
Thorpe, R.S., et al.: The geological sources and transport of the bluestones of Stonehenge, Wiltshire, UK. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 57, 103–157 (1991).
130.
Williams-Thorpe, O., et al.: The Stonehenge bluestones: discussion. In: Science and Stonehenge. pp. 315–318. Oxford University Press for the British Academy, Oxford (1997).
131.
WILLIAMS-THORPE, O., JONES, M.C., POTTS, P.J., WEBB, P.C.: PRESELI DOLERITE BLUESTONES: AXE-HEADS, STONEHENGE MONOLITHS, AND OUTCROP SOURCES. Oxford Journal of Archaeology. 25, 29–46 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0092.2006.00247.x.
132.
Bender, Barbara, Aitken, Paul: Stonehenge: making space. Berg, Oxford (1998). https://doi.org/http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781474215589.
133.
Chippindale, Christopher: Who owns Stonehenge? Batsford, London (1990).
134.
Williams (ed), T.: Editorial: PIA at 21 and the Human Remains Crisis. PIA: Papers from the Institute of Archaeology. 21, 6–34 (2011).
135.
Thackray, D., Payne, S.: Avebury Reburial Request, https://historicengland.org.uk/content/docs/consultations/avebury-reburial-request-summary-pdf/, (2010).
136.
Chippindale, Christopher: Stonehenge complete. Thames & Hudson, [London] (2004).
137.
Cleal, Rosamund, Walker, K. E., Montague, R., English Heritage: Stonehenge in its landscape: twentieth-century excavations. English Heritage, London (1995).
138.
Tim Darvill: Stonehenge: the biography of a landscape. Tempus.
139.
Pitts, Michael W.: Hengeworld. Century, London (2000).
140.
Julian Richards: Stonehenge. English Heritage.
141.
Mercer, R. J.: Causewayed enclosures. Shire, Princes Risborough (1990).
142.
Healy, Frances, Mercer, R. J., Allen, Michael J.: Hambledon Hill, Dorset, England: excavation and survey of a Neolithic monument complex and its surrounding landscape. English Heritage, Swindon (2009).
143.
Oswald, Alastair, Dyer, Carolyn, Barber, Martyn, English Heritage: The creation of monuments: neolithic causewayed enclosures in the British Isles. English Heritage, Swindon (2001).
144.
Pryor, Francis, Armour-Chelu, M., Ambers, J., English Heritage: Etton: excavations at a Neolithic causewayed enclosure near Maxey, Cambridge, 1982-87. English Heritage, London (1998).
145.
Whittle, A. W. R., Healy, Frances, Bayliss, Alexandra: Gathering time: dating the early Neolithic enclosures of southern Britain and Ireland. Oxbow, Oxford (2011).
146.
Whittle, A. W. R., Grigson, Caroline, Pollard, Joshua, Ambers, J.: The harmony of symbols: the Windmill Hill causewayed enclosure, Wiltshire. Oxbow Books, Oxford (1999).
147.
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.
148.
Sheridan, A.: The Neolithization of Britain and Ireland: the ‘big picture’. In: Landscapes in transition. pp. 89–105. Oxbow, Oxford (2010).
149.
Thomas, Julian: The birth of Neolithic Britain: an interpretive account.
150.
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).
151.
Gibson, A., Bayliss, A.: Recent research at Duggleby Howe, North Yorkshire. Archaeological journal. 166, 39–78 (2009).
152.
Gibson, A., Kinnes, I.: On the urns of a dilemma: radiocarbon and the Peterborough problem. Oxford Journal of Archaeology. 16, 65–72 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0092.00025.
153.
Shennan, S., Downey, S.S., Timpson, A., Edinborough, K., Colledge, S., Kerig, T., Manning, K., Thomas, M.G.: Regional population collapse followed initial agriculture booms in mid-Holocene Europe. Nature Communications. 4, (2013). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3486.
154.
Stevens, C.J., Fuller, D.Q.: Did Neolithic farming fail? The case for a Bronze Age agricultural revolution in the British Isles. Antiquity. 86, 707–722 (2012).
155.
Harding, Jan: Henge monuments of the British Isles. Tempus, Stroud (2003).
156.
Richards, C.: Building the great stone circles of the north; questions of materiality and social identity. In: Materialitas: working stone, carving identity. pp. 54–63. Oxbow Books, Oxford (2010).
157.
Ritchie, Anna: Prehistoric Orkney. B.T. Batsford, London (1995).
158.
Ritchie, Anna, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research: Neolithic Orkney in its European context. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, Cambridge (2000).
159.
Cleal, Rosamund, Walker, K. E., Montague, R., English Heritage: Stonehenge in its landscape: twentieth-century excavations. English Heritage, London (1995).
160.
Tim Darvill: Stonehenge: the biography of a landscape. Tempus.
161.
Needham, S.: Power pulses across a cultural divide: cosmologically driven exchange between Armorica and Wessex. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. 66, 151–207 (2000).
162.
Needham, S., Lawson, A.J., Woodward, A.: ‘A Noble Group of Barrows’: Bush Barrow and the Normanton Down Early Bronze Age Cemetery Two Centuries On. The Antiquaries Journal. 90, 1–39 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003581510000077.