Publicaties
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Reconstructing prehistoric land use change from archeological data: validation and application of a new model in Yiluo valley, northern China Universiteit Gent
Spatial and temporal changes of prehistoric human land use in the Wei River valley, northern China Universiteit Gent
Identifying elusive prehistoric land use by integrating electromagnetic and invasive survey approaches Universiteit Gent
Novel insights into prehistoric land use at stonehenge by combining electromagnetic and invasive methods with a semi-automated interpretation scheme Universiteit Gent
Identifying Elusive Prehistoric Land Use by Integrating Electromagnetic and Invasive Survey Approaches Agentschap Onroerend Erfgoed
Studying the origin and use of the oldest prehistoric pottery in northern Belgium using high-end mass spectrometric methods Universiteit Gent
Mesolithic ettlement and land use in the Campine region (Belgium) Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Mesolithic Horizons marks the publication of the proceedings of the seventh international conference on 'The Mesolithic in Europe' (Belfast 2005). The numbers attending these five-yearly conferences continue to grow - testimony to the growing interest in a period that less than fifty years ago was seen by many as either a 'hiatus' between two more interesting periods, or as a poorly understood phase of little consequence. This is an enormous ...
Plants and People: Choices and Diversity Through Time KU Leuven
This book is a result of the work of one team involved in the Collaborative Research Program funded by the European Science Foundation (ESF) and entitled “Early Agricultural Remnants and Technical Heritage” (EARTH). Within this framework, senior and younger scientists from Europe and a few guest contributors from beyond met from 2005 to 2009 in different venues around Europe to exchange views, data and experiences on choices made by humans in ...
Sensing the Bronze Age : non-invasive geophysical prospection in the archaeology of Bronze Age Italy and adjacent areas Universiteit Gent
This contribution discusses past and present applications of non-invasive geophysical prospection in the study of Bronze Age contexts in Italy and the wider Mediterranean. Although the first geophysical surveys in the Mediterranean were conducted on prehistoric sites, at present most non-invasive research focuses on classical and/or historical targets. This situation is the result of academic traditions, archaeologists' familiarity with the use ...