Not exact matches
Prehistoric human populations of hunter - gatherers in a region of North America grew at the same rate as farming societies in Europe, according to a new radiocarbon analysis
involving researchers from the University of Wyoming and the Harvard - Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
Associate Professor Ian Smith, an Otago archaeologist
involved in the study, says it seems that these contrasting wildlife histories reflect differences in
prehistoric human - hunting pressure.
Prehistoric human populations of hunter - gatherers in the region that is now Wyoming and Colorado grew at the same rate as farming societies in Europe, according to a new radiocarbon analysis
involving University of Wyoming researchers.
Weissbrod's research
involves analysis of microvertebrate remains from a wide range of
prehistoric and historic sites in Israel and the Caucasus dealing with paleoecology and
human - ecosystem interactions.