Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T16:46:25.289Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

John Robb
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Get access
Type
Chapter
Information
The Early Mediterranean Village
Agency, Material Culture, and Social Change in Neolithic Italy
, pp. 347 - 372
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adams, D. (1986). The hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy: A trilogy in four parts. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Livadie, Albore C., Federico, R., Fedele, F., Albarella, U., Matteis, F., and Esposito, D.. (1987). Ricerche sull'insediamento tardo-neolitico di Mulino Sant'Antonio (Avella). Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 41:65–103.Google Scholar
Livadie, Albore C., and Gangemi, G.. (1987). Nuovi dati sul neolitico in Campania. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:287–299.Google Scholar
Alexander, C. (2005). A Bayesian analysis of the radiocarbon evidence for the spread of the Neolithic in Italy. Cambridge, UK: M.Phil Thesis, Department of Archaeology, Cambridge University.
Allegrucci, F., E. Biondi, R. Fulton, R. Housley, C. Hunt, and S. Stoddart. (1994). Vegetation, land use and climate, in Time, territory, and state: The archaeological development of the Gubbio basin. Edited by Malone, C. and Stoddart, S.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 34–58.Google Scholar
Amadei, A., and Cremonesi, R. Grifoni. (1987). La Grotta all'Onda: Revisione ed inquadramento dei materiali. Rassegna di Archeologia 6: 171–216.Google Scholar
Ambrosi, A. (1972). Corpus delle statue-stele lunigianesi. Collana Storica dell Liguria Orientale. Bordighera: Istituto Internazionale di Studi Liguri.Google Scholar
Ambrosi, A.. (1988). Statue-stele lunigianesi. Genova: Sagep.Google Scholar
Ammerman, A. J. (1985). The Acconia survey: Neolithic settlement and the obsidian trade. London: Institute of Archaeology.Google Scholar
Ammerman, A. J., and W. Andrefsky. (1982). Reduction sequences and the exchange of obsidian in Neolithic Calabria, in Contexts for prehistoric exchange. Edited by Ericson, J. E. and Earle, T. K.. New York: Academic, pp. 149–172.Google Scholar
Ammerman, A. J., and Cavalli-Sforza, L.. (1984). The Neolithic transition and the genetics of populations in Europe. Princeton: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ammerman, A. J., Cesana, A., Polglase, C., and Terrani, M.. (1990). Neutron activation analysis of obsidian for two Neolithic sites in Italy. Journal of Archaeological Science 17:209–220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ammerman, A. J., Shaffer, G. D., and Hartmann, N.. (1988). A Neolithic household at Piano di Curinga, Italy. Journal of Field Archaeology 15:121–140.Google Scholar
Ammerman, A. J., and C. Polglase. (1993). The exchange of obsidian at Neolithic sites in Italy, in Trade and exchange in European prehistory. Edited by Healy, F. and Scarre, C.. Oxford: Oxbow Books, pp. 101–107.Google Scholar
Anati, E. (1960). La grande roche de Naquane (Vol. 31). Mémoire. Paris: Archive de l'Institut de Paléontologie Humaine.Google Scholar
Anati, E.. (1961). Camonica Valley. New York: Knopf.Google Scholar
Anati, E.. (1977). Post-paleolithic stylistic changes in rock art as illustrated by the Valcamonica cycle, in Form in indigenous art. Edited by Ucko, P.. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies, pp. 337–356.Google Scholar
André, J. (2003). La faune malacologique de Torre Sabea, in Torre Sabea: Un Établissement du Néolithique Ancien en Salento. Edited by Guilaine, J. and Cremonesi, G.. Rome: École Française de Rome, pp. 279–283.Google Scholar
Antoniazzi, A., Bagolini, B., Montanari, G. Bermond, Pasi, M. Massi, and Prati, L.. (1987). Il neolitico di Fornace Cappuccini a Faenza e la Ceramica Impressa in Romagna. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:553–563.Google Scholar
Anzidei, A. P. (1987). Lo scavo dell'abitato neolitico di Quadrato di Torre Spaccata. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:681–689.Google Scholar
Anzidei, A. P., and Carboni, G.. (2003). Strutture d'abitato di età neo-eneolitica nel territorio di Roma. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:797–801.Google Scholar
Appadurai, A. (Ed.). (1988). The social life of things. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Aranguren, B., and Revedin, A.. (1998). Il giacimento mesolitico di Perriere Sottano (Ramacca, CT). Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 89:31–72.Google Scholar
Bagolini, B. (1981). Il neolitico e l'età del rame: ricerca a Spilamberto e S. Cesario, 1977–1980. Bologna: Tamari.Google Scholar
Bagolini, B., Barker, G., Biagi, P., Castelletti, L., and Cremaschi, M.. (1987). Scavi nell'insediamento neolitico di Campo Ceresole (Vhò di Piadena, Cremona): 1974–1979. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:455–466.Google Scholar
Bagolini, B., and Cremonesi, G.. (1987). Il processo di Neolitizzazione in Italia. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:21–30.Google Scholar
Bagolini, B., Ferrari, A., and Steffè, G.. (1998). Il recente Neolitico di Spilamberto (Modena). Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 89:93–200.Google Scholar
Bagolini, B., and Cremonesi, R. Grifoni. (1994). Il Neolitico italiano: Facies culturali e manifestazioni funerarie. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 85:139–170.Google Scholar
Bailey, D. W. (2005). Prehistoric figurines: Representation and corporeality in the Neolithic. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Modesti, Bailo G. (2003). Rituali funerari eneolitici nell'Italia peninsulare: L'Italia meridionale. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:283–297.Google Scholar
Modesti, Bailo G., and Salerno, A.. (1998). Pontecagnano II.5, La necropoli eneolitica: L'età del Rame in Campania nei villaggi dei morti. Napoli: Istituto Universitario Orientale.Google Scholar
Balista, C., and G. Leonardi. (1985). Hill slope evolution: Pre- and proto-historic occupation in the Veneto, in Papers in Italian archaeology IV: The Cambridge Conference (Vol. I). BAR International Series. Edited by Malone, C. and Stoddart, S.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 135–152.Google Scholar
Barfield, L. (1981). Patterns of N. Italian trade, 5000–2000 B.C, in Archaeology and Italian Society. International Series. Edited by Barker, G. and Hodges, R.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 27–51.Google Scholar
Barfield, L.. (1986). Chalcolithic burials in Northern Italy: Problems of social interpretation. Dialoghi di Archeologia 4:241–248.Google Scholar
Barfield, L., Bernabò Brea, M., Maggi, R., and Pedrotti, A.. (2003). Processi di cambiamento culturale nel neolitico dell'Italia settentrionale. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:665–685.Google Scholar
Barker, G. (1975). Prehistoric territories and economies in Central Italy, in Palaeoeconomy. Edited by Higgs, E.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 111–175.Google Scholar
Barker, G.. (1981). Landscape and society: Prehistoric central Italy. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Barker, G.. (1985). Prehistoric farming in Europe. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Barker, G.. (1989). The archaeology of the Italian shepherd. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 215:1–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barley, N. (1989). Not a hazardous sport. London: Penguin.Google Scholar
Barley, N.. (1990). Native land. London: Penguin.Google Scholar
Barra, A., Cremonesi, R. Grifoni, Mallegni, F., Piancastelli, M., Vitiello, A., and Wilkens, B.. (1992). La Grotta Continenza di Trasacco: i livelli a ceramiche. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 42:31–100.Google Scholar
Barrett, J. (1994). Fragments from antiquity: An archaeology of social life in Britain, 2900–1200 BC. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Barrett, J.. (2001). Agency, the duality of structure, and the problem of the archaeological record, in Archaeological theory today. Edited by Hodder, I.. Oxford: Polity, pp. 140–164.Google Scholar
Barth, F. (1987). Cosmologies in the making: A generative approach to cultural variation in inner New Guinea. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barth, F.. (2002). An anthropology of knowledge. Current Anthropology 43:1–18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, R. (1974). Fate and honor, family and village: Demographic and cultural change in rural Italy since 1800. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Bender, B. (1978). Gatherer–hunter to farmer: A social perspective. World Archaeology 10:204–222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berger, P. L., and Luckmann, T.. (1967). The social construction of reality: A treatise in the sociology of knowledge. Harmondsworth: Penguin.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L. (1946). Gli scavi nella caverna delle Arene Candide. Parte I: Gli strati con ceramiche. Bordighera: Istituto di Studi Liguri.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L.. (1947). Esplorazione archeologica dell'isola e scavo di una stazione neolitica al Piano Quartera. Notizie di Scavi 72:222–230.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L.. (1947). Tomba neolitica di Malfa. Notizie di Scavi 72:220–221.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L.. (1954). La Sicilia prehistorica y sus relaciones con oriente e con la peninsula Iberica. Ampurias 16:135–235.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L.. (1957). Sicily before the Greeks. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L.. (1987). Il neolitico delle Isole Eolie. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:351–360.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. (1956). Civiltà preistoriche delle Isole Eolie e del territorio del Milazzo. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 66:7–98.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. . (1957). Stazioni preistoriche delle Isole Eolie. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 66:97–151.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. . (1960). Meligunís Lipàra. Volume I: La stazione preistorica della contrada Diana e la necropoli preistorica di Lipari. Pubblicazioni del Museo Eoliano di Lipari. Palermo: S. F. Flaccovio.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. . (1968). Meligunís Lipàra, Volume III: Stazioni preistoriche delle isole Panarea, Salina e Stromboli. Publications of the Museo Eolio. Palermo: Flaccovio.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. . 1980. Meligunís Lipàra, Volume IV: l'acropoli di Lipari nella preistoria. Publications of the Museo Eolio. Palermo: Flaccovio.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. . (1991). Isole Eolie: vulcanologia archeologia. Lipari: Oreste Ragusi Editore.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. . (1995). Meligunís Lipàra. Volume VIII: Salina (ricerche archeologiche 1989–1993). Publications of the Museo Eolio. Palermo: Flaccovio.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, M. (1987). Il popolamento neolitico della Val Trebbia (PC). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:565–573.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, M., Castagna, D., and Occhi, S.. (2003). Le strutture dell'abitato Chassey-Lagozza a S. Andrea di Travo (PC). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:785–789.Google Scholar
Biagi, P. (2003). A review of the Late Mesolithic in Italy and its implication for the Neolithic transition, in The widening harvest:The Neolithic transition in Europe: Looking back, looking forward. Edited by Ammerman, A. J. and Biagi, P.. Boston: Archaeological Institute of America, pp. 133–156.Google Scholar
Biagi, P., Maggi, R., and Nisbet, R.. (1987). Primi dati sul neolitico della Liguria orientale. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:523–532.Google Scholar
Bianco, S., and Sampò, M. Cipolloni. (1987). Il neolitico della Basilicata. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:301–320.Google Scholar
Biancofiore, F. (1965). I nuovi dipinti preistorici della Lucania. Rivista di Antropologia 52:103–109.Google Scholar
Biddittu, I., Bruni, N., Cerqua, M., Mattioli, T., and Riva, A.. (2004). Ritrovamenti neolitici e dell'Età del Rame nell'altopiano silano. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:761–764.Google Scholar
Bigazzi, G., S. Meloni, M. Oddone, and G. Radi. (1991). Nuovi dati sulla diffusione dell'ossidiana negli insediamenti preistorici italiani, in Papers of the Fourth Conference of Italian Archaeology, Volume 3: New developments. Edited by Herring, E., Whitehouse, R., and Wilkins, J.. London: Accordia Research Centre, pp. 8–18.Google Scholar
Bigazzi, G., and Radi, G.. (1981). Datazione con le tracce di fissione per l'identificazione della provenienza dei manufatti di ossidiana. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 36:223–250.Google Scholar
Bistolfi, F., and I. Muntoni. (1997). Lo scavo delle area A, B, D, E, in Casale del Dolce: Ambiente, Economia, e Cultura di una comunità preistorica del Valle del Sacco. Edited by Zarattini, A. and Petrassi, L.. Roma: Soprintendenza Archeologica per il Lazio, pp. 59–159.Google Scholar
Black-Michaud, J. (1986). Sheep and land: The economics of power in a tribal society. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Blanton, R. E., Feinman, G. M., Kowalewski, S. A., and Peregrine, P. N.. (1996). A dual-processual theory for the evolution of Mesoamerican civilization. Current Anthropology 37:1–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blitz, J. H. (1993). Big pots for big shots: Feasting and storage in a Mississippian community. American Antiquity 58:80–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boenzi, F., Caldara, M., Moresi, M., and Pennetta, L.. (2001). History of the Salpi lagoon-sabhka (Manfredonia Gulf, Italy). Il Quaternario 14:93–104.Google Scholar
Bogucki, P. (1988). Forest farmers and stockherders: Early agriculture and its consequences in north-central Europe. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bogucki, P.. (2000). How agriculture came to north-central Europe, in Europe's first farmers. Edited by Price, T. D.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 197–218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bökönyi, S. (1977/1982). The early neolithic fauna of Rendina. Origini 11:237–249.Google Scholar
Bökönyi, S.. (1983). Animal remains from the test excavations, in Studi sul Neolitico del Tavoliere della Puglia. International Series 160. Edited by Cassano, S. and Manfredini, A.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 237–249.Google Scholar
Bonanno, A. (1996). Temple megalithism vs. funerary megalithism: the case of the Maltese Islands. XIII International Congress of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences (Forlì, Italy, 8–14 September 1996) Colloquia 9:103–107.Google Scholar
Bonato, M., F. Lorenzo, A. Nonza, G. Radi, C. Tozzi, M. Weiss, and B. Zamagni. (2000). Le nuove ricerche a Pianosa: gli scavi del 1998. in Les Premier Peuplements Olocenes de l'Aire Corso-Toscane/Il Primo Popolamento Olocenico dell'Area Corso-Toscana. Edited by Tozzi, C. and Weiss, M.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, pp. 91–132.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, P. (1977). Outline of a Theory of Practice. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradford, J. (1949). “Buried landscapes” in Southern Italy. Antiquity 23:58–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R. (1984). The social foundations of prehistoric Britain. London: Longmans.Google Scholar
Bradley, R.. (1991). Ritual, time, and history. World Archaeology 23:209–219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R.. (1998). The significance of monuments: On the shaping of human experience in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bradley, R.. (2000). An archaeology of natural places. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bradley, R., and Edmonds, M.. (1993). Interpreting the axe trade: Production and exchange in Neolithic Britain. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Braithwaite, M. (1984). Ritual and prestige in the prehistory of Wessex, c.2200–1400 BC: A new dimension to the archaeological evidence, in Ideology, power, and prehistory. Edited by Miller, D. and Tilley, C.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 93–110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bringsvaerd, T. A. (1976). The man who collected the First of September, 1973, in The book of fantasy. Edited by Borges, J. L., Casares, A. B., and Ocampo, S.. New York: Carroll and Graf, pp. 77–80.Google Scholar
Brock, S., and Ruff, C.. (1988). Diachronic patterns of change in structural properties of the femur in the prehistoric American Southwest. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 75:113–127.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Broodbank, C. (1993). Ulysses without sails: Trade, distance, power, and knowledge in the early Cyclades. World Archaeology 24:315–331.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, K. (1991). A passion for excavation: Labour requirements and possible functions for the ditches of the “villaggi trincerati” of the Tavoliere, Apulia. Journal of the Accordia Research Center 2:7–30.Google Scholar
Brown, K.. (2003). Aerial archaeology of the Tavoliere: The Italian Air Photographic Record and the Riley Archive. Journal of the Accordia Research Center 9: 123–146.Google Scholar
Brück, J. (1999). Houses, lifecycles, and deposition on Middle Bronze Age settlements in Southern England. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 65:145–166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brumfiel, E. M. (1991). Weaving and cooking: Women's production in Aztec Mexico, in Engendering archaeology. Edited by Gero, J. and Conkey, M.. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 224–251.Google Scholar
Bulgarelli, G. M., D'Erme, L., and Pellegrini, E.. (2003). L'insediamento neo-eneolitico di Poggio Olivastro (Canino – VT): le strutture. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:803–806.Google Scholar
Burton, J. (1984). Quarrying in a tribal society. World Archaeology 16:234–247.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Butler, J. (1993). Bodies that matter: On the discursive limits of “sex.”London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Caldara, M., Pennetta, L., and Simone, O.. (2002). Holocene evolution of the Salpi lagoon (Puglia, Italy). Journal of Coastal Research 36 (Special Issue):124–133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Campana, N., Maggi, R., Pearce, M., and Ottomano, C.. (2006). Quanto rame? stima della produzione mineraria del distretto di Sestri Levante fra IV e III millennio a.C. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 39: in press.Google Scholar
Campetti, S., Giachi, G., and Perrini, L.. (2003). Tracce di sostanze collanti su cuspidi litiche provenienti da Grotta dell'Onda e dal Lago di Massaciuccoli (Lucca): analisi composizionali. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:999–1004.Google Scholar
Canci, A. (1998). Lesioni del cranio in resti scheletrici umani di epoca neolitica rinvenuti presso l'Arma dell'Aquila (Finale Ligure, Savona). Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 89:81–92.Google Scholar
Canci, A., and Marini, E.. (2003). La suddivisione dei ruoli nelle attività di sussistenza durante il Neolitico medio: I risultati di uno studio paleobiologico. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:1103–1108.Google Scholar
Cann, J. R., and Renfrew, C.. (1964). The characterization of obsidian and its application to the Mediterranean region. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 1964 30:111–133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Canuto, M., and Yaeger, J. (Eds.). (2000). The archaeology of communities: A new world perspective. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Carancini, G., and Guerzani, R.. (1987). Gli scavi nella Grotta Pavolella presso Cassano allo Jonio (CS). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:783–792.Google Scholar
Cardarelli, A. (1992). L'età dei metalli nell'Italia settentrionale, in Italia preistorica. Edited by Guidi, A. and Piperno, M.. Rome: Laterza, pp. 366–420.Google Scholar
Cardini, L. (1970). Praia a Mare: relazione degli scavi 1957–1970. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 79:31–59.Google Scholar
Cardosa, M. (1996). Castello di Bova Superiore (Reggio Calabria): Nuovi dati sulla prima età del Bronzo nella Calabria meridionale ionica, in L'antica età del Bronzo in Italia: Atti del Congresso di Viareggio, 9–12 gennaio 1995. Edited by Genick, D. Cocchi. Viareggio: Franco Cantini/Museo A. C. Blanc, pp. 592–593.Google Scholar
Carnieri, E., and B. Zamagni. (2000). La malacofauna marina di Pianosa, Cala Giovanna Piano, in Les premier peuplements olocenes de l'aire Corso-Toscane/Il primo popolamento olocenico dell'area Corso-Toscana. Edited by Tozzi, C. and Weiss, M.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, pp. 117–122.Google Scholar
Cassano, S., Cazzella, A., Manfredini, A., and Moscoloni, M.. (1987). Coppa Nevigata e il suo territorio: testimonianze archeologiche dal VII al II millennio a.C. Roma: Edizioni Quasar.Google Scholar
Cassano, S., and Manfredini, A.. (1983). Studi sul Neolitico del Tavoliere della Puglia. International Series. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Cassano, S., and Manfredini, A.. . (1990). Rinvenimento di una sepoltura Serra d'Alto a Masseria Candelaro: Scavo 1990. Atti Convegno Nazionale sulla Preistoria, Protostoria e Storia della Daunia 12:31–36.Google Scholar
Cassano, S., Manfredini, A., Carboni, G., Marconi, N., and Muntoni, I.. (2003). Il villaggio neolitico di Masseria Candelaro (FG): una premessa archeologica. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:813–818.Google Scholar
Cassano, S., Muntoni, I., and Barbaro, C. Conati. (1995). Dall'argilla al vaso: Fabbricazione della ceramica in una comunità neolitica di 7000 anni fa. Rome: Museo delle Origini.Google Scholar
Castellana, G. (1995). La necropoli protoeneolitica di Piano Vento nel territorio di Palma di Monte-chiaro. Agrigento: Regione Sicilia Assessorato Regionale Beni Culturali Ambientali e Pubblica Istruzione.Google Scholar
Castelletti, L. (1996). Mele e pere selvatiche (Malus sylvestris e Pyrus sp.) carbonizzate, in La Grotta Sant'Angelo sulla Montagna dei Fiori (Teramo). Edited by Fraia, T. Di and Cremonesi, R. Grifoni. Pisa: Istituti Editoriali e Poligrafici Internazionali, pp. 295–303.Google Scholar
Castelletti, L., Castiglioni, E., Leoni, L., and Rottoli, M.. (1998). Resti botanici dai contesti del Neolitico medio-recente. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 89:191–200.Google Scholar
Castelletti, L., Costantini, L., and Tozzi, C.. (1987). Considerazioni sull'economia e l'ambiente durante il neolitico in Italia. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:37–55.Google Scholar
Berlinghieri, Castignino E. (2003). The Aeolian Islands: Crossroads of Mediterranean maritime routes. International Series Vol. 1181. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Catlin, G. (1973). Letters and notes on the manners, customs, and conditions of North American Indians (Vol. 1). New York: Dover.Google Scholar
Cavalier, M. (1971). Il riparo della Sperlinga di S. Basilio (Novara di Sicilia). Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 80:7–63.Google Scholar
Cavalier, M.. (1985). Nuovi rinveninenti sul Castello di Lipari. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 40:223–254.Google Scholar
Cavanagh, W. G. (2004). WYSIWYG: Settlement and territoriality in Southern Greece during the Early and Middle Neolithic periods. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 17:165–189.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cazzella, A. (1994). Dating the “Copper Age” in the Italian peninsula and adjacent islands. European Journal of Archaeology 2:1–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cazzella, A.. (2003). Rituali funerari eneolitici nell'Italia penisulare: l'Italia centrale. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:275–282.Google Scholar
Cazzella, A., and M. Moscoloni. (1985). Dislevelli culturali nel Mediterraneo centro-orientale fra terzo e secondo millennio a.C, in Studi di paletnologia in onore di Salvatore M. Puglisi. Edited by Liverani, M., Palmieri, A., and Peroni, R.. Rome: Università di Roma “La Sapienza,” pp. 531–547.Google Scholar
Cazzella, A., and Moscoloni, M.. (1992). Neolitico ed eneolitico. Popoli e civiltà dell'Italia antica. Rome: Biblioteca di Storia Patria.Google Scholar
Cazzella, A., and M. Moscoloni. (1999). Coppa Nevigata: risulatati degli scavi in extensione 1983–1997, in Ipogei della Daunia: Preistoria di un Territorio. Edited by Sisto, A. M. Tunzi. Foggia: Claudio Grenzi Editore, pp. 102–107.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. (2000). Fragmentation in archaeology: Peoples, places, and broken objects in the prehistory of south-eastern Europe. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Chapman, J.. (2002). Colourful prehistories: The problem with the Berlin and Kay colour paradigm, in Colouring the past: the significance of colour in archaeological research. Edited by Jones, A. and MacGregor, G.. Oxford: Berg, pp. 45–72.Google Scholar
Chapman, R. (2003). Archaeologies of Complexity. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Childe, V. G. (1957). The dawn of European civilization. New York: Knopf.Google Scholar
Sampò, Cipolloni M. (1982). Gli scavi nel villaggio neolitico di Rendina (1970–76): relazione preliminare. Origini 11:183–323.Google Scholar
Cipolloni Sampò, M.. (1986). Le tombe di Toppo Daguzzo (Basilicata nord-orientale): considerazioni sulle comunità della media età del Bronzo nel sud-est italia, in Traffici micenei nel Mediterraneo. Edited by Marazzi, M., Tusa, S., and Vagnetti, L.. Taranto: Istituto per la storia e l'archeologia della Magna Grecia, pp. 27–35.Google Scholar
Cipolloni Sampò, M.. (1992). Il Neolitico nell'Italia meridionale e in Sicilia, in Italia Preistorica. Edited by Guidi, A. and Piperno, M.. Roma: Laterza, pp. 334–365.Google Scholar
Clendinnen, I. (2003). Ambivalent conquests: Maya and Spaniard in Yucatan, 1517–1570. (2nd ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Genick, Cocchi D., and Cremonesi, R. Grifoni. (1985). L'età dei metalli nella Toscana nord-occidentale. Pisa: Pacini Editore.Google Scholar
Collier, J., and M. Rosaldo. (1981). Politics and gender in simple societies, in Sexual meanings: The cultural construction of gender and sexuality. Edited by Ortner, S. and Whitehead, H.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 275–329.Google Scholar
Coltorti, M., and L. Dal Ri. (1985). Human impact on the landscape: some examples from the Adige valley, in Papers in Italian Archaeology IV: the Cambridge Conference, vol. I. BAR International Series. Edited by Malone, C. and Stoddart, S.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 105–134.Google Scholar
Barbaro, Conati C., Lemorini, C., Ciarico, A., and Sivilli, S.. (2003). Attività produttive nel villaggio neolitico di Masseria Candelaro: L'apporto dell'indagine tecnologica e funzionale dell'industria litica. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:819–824.Google Scholar
Conkey, M., and S. Williams. (1991). Original narratives: The political economy of gender in archaeology, in Gender at the crossroads of knowledge: feminist anthropology in the postmodern era. Edited by Leonardo, M. di. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 102–139.Google Scholar
Coote, J. (1992). “Marvels of everyday vision:” The anthropology of aesthetics and the cattle-keeping Nilotes, in Anthropology, Art, and Aesthetics. Edited by Coote, J. and Shelton, A.. Oxford: Clarendon, pp. 245–273.Google Scholar
Corrain, C. (1963). I resti scheletrici umani della stazione eneolitica di Remedello (Brescia). Atti dell'Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti 121:165–208.Google Scholar
Costabile, F. (1972). La stazione neolitica di Prestarona in comune di Canolo. Klearchos 53–56:5–27.Google Scholar
Costantini, L., L. C. Biasini, and A. Lentini. (2003). Indagini archeobotaniche sugli intonaci neolitici di Torre Sabea, in Torre Sabea: un Établissement du Néolithique Ancien en Salento. Edited by Guilaine, J. and Cremonesi, G.. Rome: École Française de Rome, pp. 234–246.Google Scholar
Coubray, S. (1997). Analisi preliminare dei macroresti vegetali, in Casale del Dolce: Ambiente, Economia, e Cultura di una comunità preistorica del Valle del Sacco. Edited by Zarattini, A. and Petrassi, L.. Roma: Soprintendenza Archeologica per il Lazio, pp. 273–281.Google Scholar
Cremonesi, G. (1965). Il villaggio di Ripoli alla luce dei recenti scavi. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 20:85–155.Google Scholar
Cremonesi, G.. (1976). La Grotta dei Piccioni di Bolognano nel quadro delle culture dal neolitico all'età del bronzo in Abruzzo. Pisa: Giardini.Google Scholar
Cremonesi, G.. (1988). Osservazioni su alcune strutture in abitati neolitici dell'Italia meridionale. Origini 14:83–99.Google Scholar
Cremonesi, G., and Tozzi, C.. (1987). Il Neolitico dell'Abruzzo. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:229–238.Google Scholar
Crown, P. L. (2001). Learning to make pottery in the prehispanic American Southwest. Journal of Anthropological Research 57:451–470.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Csordas, T. (1999). The body's career in anthropology, in Anthropological Theory Today. Edited by Moore, H.. Cambridge, UK: Polity, pp. 172–205.Google Scholar
Cuda, M. T., and Murgano, R.. (2004). Il sito neolitico di Sovereto di Nicotera (RC). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:163–174.Google Scholar
Curci, A., and Tagliacozzo, A.. (2003). Aspetti economici e culturali nel villaggio neolitico Masseria Candelaro (Manfredonia – FG): l'analisi faunistica della “grande struttura.”Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:825–828.Google Scholar
D'Ambrosio, B., and Sfrecola, S.. (1990). Le collane eneolitiche e del Bronzo Antico della Liguria: materie prime e fonti di approvvigionamento. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 41:331–344.Google Scholar
D'Amico, C., Minale, M., Starnini, E., and Trentini, P.. (2003). L'officina di produzione di asce in pietra levigata di Rivanazzano (PV): dati archeometrici e catena operativa, nota preliminare. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:981–986.Google Scholar
d'Errico, F. (1987). Technologie et fonction du burin de Ripabianca dans le cadre culturel du néolithique ancien de l'Italie septentrionale. Anthropologie 91:411–431.Google Scholar
d'Ottavio, F. (2001). La caratterizzazione chimica della selce delle miniere preistoriche del Gargano: proposta di un metodo archeometrico basato sulle analisi chimiche eseguite con la tecnica strumentale ICP-AES. Origini 23:111–143.Google Scholar
Dahl, G., and Hjort, A.. (1976). Having herds: Pastoral herd growth and household economy. Stockholm Studies in Social Anthropology. Stockholm: Department of Social Anthropology, University of Stockholm.Google Scholar
Davidson, I. (1989). Escaped domestic animals and the introduction of agriculture to Spain, in The walking larder: patterns of domestication, pastoralism and predation. Edited by Clutton-Brock, J.. London: Unwin Hyman, pp. 59–71.Google Scholar
Dawson, H. (2005). Island Colonisation and Abandonment in Mediterranean Prehistory. London: Ph.D. Thesis, Institute of Archaeology, University College London.Google Scholar
Certeau, M. (2002). The Practice of Everyday Life. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Lucia, A., Ferri, D., Geniola, A., Giove, C., Maggiore, M., Melone, N., Delfino, V. Pesce, Pieri, P., and Scattarella, V.. (1977). La comunità neolitica di Cala Colombo presso Torre a Mare, Bari. Bari: Società per lo Studio di Storia Patria per la Puglia.Google Scholar
Deetz, J. (1977). In small things forgotten: The archaeology of early North American life. New York: Doubleday.Google Scholar
Deith, M. (1987). La raccolta dei molluschi nel Tavoliere in epoca preistorica, in Coppa Nevigata e il suo territorio: testimonianze archeologiche dal VII al II millennio a.C. Edited by Cassano, S., Cazzella, A., Manfredini, A., and Moscoloni, M.. Rome: Quasar, pp. 101–108.Google Scholar
Deith, M.. (1989). Shellfish gathering and site function: a case study from Neolithic Apulia. ArchaeoZoologia 3:163–176.Google Scholar
Delamont, S. (1995). Appetites and identities: an introduction to the social anthropology of western Europe. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Delano C. (1979). Western Mediterranean Europe: A historical geography. New York: Academic.Google Scholar
Delano Smith, C.. (1983). L'ambiente, in Passo di Corvo e la civiltà neolitica del Tavoliere. Edited by Tinè, S.. Genova: Sagep, pp. 11–22.Google Scholar
DeMarrais, E., Castillo, L. J., and Earle, T. K.. (1996). Ideology, materialization, and power strategies. Current Anthropology 37:15–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dering, P. (1999). Earth-oven plant processing in Archaic period economies: An example from a semi-arid savannah in south-central North America. American Antiquity 64:659–674.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lampedusa, di G. T. (1960). The Leopard. New York: Pantheon.Google Scholar
Di Lernia, S., and Galiberti, A.. (1993). Archeologia mineraria della Selce nella preistoria. Firenze: All'insegna del Giglio.Google Scholar
Díaz-Andreu, M., and Champion, T.. (1996). Nationalism and archaeology in Europe. London: UCL Press.Google Scholar
Dietler, M. (1996). Feasts and commensal politics in the political economy: food, power, and status in prehistoric Europe, in Food and the status quest. Edited by Wiessner, P. and Schiefenhövel, W.. Oxford: Berghahn, pp. 87–126.Google Scholar
Dietler, M., and B. Hayden. (2001). Digesting the feast: good to east, good to drink, good to think, in Feasts: archaeological and ethnographic perspectives on food, politics and power. Edited by Dietler, M. and Hayden, B.. Washington, DC: Smithsonian, pp. 1–22.Google Scholar
Dietler, M., and Hayden, B.. (2001). Feasts: archaeological and ethnographic perspectives. Washington, DC: Smithsonian.Google Scholar
Dobres, M.-A. (2001). Technology and social agency: Outlining a practice framework for archaeology. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Dobres, M.-A., and Robb, J.. (Eds.). (2000). Agency in archaeology. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Dobres, M.-A., and Robb, J.. . (2005). “Doing” agency: introductory remarks on methodology. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 12:159–166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dobres, M.-A., and J. E. Robb. (2000). Agency in Archaeology: Paradigm or Platitude? in Agency in Archaeology. Edited by Dobres, M.-A. and Robb, J.. London: Routledge, pp. 3–17.Google Scholar
Donahue, R. (1991). Desperately seeking Ceres: a critical examination of current models for the transition to agriculture in Mediterranean Europe, in Transitions to agriculture in prehistory. Monographs in World Archaeology. Edited by Gebauer, A. and Price, T. D.. Madison: Prehistory Press, pp. 73–81.Google Scholar
Dornan, J. L. (2002). Agency and archaeology: Past, present, and future directions. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 9:303–329.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Douglas, N. (1938). Old Calabria. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ducci, S., Perazzi, P., and Ronchitelli, A.. (1987). Gli insediamenti neolitici abbruzzesi con ceramica impressa di Tricalle (CH) e Fontanelle (PE). Rassegna di Archeologia 6:65–142.Google Scholar
Earle, T., and Ericsson, J.. (1977). Exchange systems in prehistory. New York: Academic.Google Scholar
Edmonds, M. (1999). Ancestral geographies of the Neolithic: Landscape, monuments and memory. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Ehrenberg, M. (1989). Women in prehistory. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.Google Scholar
Ehrenreich, R. M., Crumley, C. L., and Levy, J.. (1995). Heterarchy and the analysis of complex societies. (Vol. 6), Archaeological Papers. Washington, DC: American Anthropological Association.Google Scholar
Evans-Pritchard, E. (1940). The Nuer. Oxford: Clarendon.Google Scholar
Evans, J. (1971). Prehistoric Antiquities of the Maltese Islands. London: Athlone.Google Scholar
Evans, J.. (1976). Archaeological evidence for religious practices in the Maltese Islands during the Neolithic and Copper Ages. Kokalos 22:130–146.Google Scholar
Evett, D. (1975). A preliminary note on the typology, functional variability and trade of Italian Neolithic ground stone axes. Origini 7:35–54.Google Scholar
Farr, R. H. (2001). Cutting Through Water: An Analysis of Neolithic Obsidian from Bova Marina, Calabria. MA Dissertation, University of Southampton.
Farr, R. H.. (2006). Seafaring as social action. Journal of Maritime Archaeology 1:1–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Farr, R. H., and J. Robb. (2005). Substances in Motion: Neolithic Mediterranean “Trade.” in The archaeology of Mediterranean prehistory. Edited by Blake, E. and Knapp, A. B.. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 24–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fedele, F. (1990). L'altopiano di Ossimo-Borno nella preistoria: ricerche 1988–1990. Capo di Ponte: Edizioni del Centro.Google Scholar
Feil, D. (1987). The evolution of highland Papua New Guinea societies. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feinman, G. (2001). Corporate/network: a new perspective on leadership in the American Southwest, in Hierarchies in action: Cui bono. Edited by Diehl, M.. Carbondale: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, pp. 152–180.Google Scholar
Feinman, G. M., and Neitzel, J.. (1984). Too many types: an overview of prestate societies in the Americas. Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory 7:39–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fiorentino, G., Torre, M., Muntoni, I., Pierattini, D., Picsciello, M., and Radina, F.. (2003). Dinamiche di crollo e ricostruzione dell'alzato di capanna: approccio integrato all'analisi degli intonaci dell'insediamento del Neolitico antico di Balsignano (Modugno, Bari). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:807–812.Google Scholar
FitzGerald, E. (1957). The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam. Garden City: Doubleday.Google Scholar
Flannery, K. (1976). The early Mesoamerican village. New York: Academic.Google Scholar
Flannery, K.. (1999). Process and agency in early state formation. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 9:3–12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forenbaher, S., and Miracle, P.. (2005). The spread of farming in the Eastern Adriatic. Antiquity 79:514–528.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Formentini, R. (1991). L'immagine femminile nelle statue-menhirs, in Second Deyà International Conference of Prehistory: Recent developments in Western Mediterranean prehistory: Archaeological techniques, technology and theory, vol. 2, BAR International Series. Edited by Waldren, W., Ensenyat, J., and Kennard, R.. Oxford: Tempus Reparatum, pp. 365–385.Google Scholar
Formicola, V. (1983). Stature in Italian prehistoric samples with particular reference to methodological problems. Homo 34:33–47.Google Scholar
Fornaciari, G. (1979). Lesione traumatica su una calotta dell'Eneolitico dell'Isola di Elba. Quaderni di Scienze Antropologiche 3:28–36.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. (1977). Discipline and punish: The birth of the prison. London: Allen Lane.Google Scholar
Fowler, C. (2004). The archaeology of personhood. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Francalacci, P. (1989). Dietary reconstruction at Arene Candide Cave (Liguria, Italy) by means of trace-element analysis. Journal of Archaeological Science 16:109–124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frayer, D. (1981). Body size, weapon use and natural selection in the European Upper Paleolithic and Mesolithic. American Anthropologist 83:57–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fried, M. (1967). The evolution of political society. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Delpino, Fugazzola M. A. (2001). La piccola “dea madre” del Lago di Bracciano. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 91–92:27–46.Google Scholar
Delpino, Fugazzola M. A., D'Eugenio, G., and Pessina, A.. (1993). “La Marmotta” (Anguillara Sabazia, RM): Scavi 1989 – un abitato perilacustre di età neolitica. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 84:181–342.Google Scholar
Delpino, Fugazzola M. A., Manfredini, A., Martini, F., Radi, G., Sarti, L., and Silvestrini, M.. (2003). Insediamenti e strutture neolitiche ed eneolitiche dell'Italia centrale. Atti Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:93–112.Google Scholar
Delpino, Fugazzola M. A., and Mineo, M.. (1995). La piroga neolitica del lago di Bracciano, La Marmotta 1. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiano (Rome) 86:197–266.Google Scholar
Delpino, Fugazzola M. A., and Tinè, V.. (2003). Le statuine fittili femminili del Neolitico Italiano: iconografia e contesto culturale. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 93–95:19–51.Google Scholar
Galaty, J. (1989). Cattle and cognition: aspects of Maasai practical reasoning, in The walking larder: Patterns of domestication, pastoralism and predation. Edited by Clutton-Brock, J.. London: Unwin Hyman, pp. 215–230.Google Scholar
Galiberti, A. (1987). La miniera preistorica della Defensola (Vieste): note preliminare. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:721–732.Google Scholar
Galiberti, A.. (1999). La miniera della Defensola, in Ipogei della Daunia: Preistoria di un Territorio. Edited by Sisto, A. M. Tunzi. Foggia: Claudio Grenzi Editore, pp. 30–33.Google Scholar
Galli, E. (1950). Nuove scoperte nella necropoli di “Fonte Noce” presso Recanati. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 8:1–19.Google Scholar
Gardner, A. (2004). Agency uncovered: Archaeological perspectives on social agency, personhood, and being human. London: UCL Press.Google Scholar
Gathercole, P., and Lowenthal, D.. (Eds). (1990). The politics of the past. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Geertz, C. (1973). The interpretation of cultures. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Gell, A. (1992). The technology of enchantment and the enchantment of technology, in Anthropology, Art and Aesthetics. Edited by Coote, J. and Shelton, A.. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 40–67.Google Scholar
Gell, A.. (1998). Art and agency: An anthropological theory. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Geniola, A. (1987). La cultura di Serra d'Alto nella Puglia centrale. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:771–781.Google Scholar
Geniola, A.. (1992). Marcianese: il villaggio Rossi: entità del neolitico medio arcaico abruzzese. Lanciano: Itinerari.Google Scholar
Geniola, A., Camerini, V., and Lionetti, G.. (1995). Villaggi trincerati Neolitici negli agri di Matera, Santeramo, Laterza. Matera: Grafiche Paternoster.Google Scholar
Geniola, A., and Ponzetti, F.. (1987). Ricerche sul neolitico delle murge altamurane. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 25:209–221.Google Scholar
Geniola, A., and Sisto, A. Tunzi. (1980). Espressioni cultuali e d'arte nella Grotta di Cala Scizzo presso Torre a Mare (Bari). Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 35:125–146.Google Scholar
Germanà, F., and Fornaciari, G.. (1992). Trapanazioni, craniotomie e traume cranici in Italia dalla preistoria all'età moderna. Pisa: Giardini.Google Scholar
Germanà, F., Mallegni, F., Pompeis, C., and Ronco, D.. (1990). Il villaggio neolitico di Villa Badessa (Pescara): aspetti paletnologici, antropologici e paleopatologici. Atti, Società Toscana di Scienze Naturali 97:271–310.Google Scholar
Gero, J. (1991). Genderlithics: Women's role in stone tool production, in Engendering Archaeology. Edited by Conkey, M. and Tringham, R.. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 163–193.Google Scholar
Giampietri, A., and Tozzi, C.. (1989). L'industria litica del villaggio di Ripa Tetta (Lucera). Atti Convegno Nazionale sulla Preistoria, Protostoria e Storia della Daunia 11:57–78.Google Scholar
Giannitrapani, M. (2002). Coroplastica Neolitica antropomorfa d'Italia: Simboli ed iconografie dell'arte mobiliare quaternaria post-glaciale. International Series (Vol. 1020). Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Giddens, A. (1979). Central problems in social theory: Action, structure, and contradiction in social analysis. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giddens, A.. (1984). The constitution of society. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Gillespie, S. D. (2001). Personhood, agency, and mortuary ritual: A case study from the ancient Maya. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 20:73–112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilman, A. (1981). The development of social stratification in Bronze Age Europe. Current Anthropology 22:1–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilman, A.. (1991). Trajectories towards social complexity in the later prehistory of the Mediterranean, in Chiefdoms: Power, economy, ideology. Edited by Earle, T.. New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 146–168.Google Scholar
Gimbutas, M. (1991). The civilization of the Goddess: The world of Old Europe. San Francisco: Harper and Row.Google Scholar
Glass, M. (1991). Animal production systems in Neolithic Central Europe. BAR International Series. Oxford: Tempus Reparatum.Google Scholar
Gnoli, G., and Vernant, J.-P.. (1982). La mort, les morts dan les sociétés anciennes. Cambridge, UK and Paris: Cambridge University Press/Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme.Google Scholar
Godelier, M. (1986). The making of great men: Male domination and power among the New Guinea Baruya. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Godelier, M.. (1991). An unfinished attempt at reconstructing the social processes which may have prompted the transformation of great-men societies into big-men societies, in Big men and great men: Personifications of power in Melanesia. Edited by Godelier, M. and Strathern, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 275–304.Google Scholar
Godelier, M., and Strathern, A.. (1991). Big men and great men: Personifications of power. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gosden, C. (1994). Social being and time. London: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Gosden, C., and Marshall, Y.. (1999). The cultural biography of objects. World Archaeology 31:169–178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gravina, A. (1975). Fossati e strutture ipogeiche dei villaggi neolitici in agro di S. Severo. Attualità Archeologiche 1:14–34.Google Scholar
Graziosi, P. (1974). L'arte preistorica in Italia. Firenze: Sansoni.Google Scholar
Graziosi, P.. (1975). Nuove manifestazioni d'arte mesolitica e neolitica nel Riparo Gaban presso Trento. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 30:237–278.Google Scholar
Graziosi, P.. (1980). Le pitture preistoriche di Porto Badisco. Firenze: Martelli.Google Scholar
Gregg, S. (1988). Foragers and farmers: Population interaction and agricultural expansion in prehistoric Europe. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Grifoni Cremonesi, R. (1992). Il Neolitico nell'Italia Centrale e in Sardegna, in Italia preistorica. Edited by Guidi, A. and Piperno, M.. Roma: Laterza, pp. 306–333.Google Scholar
Cremonesi, Grifoni R.. (2003). Sepolture neolitiche dell'Italia centro-meridionale e loro relazioni con gli abitati. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:259–274.Google Scholar
Grifoni Cremonesi, R., F. Mallegni, and A. Tramonti. (2003). La sepoltura del Neolitico antico di Torre Sabea, in Torre Sabea: un Établissement du Néolithique Ancien en Salento. Edited by Guilaine, J. and Cremonesi, G.. Rome: École Française de Rome, pp. 96–105.Google Scholar
Cremonesi, Grifoni R., and Radmilli, A.. (2001). La grotta Patrizi al Sassi di Furbara (Cerveteri, Roma). Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 91–92:63–120.Google Scholar
Grifoni Cremonesi, R., C. Tozzi, and M. Weiss. (2000). Il Neolitico antico dell'area corso-toscana, in Les Premier Peuplements Olocenes de l'Aire Corso-Toscane/Il Primo Popolamento Olocenico dell'Area Corso-Toscana. Edited by Tozzi, C. and Weiss, M.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, pp. 259–271.Google Scholar
Guidi, A. (1992). Le età dei metalli nell'Italia centrale e in Sardegna, in Italia preistorica. Edited by Guidi, A. and Piperno, M.. Rome: Laterza, pp. 420–470.Google Scholar
Guidi, A.. (2000). Preistoria della complessità sociale. Bari: Laterza.Google Scholar
Guilaine, J. (Ed.). (1993). Dourgne: Derniers chasseurs-collecteurs et premiers éleveurs de la Haute-Vallée de l'Aude. Toulouse: Centre d'Anthropologie des Sociétés Rurales.Google Scholar
Guilaine, J., and Cremonesi, G.. (1987). L'habitat néolithique de Trasano (Matera, Basilicate). Premiers résultats. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:707–719.Google Scholar
Guilaine, J., and Cremonesi, G.. . (Eds.). (2003). Torre Sabea: Un Établissement du Néolithique Ancien en Salento (Vol. 315). Collection de l'École Française de Rome. Rome: École Française de Rome.Google Scholar
Guzzardi, L., Iovino, M. R., and Rivoli, A.. (2003). L'organizzazione del villaggio neolitico di Vulpiglia presso Pachino (Siracusa). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:845–849.Google Scholar
Hagerstrand, T. (1977). Culture and ecology: four time-geographic essays. Lund: Lund Universitets Kulturgeografiska Institutionen.Google Scholar
Hallam, B., Warren, S., and Renfrew, C.. (1976). Obsidian in the western Mediterranean: characterization by neutron activation analysis and optical emission spectroscopy. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 42:85–110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Halstead, P. (1981). Counting sheep in Neolithic and Bronze Age Greece, in Pattern of the past: studies in honour of David Clarke. Edited by Hodder, I., Isaac, G., and Hammond, N.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 307–339.Google Scholar
Halstead, P.. (1989). The economy has a normal surplus: economic stability and social change among early farming communities of Thessaly, Greece, in Bad year economics. Edited by Halstead, P. and O'Shea, J.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 68–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Halstead, P.. (1994). The North–South divide: Regional paths to complexity in prehistoric Greece, in Development and decline in the Mediterranean. Edited by Mathers, C. and Stoddart, S.. Sheffield: J. R. Collis Publications, pp. 195–219.Google Scholar
Halstead, P., and J. O'Shea. (1982). A friend in need is a friend indeed: Social storage and the origins of ranking, in Ranking, resource, and exchange. Edited by Renfrew, C. and Shennan, S.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 92–99.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y. (1998). Eating the dead: Mortuary feasting and the politics of memory in the Aegean Bronze Age societies, in Cemetery and Society in the Aegean Bronze Age. Edited by Branigan, K.. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, pp. 115–132.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y.. (1999). Food technologies, technologies of the body: The social context of wine and oil production and consumption in Bronze Age Crete. World Archaeology 31:38–54.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hamilakis, Y., Pluciennik, M., and Tarlow, S.. (Eds.). (2002). Thinking through the body: archaeologies of corporeality. London: Kluwer/ Plenum Academic.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardy, K., and Sillitoe, P.. (2003). Material perspectives: Stone tool use and material culture among the Wola, Papua New Guinea. Internet Archaeology 14.Google Scholar
Hastorf, C. A. (1991). Gender, space and food in prehistory, in Engendering Archaeology. Edited by Conkey, M. and Gero, J.. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 132–161.Google Scholar
Hatch, E. (1989). Theories of social honor. American Anthropologist 91:341–353.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayden, B. (1990). Nimrods, Piscators, Pluckers, and Planters: The emergence of food production. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 9:31–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hegmon, M., and Kulow, S.. (1995). Painting as agency, style as structure: Innovations in Mimbres pottery designs from Southwest New Mexico. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 12:313–334.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helms, M. (1983). Ulysses' sail. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Helms, M.. (1998). Access to origins: affines, ancestors, and aristocrats. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Herbert, E. W. (1994). Iron, gender, and power: Rituals of transformation in African societies. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Hirth, K. (Ed.) (2003). Mesoamerican lithic technology: Experimentation and interpretation. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.Google Scholar
Hobsbawn, E., and Ranger, T.. (1993). The invention of tradition. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hodder, I. (1990). The domestication of Europe. London: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar
Hodder, I., and Cessford, C.. (2004). Daily practice and social memory at Çatalhöyük. American Antiquity 69:17–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodder, I., and Malone, C.. (1984). Intensive survey of prehistoric sites in the Stilo region, Calabria. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 50:121–150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holloway, R. (1974). Buccino. Rome: de Luca.Google Scholar
Holloway, R.. (1975). Buccino: the Early Bronze Age village of Tufariello. Journal of Field Archaeology 2:11–81.Google Scholar
Holmes, K., and R. Whitehouse. (1998). Anthropomorphic figurines and the construction of gender in Neolithic Italy, in Gender and italian archaeology: Challenging the stereotypes. Edited by Whitehouse, R.. London: Accordia Research Center, pp. 95–126.Google Scholar
Hopf, M. (1991). South and Southwest Europe, in Progress in Old World palaeoethnobotany. Edited by Zeist, W., Wasylikowa, K., and Behre, K.-E.. Rotterdam: Balkema, pp. 241–277.Google Scholar
Horden, P., and Purcell, N.. (2000). The corrupting sea: A study of Mediterranean history. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Hosler, D. (1995). Sound, color, and meaning in the metallurgy of ancient West Mexico. World Archaeology 27:100–115.Google Scholar
Houston, S., and Taube, K.. (2000). An archaeology of the senses: perception and cultural expression in ancient Mesoamerica. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 10:261–294.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hurcombe, L. (1992). New contributions to the study of the function of Sardinian obsidian artifacts, in Sardinia in the Mediterranean: A footprint in the sea. Edited by Tykot, R. H. and Andrews, T. K.. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, pp. 83–97.Google Scholar
Iacopini, A. (2000). Il sito neolitico di Casa Querciolaia (Livorno). Rassegna di Archeologia 17:127–178.Google Scholar
Ingold, T. (2000). The perception of the environment: Essays on livelihood, dwelling, and skill. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ingravallo, E. (1999). Le cose della preistoria, in Fonti di Informazione e Contesto Archeologico: Manufatti Ceramici e Neolitizazzione Meridionale. Edited by Ingravallo, E.. Galatina: Mario Congedi, pp. 9–20.Google Scholar
Ingravallo, E.. (2001). Il sito neolitico di Serra Cicora (Nardò, LE): note preliminari. Origini 26:87–118.Google Scholar
Irti, U. (1992). Due statuette preistoriche dal Fucino. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 28:433–440.Google Scholar
Jarman, M., and D. Webley. (1975). Settlement and land use in Capitanata, Italy, in Palaeoeconomy. Edited by Higgs, E.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 177–231.
Johnson, M. (1989). Conceptions of agency in archaeological interpretation. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 8:189–211.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, M.. (2000). The medieval castle and the fashioning of agency, in Agency in Archaeology. Edited by Dobres, M.-A. and Robb, J.. London: Routledge, pp. 213–231.Google Scholar
Jones, A., and MacGregor, G.. (Eds.). (2002). Colouring the past: the significance of colour in archaeological research. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Jones, G. B. D. (1987). Apulia. London: Society of Antiquaries.Google Scholar
Jones, R. (1989). Hunters of the dreaming: some ideational, economic, and ecological parameters of the Australian Aboriginal productive system. in Production systems in the Pacific. Edited by Yen, D. and Mummery, J.. Canberra: Department of Prehistory, Australian National University, pp. 25–55.Google Scholar
Jorgenson, D. (1991). Big men, great men and women: alternative logics of difference, in Big men and great men: personifications of power in Melanesia. Edited by Godelier, M. and Strathern, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 256–272.Google Scholar
Joyce, R. (2000). Girling the girl and boying the boy: The production of adulthood in ancient Mesoamerica. World Archaeology 31:473–483.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Joyce, R., and Lopiparo, J.. (2005). Doing agency in archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 12:365–374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaiser, T., and Forenbaher, S.. (1999). Adriatic sailors and stone knappers: Palagruza in the 3rd millenium BC. Antiquity 73:313–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kamp, K. A. (2001). Prehistoric children working and playing: A case study in learning ceramics. Journal of Anthropological Research 57:427–450.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keates, S. (2000). The ancestralization of the landscape: Monumentality, memory, and the rock art of Copper Age Vai Camonica, in Signifying place and space: World perspectives in rock art and landscape. International Series (Vol. 902) Edited by Nash, G.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 83–102.Google Scholar
Keates, S.. (2002). The flashing blade: copper, colour, and luminosity in North Italian Copper Age society, in Colouring the past: The significance of colour in archaeological research. Edited by Jones, A. and MacGregor, G.. Oxford: Berg, pp. 109–126.Google Scholar
Kelly, R. (1985). The Nuer conquest: Structure and development of an expansionist system. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Kelly, R.. (1993). Constructing inequality: the fabrication of a hierarchy of virtue among the Etoro. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Kensinger, K. (1989). Hunting and male domination in Cashinahua society, in Farmers as hunters: The implications of sedentism. Edited by Kent, S.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 18–26.Google Scholar
Kent, S. (1989). Cross-cultural perceptions of farmers as hunters and the value of meat, in Farmers as hunters: The implications of sedentism. Edited by Kent, S.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 1–17.Google Scholar
Knauft, B. (1985). Good company and violence: Sorcery and social action in a lowland New Guinea society. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Knauft, B.. (1987). Reconsidering violence in simple human societies: Homicide among the Gebusi of New Guinea. Current Anthropology 28:457–499.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knauft, B.. (1991). Violence and sociality in human evolution. Current Anthropology 32:391–428.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knauft, B.. (1993). South coast New Guinea cultures: History, comparison, dialectic. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuhn, S. L. (1995). Mousterian lithic technology: An ecological perspective. Princeton: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rocca, F. (2005). La Miniera Pre-Protostorica di Grotta della Monaca (Sant'Agata di Esaro, Cosenza). Roseto (Cosenza): Centro Regionale di Speleologia “Enzo dei Medici.”Google Scholar
Rosa, V. (1987). Un nuovo insediamento neolitico a Serra del Palco di Milena (CL). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:801–808.Google Scholar
Langella, M., Boscaino, M., Coubrai, S., Curci, A., Francesco, A. M., and Senatore, M. R.. (2003). Baselice (Benevento): Il sito pluristratificato neolitico di torrente Cervaro. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 59:259–336.Google Scholar
Latour, B. (2005). Reassembling the social: an introduction to actor-network-theory. Oxford: Clarendon.Google Scholar
Zambotti, Laviosa P. (1938). Le civiltà preistoriche e protostoriche dell'Alto Adige. Monumenti Antichi dei Lincei 37:9–578.Google Scholar
Leighton, R. (1989). Ground stone tools from Serra Orlando (Morgantina) and stone axe studies in Sicily and Southern Italy. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 55:135–159.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leighton, R.. (1992). Stone axes and exchange in south Italian prehistory: New evidence from old collections. Journal of the Accordia Research Center 3:11–40.Google Scholar
Leighton, R.. (1999). Sicily before History. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Leighton, R., and J. Dixon. (1991). Alcune considerazioni sulle asce levigate in Italian Meridionale ed in Sicilia, in Papers of the Fourth Conference of Italian Archaeology, Volume 3: New developments. Edited by Herring, E., Whitehouse, R., and Wilkins, J.. London: Accordia Research Centre, pp. 19–28.Google Scholar
Leighton, R., and Dixon, J.. (1992). Jade and greenstone in the prehistory of Sicily and Southern Italy. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 11:179–200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lemonnier, P. (1991). From great men to big men: peace, substitution and competition in the Highlands of New Guinea, in Big men and great men: Personifications of power in Melanesia. Edited by Godelier, M. and Strathern, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 7–27.Google Scholar
Lemonnier, P.. (1992). Elements for an anthropology of technology. Anthropological Papers. Ann Arbor: Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan.Google Scholar
Leone, M. (1984). Interpreting ideology in historical archaeology: using the rules of perspective in the William Paca Garden in Annapolis, Maryland, in Ideology, power, and prehistory. Edited by Miller, D. and Tilley, C.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 25–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levi, P. (1988). The Drowned and the Saved. New York: Vintage.Google Scholar
Levy, J. E. (1992). Orayvi revisited: social stratification in an “egalitarian” community. Santa Fe: School of American Research.Google Scholar
Lewthwaite, J. (1987). Three steps to leaven: applicazione del modello di disponibilità al neolitico italiano. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:90–101.Google Scholar
Liep, J. (1991). Great man, big man, chief: a triangulation of the Massim, in Big men and great men: Personifications of power in Melanesia. Edited by Godelier, M. and Strathern, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 28–47.Google Scholar
Lillios, K. (1999). Symbolic artifacts and spheres of meaning: groundstone tools from Copper Age Portugal, in Material symbols: Culture and economy in prehistory. Edited by Robb, J. E.. Carbondale, Illinois: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, pp. 173–187.Google Scholar
Lillios, K.. (1999b). Objects of memory: the ethnography and archaeology of heirlooms. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 6:235–262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lilliu, G. (1999). Arte e religione della Sardegna prenuragica. Sassari: Carlo Delfino editore.Google Scholar
Lindenlauf, A. (2004). Dirt, cleanliness, and social structure in ancient Greece, in Agency uncovered: Archaeological perspectives on social agency, power and being human. Edited by Gardner, A.. London: UCL Press, pp. 81–106.Google Scholar
Livi-Bacci, M. (1999). The population of Europe. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Porto, Lo F. (1972). La tomba neolitica con idola di pietra di Arnesano. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 27:357–372.Google Scholar
Porto, Lo F.. (1978). La preistoria del Materano alla luce delle ultime ricerche. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 20:275–294.Google Scholar
Porto, Lo F.. (1989). L'insediamento neolitico di Serra d'Alto nel Materano. Rome: Giorgio Bretschneider.Google Scholar
Lowenthal, D. (1985). The past is a foreign country. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lucas, G. (2004). The archaeology of time. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Lucifero, A. (1901). Girifalco. Rivistia Italiana di Scienze Naturali:115.Google Scholar
Lupton, D. (1996). Food, the body, and the self. London: Sage.Google Scholar
Maggi, R. (2001). Pietre della memoria, in Studie di Preistoria e Protostoria in onore di Luigi Bernabò Brea. Edited by Martinelli, M. C. and Spigo, U.. Lipari: Museo Archeologico Regionale Eoliano, pp. 175–186.Google Scholar
Maggi, R., and Pearce, M.. (2005). Mid-fourth-millennium copper mining in Liguria, north-west Italy: the earliest known copper mines in western Europe. Antiquity 79:66–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malafouris, L. (2005). The cognitive basis of material engagement: Where brain, body, and culture conflate, in Rethinking materiality: the engagement of mind with the material world. Edited by DeMarrais, E., Gosden, C., and Renfrew, C.. Cambridge, UK: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, pp. 53–62.Google Scholar
Malinowski, B. (1922). Argonauts of the western Pacific. Routledge: London.Google Scholar
Mallory, J. (1987). Lagnano da Piede: an Early Neolithic village on the Tavoliere. Origini 13:193–290.Google Scholar
Mallory, J.. (1989). In search of the Indo-Europeans. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Malone, C. (1985). Pots, prestige and ritual in Neolithic southern Italy. Papers in Italian archaeology IV: The Cambridge conference, Cambridge, 1985. International series 244 Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 118–151.Google Scholar
Malone, C.. (1994). The transition to agriculture, in Time, territory, and state: The archaeological development of the Gubbio basin. Edited by Malone, C. and Stoddart, S.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 67–80.Google Scholar
Malone, C., and Stoddart, S.. (1996). Maltese and Mediterranean megalithism in the light of the Brochtorff Circle. XIII International Congress of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences (Forlì, Italy, 8–14 September 1996) Colloquia 9:109–114.Google Scholar
Malone, C.. (2004). Towards an island of mind? in Explaining social change: studies in honour of Colin Renfrew. Edited by Cherry, J., Scarre, C., and Shennan, S.. Cambridge, UK: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, pp. 93–102.Google Scholar
Malone, C., Stoddart, S., Trump, D., Bonanno, A., and Pace, A.. (Eds.). (2007). Mortuary ritual in prehistoric Malta: The Brochtorff Circle at Xaghra excavations (1987–1994). Cambridge, UK: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.Google Scholar
Manfredini, A. (2001). Rituali funerari e organizzazione sociale: Una rilettura di alcuni dati della facies Diana in Italia meridionale, in Studie di Preistoria e Protostoria in onore di Luigi Bernabò Brea. Edited by Martinelli, M. C. and Spigo, U.. Lipari: Museo Archeologico Regionale Eoliano, pp. 71–88.Google Scholar
Manfredini, A.. (Ed.). (2002). Le dune, il lago, il mare: Una comunità di villaggio dell'età del Rame a Maccarese. Firenze: Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria.Google Scholar
Manfredini, A., and Muntoni, I.. (2003). Gli spazi del vivere: Funzioni e cronologia delle strutture d'abitato dell'insediamento neolitico di Casale del Dolce (Anagni – FR). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:187–198.Google Scholar
Mangili, G. (1954). I reperti ossei della Grotta Patrizi (Sasso Furbara): Il cranio trapanato. Rivista di Antropologia 41:52–67.Google Scholar
Maniscalco, L. (1989). Ocher containers and trade in the Central Mediterranean Copper Age. American Journal of Archaeology 93:537–541.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maniscalco, L.. (1997). I'insediamento preistorico presso Le Salinelle di San Marco (Paternò), in Prima Sicilia: alle origini della società siciliana (Vol. 1). Edited by Tusa, S.. Palermo: Ediprint, pp. 193–197.Google Scholar
Maniscalco, L., and Iovino, M. R.. (2004). La Sicilia Orientale e la Calabria Centro-Meridionale nel Neolitico. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:189–201.Google Scholar
Mann, T. (1952). The Magic Mountain. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Marino, D. (1993). Il neolitico nella Calabria centro-orientale: Ricerche 1974–1990. Annali della Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia dell'Università degli Studi di Bari 35–36:21–101.Google Scholar
Marx, K. (1978). Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, in The Marx–Engels Reader. Edited by Tucker, R.. New York: W. W. Norton, pp. 3–6.Google Scholar
Marx, K., and F. Engels. (1978). The German ideology, in The Marx-Engels reader, 2nd edition. Edited by Tucker, R.. New York: Norton, pp. 146–201.Google Scholar
McCall, J. C. (1999). Structure, agency, and the locus of the social: Why post-structural theory is good for archaeology, in Material symbols: Culture and economy in prehistory. Edited by Robb, J. E.. Carbondale, Illinois: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, pp. 16–21.Google Scholar
McConnell, B. E. (2003). Insediamenti dell'altopiano ibleo e l'architettura dell'Età del Rame in Sicilia. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:225–238.Google Scholar
McVicar, J., C. Backway, G. Clark, and R. Housley. (1994). Agriculture, in Time, territory, and state: The archaeological development of the Gubbio basin. Edited by Malone, C. and Stoddart, S.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 94–105.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. (1981). Maidens, meal, and money. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Mello, E. (1983). Indagini scientifiche per l'individuazione della provenienza dei manufatti di ossidiana, in Passo di Corvo e la civiltà neolitica del Tavoliere. Edited by Tinè, S.. Genova: Sage, pp. 122–124.Google Scholar
Merleau-Ponty, M. (1962). Phenomenology of perception. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Meskell, L., and Joyce, R.. (2003). Embodied lives: Figuring ancient Maya and Egyptian experience. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Michelaki, K. (2006). Household economies: Ceramic production and consumption among the Maros villagers of Bronze Age Hungary. International Series, 1503. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Milisauskas, S. (1983). European prehistory. New York: Academic.Google Scholar
Milisauskas, S.. (Ed.). (2002). European Prehistory: a Survey. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, D. (Ed.). (2005). Materiality. Durham: Duke University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mintz, S. (1994). Eating and being: What food means, in Food: multidisciplinary perspectives. Edited by Harriss-White, B. and Hoffenberg, R.. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 102–115.Google Scholar
Modjeska, N. (1991). Post-Ipomoean modernism: the Duna example, in Big men and great men: personifications of power in Melanesia. Edited by Godelier, M. and Strathern, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 234–255.Google Scholar
Morphy, H. (1992). From dull to brilliant: The aesthetics of spiritual power among the Yokgnu, in Anthropology, art, and aesthetics. Edited by Coote, J. and Shelton, A.. Oxford: Clarendon, pp. 181–208.Google Scholar
Morter, J. (1992). Capo Alfiere and the Middle Neolithic period in eastern Calabria, southern Italy. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas, Austin.
Morter, J., and J. Robb. (1998). Space, gender, and architecture in the southern Italian Neolithic, in Gender and Italian archaeology: Challenging the stereotypes. Edited by Whitehouse, R.. London: Accordia Research Center, pp. 83–94.Google Scholar
Mosso, A. (1908). La stazione preistorica di Coppa Nevigata presso Manfredonia. Monumenti Antichi dei Lincei 19:305–396.Google Scholar
Muntoni, I. M. (2003). Modellare l'argilla: Vasai del neolitico antico e medio nelle murge pugliesi. Firenze: Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria.Google Scholar
Muntoni, I. M.. (2004). Analisi archeometriche sulle ceramiche impresse di Favella: Caratterizzazione delle materie prime e tecnologia di manufattura. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:703–709.Google Scholar
Mussi, M. (2001). Earliest Italy: An overview of the Italian Paleolithic and Mesolithic. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum.Google Scholar
Naroll, R. (1962). Floor area and settlement population. American Antiquity 27:587–588.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, S. M. (1997). Gender in archaeology: Analyzing power and prestige. Walnut Creek: Altamira.Google Scholar
Nelson, S. M.. (2002). In pursuit of gender: Worldwide archaeological approaches. Walnut Creek: Altamira.Google Scholar
Nicoletti, F. (1997). Il commercio preistorico dell'ossidiana nel mediterraneo ed il ruolo di Lipari e Pantelleria nel più antico sistema di scambio, in Prima Sicilia: alle origini della società siciliana. Edited by Tusa, S.. Palermo: Regione Siciliana, pp. 259–273.Google Scholar
Nicoletti, G. (2004). L'insediamento neolitico di Ceraso (Acri – CS). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:737–742.Google Scholar
O'Hare, G. (1990). A preliminary study of polished stone artefacts in prehistoric southern Italy. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 56:123–152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Shea, J. M. (1996). Villagers of the Maros. New York: Plenum.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olsen, B. (2003). Material culture after text: Re-membering things. Norwegian Archaeological Review 36:87–104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Orsi, P. (1890). Stazione neolitica di Stentinello. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 16:177–200.Google Scholar
Orsi, P.. (1898). Miniere di selce e sepolcri eneolitici a Monte Tabuto e Monte Racello presso Comiso (Siracusa). Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 24:165–206.Google Scholar
Orsi, P.. (1921). Megara Hyblaea. Monumenti Antichi dei Lincei 27:109–150.Google Scholar
Orsi, P.. (1924). Villaggio trincerato dell'età della pietra scoperto a Megara Hyblaea. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 44:214–220.Google Scholar
Ortiz, A. (1969). The Tewa world: Space, time, being, and becoming in a Pueblo society. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Ortner, S. (1972). On key symbols. American Anthropologist 75:1338–1346.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ortner, S.. (1984). Theory in anthropology since the sixties. Comparative Studies in Society and History 1:126–166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palma di Cesnola, A., and A. Vigliardi. (1984). Il neo-eneolitico del promentorio del Gargano, in La Daunia antica dalla preistoria all'altomedioevo. Edited by Mazzei, M.. Milano: Electa, pp. 55–74.Google Scholar
Pandolfi, L., and B. Zamagni. (2000). La pietra verde in Toscana: i dati sulle analisi delle provenienze, in Les Premier Peuplements Olocenes de l'Aire Corso-Toscane/Il Primo Popolamento Olocenico dell'Area Corso-Toscana. Edited by Tozzi, C. and Weiss, M.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, pp. 245–248.Google Scholar
Papadopoulos, J. K. (2000). Skeletons in wells: towards an archaeology of social exclusion in the ancient Greek world, in Madness, disability, and social exclusion: The archaeology and anthropology of “difference.” Edited by Hubert, J.. London: Routledge, pp. 96–118.Google Scholar
Papathanassopoulos, G. A. (1996). Neolithic culture in Greece. Athens: N.P. Goulandris Foundation.Google Scholar
Pearson, Parker M. (1999). The archaeology of death and burial. Sutton: Stroud.Google Scholar
Pearson, Parker M., and Richards, C.. (1994). Architecture and order: approaches to social space. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patrizi, S., Radmilli, A., and Mangili, G.. (1954). Sepoltura ad inumazione con cranio trapanato nella Grotta Patrizi, Sasso Furbara. Rivista di Antropologia 41:33–68.Google Scholar
Patroni, G. (1902). Un villaggio siculo presso Matera. Monumenti Antichi dei Lincei 8:417–520.Google Scholar
Pauketat, T. R. (2001). Practice and history in archaeology: An emerging paradigm. Anthropological Theory 1:73–98.Google Scholar
Pellegrini, E. (1992). Le età dei metalli nell'Italia meridionale e in Sicilia, in Italia preistorica. Edited by Guidi, A. and Piperno, M.. Roma: Laterza, pp. 471–516.Google Scholar
Pennacchioni, M. (2003). Navigazione, commercianti e materie prime. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:1053–1058.Google Scholar
Peristiany, J. (1966). Honor and shame: The values of Mediterranean society. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Perlès, C., and K. D. Vitelli. (1999). Craft specialization in the Neolithic of Greece, in Neolithic society in Greece. Edited by Halstead, P.. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press., pp. 96–107Google Scholar
Peroni, R. (1971). L'età del Bronzo nella penisola Italiana. Firenze: Olschki.Google Scholar
Peroni, R.. (1979). From Bronze Age to Iron Age: Economic, historical, and social considerations, in Italy before the Romans. Edited by Ridgway, D. and Ridgway, F.. New York: Academic, pp. 7–30.Google Scholar
Delfino, Pesce V., Scattarella, V., Lucia, A., Ferri, D., and Giove, C.. (1979). Tomba megalitica a camera del III millennio in Rutigliano (Bari): triplice deposizione. Antropologia Contemporanea 2:453–457.Google Scholar
Petrequin, P. (1996). Management of architectural woods and variations in population density in the fourth and third millennia BC (Lakes Chalain and Clainvaux, Jura, France). Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 15:1–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pfaffenberger, B. (1992). Social anthropology of technology. Annual Review of Anthropology 21:491–516.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, P. (1992). Western Mediterranean obsidian distribution and the European Neolithic, in Sardinia in the Mediterranean: A footprint in the sea. Edited by Tykot, R. H. and Andrews, T. K.. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, pp. 71–82.Google Scholar
Pluciennik, M. (1997). Historical, geographical, and anthropological imaginations: Early ceramics in Southern Italy, in Not so much a pot, more a way of life, Oxbow Monographs. Edited by Cumberpatch, C. and Blinkhorn, P.. Oxford: Oxbow, pp. 37–56.Google Scholar
Pluciennik, M.. (1998). Representations of gender in prehistoric Southern Italy, in Gender and Italian archaeology: Challenging the stereotypes. Edited by Whitehouse, R.. London: Accordia Research Center, pp. 57–82.Google Scholar
Pollard, J. (2001). The aesthetics of depositional practice. World Archaeology 33:35–333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pred, A. (1990). Making histories and constructing human geographies: The local transformation of practice, power relations, and consciousness. Boulder: Westview.Google Scholar
Price, T. D. (2003). The arrival of agriculture in Europe as seen from the North, in The widening harvest: The Neolithic transition in Europe: Looking back, looking forward. Edited by Ammerman, A. J. and Biagi, P.. Boston: Archaeological Institute of America, pp. 273–295.Google Scholar
Priuli, A. (1985). Incisioni rupestri della Valcamonica. Torino: Priuli and Verlucca.Google Scholar
Puglisi, S. (1957). La civiltà apenninica: origine delle comunità pastorale in Italia. Firenze: Olshki.Google Scholar
Quagliati, Q. (1906). Tombe neolitiche in Taranto e nel suo territorio. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 32:17–49.Google Scholar
Quagliati, Q.. (1936). La Puglia preistorica. Rome: Società per la Storia Patria per la Puglia.Google Scholar
Quarta, G., D'Elia, M., Ingravallo, E., Tiberi, I., and Calcagnile, L.. (2005). The Neolithic site of Serra Cicora: Results of the AMS radiocarbon dating. Radiocarbon 47:207–210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Radi, G. (1987). Scavo preliminare a Fonte di San Callisto (L'Aquila). Rassegna di Archeologia 6:143–170.Google Scholar
Radi, G.. (2000). La distribuzione dell'ossidiana in Toscana nel neolitico antico, in Les Premier Peuplements Olocenes de l'Aire Corso-Toscane/ Il Primo Popolamento Olocenico dell'Area Corso-Toscana. Edited by Tozzi, C. and Weiss, M.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, pp. 249–252.Google Scholar
Radi, G., and Wilkens, B.. (1989). Il sito a ceramica impressa di Santo Stefano (Ortucchio, L'Aquila): Notizia preliminare. Rassegna di Archeologia 8:97–116.Google Scholar
Radina, F. (1999). La ricerca archeologica nell'insediamento neolitico di Balsignano (Modugno, Bari), in Fonti di informazione e contesto archeologico: Manufatti ceramici e neolitizazzione meridionale. Edited by Ingravallo, E.. Galatina: Mario Congedi, pp. 93–103.Google Scholar
Radina, F.. (2003). Le ricerche archeologiche, in Modellare l'argilla: Vasai del neolitico antico e medio nelle murge pugliesi. Edited by Muntoni, I.. Firenze: Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria, pp. 81–96.Google Scholar
Radmilli, A. (1974). Dal Paleolitico all'Età del Bronzo, in Popoli e culture dell'Italia antica, Volume 1. Edited by Radmilli, A.. Rome: Biblioteca di Storia Patria, pp. 69–404.Google Scholar
Radmilli, A.. (1997). I Primi agricoltori in abruzzo: Il neolitico. Pescara: Editrice Italica.Google Scholar
Randle, K., Barfield, L., and Bagolini, B.. (1993). Recent Italian obsidian analyses. Journal of Archaeological Science 20:503–509.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rappaport, R. (1979). Ecology, meaning, and religion. Berkeley: North Atlantic Press.Google Scholar
Redding, R. (1981). Decision making in subsistence herding of sheep and goats in the Middle East. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan.
Reid, A., and MacLean, R.. (1995). Symbolism and the social contexts of iron production in Karagwe. World Archaeology 27:144–161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rellini, U. (1923). La Grotta delle Felci a Capri. Monumenti Antichi dei Lincei 29:305–406.Google Scholar
Rellini, U.. (1934). La più antica ceramica dipinta d'Italia. Roma: Collana Meridionale Editrice.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C. (1975). Trade as Action at a Distance: Questions of Integration and Communication, in Ancient civilization and trade. Edited by Sabloff, J. and Lamberg-Karlovsky, C.. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, pp. 3–59.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C.. (1976). Megaliths, territories, and populations, in Acculturation and continuity in Atlantic Europe. Edited by Laet, S.. Brugge: De Tempel, pp. 198–220.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C., and J. E. Dixon. (1976). Obsidian in western Asia: A review, in Problems in economic and social archaeology. Edited by Sieveking, G. G., Longworth, I. H., and Wilson, K. E., London: Duckworth, pp. 137–150.Google Scholar
Rice, P. (1987). Pottery analysis: A sourcebook. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Ridola, D. (1924). Le grandi trincee preistoriche di Matera, I. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 44:97–122.Google Scholar
Ridola, D.. (1925). Le grandi trincee preistoriche di Matera, II. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 45:85–98.Google Scholar
Ridola, D.. (1926). Le grandi trincee preistoriche di Matera, III. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 46:135–174.Google Scholar
Robb, J. (1991). Neolithic skeletal remains from the Grotta Scaloria: The 1979 excavations. Rivista di Antropologia 69:111–124.Google Scholar
Robb, J.. (1994). The Neolithic of peninsular Italy: Anthropological synthesis and critique. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 85:189–214.Google Scholar
Robb, J.. (1994). Burial and social reproduction in the Peninsular Italian neolithic. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 7:29–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robb, J.. (1994). Gender contradictions: Moral coalitions and inequality in prehistoric Italy. Journal of European Archaeology 2:20–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robb, J.. (1995). From gender to class: Inequality in prehistoric Italy. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Robb, J.. (1997). Intentional tooth removal in Neolithic Italian women. Antiquity 71:659–669.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robb, J.. (1997). Violence and gender in early Italy, in Troubled times: osteological and archaeological evidence of violence. Edited by Martin, D. L. and Frayer, D.. New York: Gordon and Breach, pp. 108–141.Google Scholar
Robb, J.. (2001). Island identities: ritual, travel, and the creation of difference in Neolithic Malta. European Journal of Archaeology 4:175–202.Google Scholar
Robb, J.. (2001). Why do we find “Late Neolithic” burials in “Middle Neolithic” villages?” Paper presented at the International Union of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences, Liege.
Robb, J.. (2002). Time and biography, in Thinking through the Body: Archaeologies of Corporeality. Edited by Hamilakis, Y., Pluciennik, M., and Tarlow, S.. London: Kluwer Academic, pp. 153–171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robb, J.. (2003). Bova Marina Archaeological Project survey and excavations: Preliminary report, 2003 season. Cambridge, UK: Department of Archaeology, Cambridge University.Google Scholar
Robb, J.. (2004). The extended artifact and the monumental economy: A methodology for material agency, in Rethinking materiality: The engagement of mind with the material world. Edited by DeMarrais, E., Gosden, C., and Renfrew, C.. Cambridge, UK: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, pp. 131–139.Google Scholar
Robb, J.. (2004). Il Neolitico dell'Aspromonte. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:175–188.Google Scholar
Robb, J., and Mallegni, F.. (1994). Anthropology and paleopathology of human remains from Catignano (Pescara, Italy). Rivista di Antropologia 72:197–224.Google Scholar
Robb, J., Mallegni, F., and Ronco, D.. (1991). New human remains from the southern Italian Neolithic: Ripa Tetta and Latronico. Rivista di Antropologia 69:125–144.Google Scholar
Robb, J., and P. Miracle. (2007). Beyond “migration” versus “acculturation”: new models for the spread of agriculture, in Going over: The Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Western Europe. Edited by Whittle, A. and Cummings, V.. London: British Academy, pp. 97–113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robb, J., and Tykot, R.. (2003). Ricostruzione tramite analisi GIS di aspetti marittimi e sociali nello scambio dell'ossidian durante il Neolitico. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:1021–1025.Google Scholar
Robb, J., and Hove, D.. (2003). Gardening, foraging and herding: Neolithic land use and social territories in Southern. Antiquity 77:241–254.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robertshaw, P. (1989). The development of pastoralism in East Africa, in The walking larder: Patterns of domestication, pastoralism and predation. Edited by Clutton-Brock, J.. London: Unwin Hyman, pp. 207–214.Google Scholar
Romito, M. (1987). Un insediamento neolitico a Palinuro. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:691–695.Google Scholar
Ronchitelli, A. (1983). L'industria litica dell'area B, in Passo di Corvo e la civiltà neolitica del Tavoliere. Edited by Tinè, S.. Genova: Sagep, pp. 101–121.Google Scholar
Rosaldo, R. (1980). Ilongot headhunting: A study in society and history, 1885–1974. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Rosaldo, R.. (1986). Ilongot hunting as story and experience, in The anthropology of experience. Edited by Turner, V. W. and Brunes, E. M.. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, pp. 97–138.Google Scholar
Roscoe, P. (2000). New Guinea leadership as ethnographic analogy: A critical review. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 7:79–126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rottoli, M. (1993). “La Marmotta” (Anguillara Sabazia (RM), scavi 1989. Analisi paletnobotaniche: prime risultanze. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 84:305–315.Google Scholar
Rottoli, M.. (2001). Zafferanone selvatico (Carthamus lanatus) e cardo della Madonna (Silybum marianun), piante raccolte o coltivate nel Neolitico antico a “La Marmotta”?Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 91–92:47–62.Google Scholar
Rowly-Conwy, P. (1997). The animal bones from Arene Candide: Final report, in Arene Candide: a functional and environmental assessment of the Holocene sequence. Edited by Maggi, R.. Rome: Il Calamo, pp. 153–277.Google Scholar
Runnels, C. (2003). The origins of the Greek Neolithic: A personal view, in The widening harvest: The Neolithic transition in Europe: Looking back, looking forward. Edited by Ammerman, A. J. and Biagi, P.. Boston: Archaeological Institute of America, pp. 121–132.Google Scholar
Russell, N. (1998). Cattle as wealth in Neolithic Europe: Where's the beef? in The archaeology of value. International Series (Vol. 730). Edited by Bailey, D. W.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 42–54.Google Scholar
Russell, N.. (1999). Symbolic dimensions of animals and meat at Opovo, Yugoslavia, in Material Symbols: Culture and economy in prehistory. Edited by Robb, J.. Carbondale, Illinois: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, pp. 153–172.Google Scholar
Russell, N., and L. Martin. (2000). Trashing rubbish, in Towards reflexive method in archaeology: The example at Ca¸talhoÿuk¨. Edited by Hodder, I.. Cambridge, UK: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, pp. 57–69.Google Scholar
Rye, O. S. (1981). Pottery technology: Principles and reconstruction. Washington, DC: Smithsonian.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M. (1963). Poor man, rich man, big man, chief: Political types in Melanesia and Polynesia. Comparative Studies in Society and History 5:285–303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sahlins, M.. (1968). Tribesmen. Engelwood Cliffs,Prentice-Hall.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M.. (1972). Stone Age economics. Chicago: Aldine.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M.. (1981). Historical metaphors and mythical realities. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sahlins, M.. (1985). Islands of history. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Saitta, D. J., and McGuire, R. H.. (1998). Dialectics, heterarchy, and Western Pueblo social organization. American Antiquity 63:334–336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salvadei, L., and R. Macchiarelli. (1983). Studi antropologici, in Studi sul Neolitico del Tavoliere della Puglia. International Series 160. Edited by Cassano, S. and Manfredini, A.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 253–264.Google Scholar
Salvadei, L., and Santandrea, E.. (2003). Condizioni di vita e stato di salute nel campione neolitico di Masseria Candelaro (FG). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:829–834.Google Scholar
Sammartino, F. (1990). Insediamenti neolitici e della prima età dei metalli in località La Puzzolente (Livorno): un'officina per la lavorazione della steatite. Rassegna di Archeologia 9:153–182.Google Scholar
Sargent, A. (1983). Exploitation territory and economy in the Tavoliere of Apulia, in Studi sul Neolitico del Tavoliere della Puglia. International Series 160. Edited by Cassano, S. and Manfredini, A.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 223–236.Google Scholar
Sargent, A.. (1983). Neolithic plant remains, in Studi sul Neolitico del Tavoliere della Puglia. International Series 160. Edited by Cassano, S. and Manfredini, A.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 250–252.Google Scholar
Sarti, L., Corridi, C., Martini, F., and Pallecchi, P.. (1991). Mileto: un insediamento Neolitico della ceramica a linee incise. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 43:73–154.Google Scholar
Sarti, L., Martini, F., Magi, M., Cioppi, E., Mazzini, M., Bernabei, M. L., Birtolo, R., Foggi, B., Mazzoni, G., Franchi, R., and Pallecchi, P.. (1985). L'insediamento Neolitico di Neto di Bolasse (Sesto Fiorentino, Firenze). Rassegna di Archeologia 5:63–118.Google Scholar
Saunders, N. J. (2002). The colours of light: Materiality and chromatic cultures of the Americas, in Colouring the past: The significance of colour in archaeological research. Edited by Jones, A. and MacGregor, G.. Oxford: Berg, pp. 209–226.Google Scholar
Service, E. (1962). Primitive social organisation. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Sewell, W. (1992). A theory of structure: Duality, agency and transformation. American Journal of Sociology 98:1–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shaffer, G. D. (1983). Neolithic building technology in Calabria, Italy. Ph.D. dissertation, State University of New York, Binghamton.
Shaffer, G. D.. (1985). Architectural resources and their effect on certain neolithic settlements in Southern Italy, in Papers in Italian Archaeology IV: The Cambridge conference. BAR International Series. Edited by Malone, C. and Stoddart, S.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 101–117.Google Scholar
Shaffer, G. D.. (1993). Archaeomagnetic study of a wattle and daub building collapse. Journal of Field Archaeology 20:59–75.Google Scholar
Shanks, M., and Tilley, C.. (1987). Social theory and archaeology. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.Google Scholar
Shaw, B. (1982–1983). “Eaters of flesh, drinkers of milk:” The ancient Mediterranean ideology of the pastoral nomad. Ancient Society 13–14:5–31.Google Scholar
Shennan, S. (1982). Ideology, change and the European Bronze Age, in Symbolic and structural archaeology. Edited by Hodder, I.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 155–161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shennan, S.. (1986). Interaction and change in third millennium BC Western and Central Europe, in Peer polity interaction and socio-political change. Edited by Renfrew, C. and Cherry, J.. New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 137–148.Google Scholar
Shennan, S.. (1989). Archaeological approaches to cultural identity. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shepard, A. O. (1956). Ceramics for the archaeologist. Washington, DC: Carnegie Institution of Washington.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A. (1981). Plough and pastoralism: Aspects of the secondary products revolution, in Pattern of the past: Studies in honor of David Clarke. Edited by Hodder, I., Isaac, G., and Hammond, N.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 261–305.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A.. (1984). Social evolution: Europe in the Later Neolithic and Copper ages, in European social evolution: Archaeological perspectives. Edited by Bintliff, J.. Bradford: Bradford University Press, pp. 123–134.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A.. (1997). Cups that cheered: The introduction of alcohol to prehistoric Europe, in Economy and society in prehistoric Europe: Changing perspectives. Edited by Sherratt, A.. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 376–402.Google Scholar
Shilling, C. (2003). The body and social theory. (2nd ed.). London: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Sillitoe, P. (1988). Made in Niugini: Technology in the Highlands of New Guinea. London: British Museum.Google Scholar
Sillitoe, P.. (1997). The earth oven, in The anthropologist's cookbook. (2nd ed.). Edited by Kuper, J.. London: Kegan Paul, pp. 224–231.Google Scholar
Simone, L. (1982). Il villaggio neolitico della Villa Comunale di Foggia. Origini 11:129–182.Google Scholar
Sinclair, A. (1995). The technique as symbol in Late Glacial Europe. World Archaeology 27:50–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Singer, I. B. (1973). The fools of Chelm and their history. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux.Google Scholar
Skeates, R. (1991). Caves, cult and children in Neolithic Abruzzo, Central Italy, in Sacred and Profane. Edited by Garwood, P., Jennings, D., Skeates, R., and Toms, J.. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, pp. 122–134.Google Scholar
Skeates, R.. (1992). Thin-section analysis of Italian neolithic pottery, in Papers of the Fourth Conference of Italian Archaeology. Volume 3: New developments in Italian archaeology. Edited by Herring, E., Whitehouse, R., and Wilkins, J.. London: Accordia Research Center, pp. 29–34.Google Scholar
Skeates, R.. (1993). Early metal use in the central Mediterranean region. Accordia Research Papers 4:5–48.Google Scholar
Skeates, R.. (1994). Ritual, context, and gender in Neolithic south-eastern Italy. Journal of European Archaeology 2:199–214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skeates, R.. (1995). Animate objects: A biography of prehistoric ‘axe-amulets’ in the central Mediterranean region. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 61:279–301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skeates, R.. (1998). The social life of Italian Neolithic painted pottery, in The archaeology of value. International Series (Vol. 730). Edited by Bailey, D. W.. Oxford: British Archaeological Report, pp. 131–141s.Google Scholar
Skeates, R.. (2002). The social dynamics of enclosure in the Neolithic of the Tavoliere, south-east Italy. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 13:155–188.Google Scholar
Skeates, R.. (2003). Radiocarbon dating and interpretations of the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Italy, in The widening harvest: The Neolithic transition in Europe: Looking back, looking forward. Edited by Ammerman, A. J. and Biagi, P.. Boston: Archaeological Institute of America, pp. 157–187.Google Scholar
Sofaer, J. (Ed.). (2000). Children and material culture. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Soprintendenza Archeologica della Basilicata. (1976). Il Museo Nazionale Ridola di Matera. Matera: Edizioni Meta.
S⊘rensen, M. L. (2000). Gender archaeology. Oxford: Polity.Google Scholar
Sorrentino, C. (1983). La fauna, in Passo di Corvo e la civiltà neolitica del Tavoliere. Edited by Tinè, S.. Genova: Sagep, pp. 149–158.Google Scholar
Sorrentino, C.. 1984. Lo studio della fauna di Tirlecchia. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 39:73–84.Google Scholar
Spataro, M. (2002). The first farming communities of the Adriatic: Pottery production and circulation in the early and middle Neolithic. Quaderni 9. Trieste: Società per la Preistoria e Protostoria della Regione Friuli – Venezia Giulia.Google Scholar
Spindler, K. (1994). The man in the ice. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson.Google Scholar
Stark, M. (1998). The archaeology of social boundaries. Washington, DC: Smithsonian.Google Scholar
Steensberg, A. (1980). New Guinea gardens: a study of husbandry with parallels in prehistoric Europe. London: Academic.Google Scholar
Stevanovic, M. (1997). The age of clay: The social dynamics of house destruction. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 16:334–395.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stoddart, S., Bonanno, A., Gouder, T., Malone, C., and Trump, D. H.. (1993). Cult in an island society: Prehistoric Malta in the Tarxien period. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 3:3–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strathern, A., and M. Lambek. (1998). Embodying sociality: Africanist-Melanesianist comparison, in Bodies and Persons: Comparative Perspectives from Africa and Melanesia. Edited by Strathern, A. and Lambek, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 1–25.Google Scholar
Strathern, M. (1988). The gender of the gift: Problems with women and problems with society in Melanesia. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strathern, M.. (1991). One man and many men, in Big men and great men: Personifications of power in Melanesia. Edited by Godelier, M. and Strathern, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 197–214.Google Scholar
Striccoli, R. (1988). Le culture preistoriche di Grotta Pacelli (Castellana Grotte, Bari). Brindisi: Schena Editore.Google Scholar
Taçon, P. (1991). The power of stone: Symbolic aspects of stone use and tool development in western Arnhem-land, Australia. Antiquity 65:192–207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tagliacozzo, A. (1992). I mammiferi dei giacimenti pre-e protostorici italiani: Un inquadramento paleontologico e archeozoologico, in Italia preistorica. Edited by Guidi, A. and Piperno, M.. Rome: Laterza, pp. 68–102.Google Scholar
Tagliacozzo, A.. (1993). Archeozoologia della Grotta dell'Uzzo, Sicilia. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 84 (supplemento), (II):1–278.Google Scholar
Tagliacozzo, A.. (1997). Dalla caccia alla pastorizia: La domesticazione animale, le modificazioni economiche tra il mesolitico ed il neolitico e l'introduzione degli animali domestici in Sicilia, in Prima Sicilia: alle origini della società siciliana (Vol. 1). Edited by Tusa, S.. Palermo: Ediprint, pp. 237–248.Google Scholar
Tagliacozzo, A., and I. Fiore. (1997). Analisi dei resti ossei faunistici di una struttura neolitica (Fossa 116) dell' area E, in Casale del Dolce: ambiente, economia, e cultura di una comunità preistorica del Valle del Sacco. Edited by Zarattini, A. and Petrassi, L.. Roma: Soprintendenza Archeologica per il Lazio, pp. 227–247.Google Scholar
Talalay, L. (1993). Deities, dolls and devices: Neolithic figurines from Franchthi Cave, Greece. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Talalay, L.. (2004). Heady business: skulls, heads, and decapitation in Neolithic Anatolia and Greece. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 17:139–163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Talamo, P. (1994). La capanna di Contrada S. Martino a Taurasi (AV), in L'ultima pietro, il primo metallo. Pontecagnano: Museo Nazionale dell'Agro Picentino, pp. 70–73.
Thomas, J. (1999). Understanding the Neolithic. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Thomas, J.. (2003). Thoughts on the “repacked: Neolithic revolution. Antiquity 77:67–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thorpe, I. (1996). The origins of agriculture in Europe. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Thorpe, I., and C. Richards. (1984). The decline of ritual authority and the introduction of beakers into Britain, in Neolithic studies. British Series 133. Edited by Bradley, R. and Gardiner, J.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 67–78.Google Scholar
Tilley, C. (1994). A phenomenology of landscape: Places, paths, and monuments. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Tilley, C.. (1996). An ethnography of the Neolithic. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tinè, S. (1962). Successione delle culture preistoriche in Calabria alla luce dei recenti scavi in provincia di Cosenza. Klearchos 4:38–43.Google Scholar
Tinè, S.. (1964). La grotta di S. Angelo III a Cassano Ionio. Atti e Memorie della Società della Magna Grecia 5:11–55.Google Scholar
Tinè, S.. (1983). Passo di Corvo e la civiltà neolitica del Tavoliere. Genova: Sagep.Google Scholar
Tinè, S.. (1988). Il Neolitico, in Storia della Calabria Antica. Edited by Settis, S.. Reggio Calabria: Gangemi, pp. 39–63.Google Scholar
Tinè, S.. (1992). Bova Survey 1992. Genova: Istituto Italiano di Archeologia Sperimentale.Google Scholar
Tinè, S., and Isetti, E.. (1980). Culto neolitico delle acque e recenti scavi nella Grotta Scaloria. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 82:31–70.Google Scholar
Tinè, V. (2004). Il Neolitico in Calabria. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:115–144.Google Scholar
Tinè, V.. (2007). Favella: un villaggio neolitico della Sibaritide (Vol. 2). Studi di Paletnologia. Rome: Museo Pigorini.Google Scholar
Tinè, V., and E. Natali. (2005). Grotta San Michele di Saracena (CS): la campagna di scavo 2003, in Preistoria e Protostoria della Calabria 1: Scavi e ricerche 2003. Edited by Ambrogio, B. and Tinè, V.. Pellaro: Gruppo Archeologico Pellarese., pp. 17–28Google Scholar
Todisco, L., and Coppola, D.. (1980). Ceramica Neolitica nel Museo di Bisceglie. Bari: Dedalo.Google Scholar
Torrence, R. (1986). Production and exchange of stone tools: Prehistoric obsidian in the Aegean. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tozzi, C., and Tasca, G.. (1989). Ripa Tetta. Atti Convegno Nazionale sulla Preistoria, Protostoria e Storia della Daunia 11:39–54.Google Scholar
Tozzi, C., and Verola, L.. (1990). La campagna di scavo 1990 a Ripatetta (Lucera, Foggia). Atti Convegno Nazionale sulla Preistoria, Protostoria e Storia della Daunia 12:37–48.Google Scholar
Tozzi, C., and Weiss, M.. (Eds.). (2000). Les Premier Peuplements Olocenes de l'Aire Corso-Toscane/Il Primo Popolamento Olocenico dell'Area Corso-Toscana. Pisa: Edizioni ETS.Google Scholar
Tozzi, C., and B. Zamagni. (2000). Il Neolitico antico nella Toscana settentrionale (Valle del Serchio), in Les Premier Peuplements Olocenes de l'Aire Corso-Toscane/Il Primo Popolamento Olocenico dell'Area Corso-Toscana. Edited by Tozzi, C. and Weiss, M.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, pp. 57–70.Google Scholar
Tozzi, C., and Zamagni, B.. (2001). Una statuetta fittile dal villaggio neolitico di Catignano (Pescara): nota preliminare. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 51:465–469.Google Scholar
Tozzi, C., and Zamagni, B.. (2003). Gli scavi nel villaggio Neolitico di Catignano, 1971–1980. Firenze: Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria.Google Scholar
Treherne, P. (1995). The warrior's beauty: The masculine body and self-identity in Bronze Age Europe. Journal of European Archaeology 3:105–144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trigger, B. G. (1969). The Huron: Farmers of the north. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.Google Scholar
Trigger, B. G.. (1978). Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 15: Northeast. Washington, DC: Smithsonian.Google Scholar
Tringham, R., Brukner, B., Kaiser, T., Borojevic, K., Bukvic, L., Steli, P., Russell, N., Stevanovic, M., and Voytek, B.. (1992). Excavations at Opovo, 1985–1987: Socioeconomic change in the Balkan Neolithic. Journal of Field Archaeology 19:351–386.Google Scholar
Trump, D. (1966). Skorba: excavations carried out on behalf of the National Museum of Malta, 1961–1963. London: Society of Antiquaries.Google Scholar
Trump, D.. (1981). Megalithic architecture in Malta, in Antiquity and man: Essays in honour of Glyn Daniel. Edited by Evans, J. D., Cunliffe, B., and Renfrew, C.. London: Thames and Hudson, pp. 128–140.Google Scholar
Sisto, Tunzi A. (1990). Nuova miniera preistorica sul Gargano. Atti Convegno Nazionale sulla Preistoria, Protostoria e Storia della Daunia 12:63–71.Google Scholar
Sisto, Tunzi A.. 1999. Ipogei della Daunia: Preistoria di un Territorio. Foggia: Claudio Grenzi Editore.Google Scholar
Turner, V. (1974). Dramas, fields, and metaphors: Symbolic action in human society. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Turner, V.. (1988). The anthropology of performance. New York: PAJ.Google Scholar
Tusa, S. (1993). La Sicilia nella preistoria. (2nd ed.) Palermo: Sellerio.Google Scholar
Tusa, S.. (1997). Origine della società agro-pastorale, in Prima Sicilia: Alle origini della società siciliana (Vol. 1). Edited by Tusa, S.. Palermo: Ediprint, pp. 173–191.Google Scholar
Tusa, S.. (Ed.). (1997). Prima Sicilia: Alle origini delle società siciliana. Palermo: Ediprint.Google Scholar
Tusa, S., and I. Valente. (1994). La ricerca archeologica in Contrada Stretto-Partanna: il fossato/trincea Neolitico, in La preistoria del Basso Belice e della Sicilia meridionale nel quadro della preistoria siciliana e mediterranean. Edited by Tusa, S.. Palermo: Società Siciliana per la Storia Patria, pp. 177–195.Google Scholar
Twiss, K. (Ed.). (2007). We were what we ate: The archaeology of food and identity. Carbondale: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University.Google Scholar
Tykot, R. H. (1997). Characterization of the Monte Arci Obsidian sources. Journal of Archaeological Science 24:467–479.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tykot, R. H.. (1998). Mediterranean Islands and Multiple Flows: The sources and exploitation of Sardinian obsidian, in Archaeological obsidian studies. Edited by Shackley, M. S.. New York: Plenum Press, pp. 67–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tykot, R. H., and Ammerman, A. J.. (1997). Mediterranean obsidian provenance studies. Antiquity 71:1000–1006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ucko, P. (1969). Ethnography and archaeological interpretation of funerary remains. World Archaeology 1:262–280.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van Hove, D. (2003). Imagining Calabria: A GIS Approach to Neolithic Landscapes. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Southampton.
Navarro, Vida M. C. (1992). Warriors and weavers: Sex and gender in Early Iron Age graves from Pontecagnano. Journal of the Accordia Research Center 3:67–100.Google Scholar
Vigne, J.-D. (2003). L'exploitation des animaux à Torre Sabea: Nouvelles analyses sur les débuts de l'élevage en Méditerranée centrale et occidentale, in Torre Sabea: un Établissement du Néolithique Ancien en Salento. Edited by Guilaine, J. and Cremonesi, G.. Rome: École Française de Rome, pp. 325–359.Google Scholar
Villa, P., Bouville, C., Courtin, J., Helmer, D., Mahieu, E., Shipman, P., Belluomini, G., and Branca, M.. (1986). Cannibalism in the Neolithic. Science 233:431–437.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Villari, P. (1995). Le fauna della tarda preistoria nella Sicilia orientale. Siracusa: Ente Fauna Siciliana.Google Scholar
Vinson, S. (1975). Excavations at Casa S. Paolo: 1971–1972. American Journal of Archaeology 79:49–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vitelli, K. D. (1995). Pots, potters, and the shaping of Greek Neolithic society, in The emergence of pottery: Technology and innovation in ancient societies. Edited by Barnett, W. K. and Hoopes, J. W.. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, pp. 55–64.Google Scholar
Masi, Eles P., and Steffè, G.. (1987). Primi risulatati delle ricerche nell'insediamento neolitico di Lugo di Romagna (Ravenna). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:595–602.Google Scholar
Wagstaff, M., and C. Gamble. (1983). Island resources and their limitations, in Melos: an island polity. Edited by Renfrew, C. and Wagstaff, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 95–105.Google Scholar
Warren, S. E., and J. G. Crummett. (1985). Chemical analysis of Calabrian obsidian, in The Acconia survey: Neolithic settlement and the obsidian trade. Institute of Archaeology Occasional Publications. Edited by Ammerman, A. J.. London: Institute of Archaeology, University of London, pp. 107–114.Google Scholar
Wason, P. (1994). The archaeology of rank. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, A. (2001). Composing Avebury. World Archaeology 33:296–314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weiss, K. M. (1973). Demographic models for anthropology. Volume 27. Society for American Archaeology Memoirs. Washington, DC: Society for American Archaeology.Google Scholar
Weller, O. (2002). The earliest rocksalt exploitation in Europe: A salt mountain in the Spanish Neolithic. Antiquity 76:317–318.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitehead, H. (1987). Fertility and exchange in New Guinea, in Gender and kinship: Essays toward a unified theory. Edited by Collier, J. and Yanagisako, S.. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press, pp. 244–267.Google Scholar
Whitehead, N. (1992). Tribes make states and states make tribes: Warfare and the creation of colonial tribes and states in northeastern South America, in War in the tribal zone: expanding states and indigenous warfare. Edited by Ferguson, R. and Whitehead, N.. Santa Fe: School of American Research Press, pp. 127–150.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, R. (1969). The neolithic pottery sequence in Southern Italy. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 35:267–310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitehouse, R.. (1972). The rock-cut tombs of the Central Mediterranean. Antiquity 46:275–281.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitehouse, R.. (1981). Prehistoric settlement patterns in Southeast Italy, in Archaeology and Italian Society. International Series. Edited by Hodges, R. and Barker, G.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 157–165.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, R.. (1984). Social organization in the Neolithic of Southern Italy, in The Deyá Conference of prehistory. International Series 229 (iv). Edited by Waldren, W.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 1109–1133.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, R.. (1992). Tools the manmaker: The cultural construction of gender in Italian prehistory. Accordia Research Papers 3:41–53.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, R.. (1992). Underground religion: Cult and culture in prehistoric Italy. London: Accordia Research Center.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, R.. (2001). Exploring gender in prehistoric Italy. Papers of the British School at Rome 68:49–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whittle, A. (1996). Europe in the Neolithic: the creation of new worlds. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Whittle, A.. (2003). The archaeology of people: Dimensions of Neolithic life. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whittle, A., and Cummings., V. (Eds.). (2007). Going over: The Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Western Europe. London: British Academy.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wiessner, P., and Schiefenhövel, W.. (1996). Food and the status quest: An interdisciplinary perspective. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Wiessner, P., and Tumu, A.. (1998). Historical vines: Enga networks of exchange, ritual and warfare in Papua New Guinea. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press.Google Scholar
Wilkens, B. (1989). Il cervo dal Mesolitico all' Età del Bronzo nell' Italia centro-meridionale. Rassegna di Archeologia 8:63–95.Google Scholar
Williams, J. L. (1980). A petrological examination of the prehistoric pottery from the excavation in the Castello and Diana plain of Lipari, in Meligunìs Lipára, Volume IV: L'acropoli di Lipari nella preistoria. Edited by Bernabò Brea, L. and Cavalier, M.. Palermo: Flaccovia, pp. 845–868.Google Scholar
Williams, J. L., and S. Levi. (1995). The characterisation of Neolithic Stentinellian pottery fabrics from the Aeolian Islands and the type site of Stentinello near Syracuse, Sicily, in Meligunís Lipàra. Volume VIII: Salina (ricerche archeologiche 1989–1993). Edited by Bernabò Brea, L. and Cavalier, M.. Palermo: Flaccovia, pp. 138–163.Google Scholar
Williams, J. L., and S. Levi. (2001). Archeometria della ceramica eoliana: nuovi risultati, sintesi, e prospettive, in Studie di Preistoria e Protostoria in onore di Luigi Bernabò Brea. Edited by Martinelli, M. C. and Spigo, U.. Lipari: Museo Archeologico Regionale Eoliano, pp. 265–304.Google Scholar
Winn, S., and Shimabuku, D.. (1988). The heritage of two subsistance strategies: Preliminary report on the excavations at the Grotta Scaloria, Southeastern Italy, 1978. Halifax, Nova Scotia: Saint Mary's University.Google Scholar
Wobst, H. (1974). Boundary conditions for Paleolithic social systems: A simulation approach. American Antiquity 39:147–178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wobst, H.. (1978). The archaeo-ethnology of hunter-gatherers or the tyranny of the ethnographic record in archaeology. American Antiquity 43:303–309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, E. (1982). Europe and the people without history. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Wood, J. W., Milner, G. R., Harpending, H., and Weiss, K.. (1992). The osteological paradox: Problems in inferring prehistoric health from skeletal samples. Current Anthropology 33:343–370.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yeats, W. B. (1962). Selected poems and two plays of William Butler Yeats. New York: Collier.Google Scholar
Zarattini, A., and Petrassi, L.. (Eds.). (1997). Casale del Dolce: Ambiente, economia, e cultura di una comunità preistorica del Valle del Sacco. Rome: Soprintendenza Archeologica per il Lazio.Google Scholar
Zarattini, A., and L. Petrassi. (1997). Il valore dell'ossidiana e le vie terrestri: Ipotesi dopo i primi risultati della fluorescenza ai raggi x, in Casale del Dolce: Ambiente, economia, e cultura di una comunità preistorica del Valle del Sacco. Edited by Zarattini, A. and Petrassi, L.. Roma: Soprintendenza Archeologica per il Lazio, pp. 191–207.Google Scholar
Zilhão, J. (2003). The Neolithic transition in Portugal and the role of demic diffusion in the spread of agriculture across West Mediterranean Europe, in The widening harvest: The Neolithic transition in Europe: Looking back, looking forward. Edited by Ammerman, A. J. and Biagi, P.. Boston: American Institute of Archaeology, pp. 207–226.Google Scholar
Zohary, D., and Hopf, M.. (1993). Domestication of plants in the Old World. Oxford: Clarendon.Google Scholar
Zvelebil, M., and P. Rowly-Conwy. (1986). Foragers and farmers in Atlantic Europe, in Hunters in transition: Mesolithic societies of temperate Eurasia and their transition to farming. Edited by Zvelebil, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 67–93.Google Scholar
Adams, D. (1986). The hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy: A trilogy in four parts. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Livadie, Albore C., Federico, R., Fedele, F., Albarella, U., Matteis, F., and Esposito, D.. (1987). Ricerche sull'insediamento tardo-neolitico di Mulino Sant'Antonio (Avella). Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 41:65–103.Google Scholar
Livadie, Albore C., and Gangemi, G.. (1987). Nuovi dati sul neolitico in Campania. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:287–299.Google Scholar
Alexander, C. (2005). A Bayesian analysis of the radiocarbon evidence for the spread of the Neolithic in Italy. Cambridge, UK: M.Phil Thesis, Department of Archaeology, Cambridge University.
Allegrucci, F., E. Biondi, R. Fulton, R. Housley, C. Hunt, and S. Stoddart. (1994). Vegetation, land use and climate, in Time, territory, and state: The archaeological development of the Gubbio basin. Edited by Malone, C. and Stoddart, S.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 34–58.Google Scholar
Amadei, A., and Cremonesi, R. Grifoni. (1987). La Grotta all'Onda: Revisione ed inquadramento dei materiali. Rassegna di Archeologia 6: 171–216.Google Scholar
Ambrosi, A. (1972). Corpus delle statue-stele lunigianesi. Collana Storica dell Liguria Orientale. Bordighera: Istituto Internazionale di Studi Liguri.Google Scholar
Ambrosi, A.. (1988). Statue-stele lunigianesi. Genova: Sagep.Google Scholar
Ammerman, A. J. (1985). The Acconia survey: Neolithic settlement and the obsidian trade. London: Institute of Archaeology.Google Scholar
Ammerman, A. J., and W. Andrefsky. (1982). Reduction sequences and the exchange of obsidian in Neolithic Calabria, in Contexts for prehistoric exchange. Edited by Ericson, J. E. and Earle, T. K.. New York: Academic, pp. 149–172.Google Scholar
Ammerman, A. J., and Cavalli-Sforza, L.. (1984). The Neolithic transition and the genetics of populations in Europe. Princeton: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ammerman, A. J., Cesana, A., Polglase, C., and Terrani, M.. (1990). Neutron activation analysis of obsidian for two Neolithic sites in Italy. Journal of Archaeological Science 17:209–220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ammerman, A. J., Shaffer, G. D., and Hartmann, N.. (1988). A Neolithic household at Piano di Curinga, Italy. Journal of Field Archaeology 15:121–140.Google Scholar
Ammerman, A. J., and C. Polglase. (1993). The exchange of obsidian at Neolithic sites in Italy, in Trade and exchange in European prehistory. Edited by Healy, F. and Scarre, C.. Oxford: Oxbow Books, pp. 101–107.Google Scholar
Anati, E. (1960). La grande roche de Naquane (Vol. 31). Mémoire. Paris: Archive de l'Institut de Paléontologie Humaine.Google Scholar
Anati, E.. (1961). Camonica Valley. New York: Knopf.Google Scholar
Anati, E.. (1977). Post-paleolithic stylistic changes in rock art as illustrated by the Valcamonica cycle, in Form in indigenous art. Edited by Ucko, P.. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies, pp. 337–356.Google Scholar
André, J. (2003). La faune malacologique de Torre Sabea, in Torre Sabea: Un Établissement du Néolithique Ancien en Salento. Edited by Guilaine, J. and Cremonesi, G.. Rome: École Française de Rome, pp. 279–283.Google Scholar
Antoniazzi, A., Bagolini, B., Montanari, G. Bermond, Pasi, M. Massi, and Prati, L.. (1987). Il neolitico di Fornace Cappuccini a Faenza e la Ceramica Impressa in Romagna. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:553–563.Google Scholar
Anzidei, A. P. (1987). Lo scavo dell'abitato neolitico di Quadrato di Torre Spaccata. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:681–689.Google Scholar
Anzidei, A. P., and Carboni, G.. (2003). Strutture d'abitato di età neo-eneolitica nel territorio di Roma. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:797–801.Google Scholar
Appadurai, A. (Ed.). (1988). The social life of things. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Aranguren, B., and Revedin, A.. (1998). Il giacimento mesolitico di Perriere Sottano (Ramacca, CT). Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 89:31–72.Google Scholar
Bagolini, B. (1981). Il neolitico e l'età del rame: ricerca a Spilamberto e S. Cesario, 1977–1980. Bologna: Tamari.Google Scholar
Bagolini, B., Barker, G., Biagi, P., Castelletti, L., and Cremaschi, M.. (1987). Scavi nell'insediamento neolitico di Campo Ceresole (Vhò di Piadena, Cremona): 1974–1979. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:455–466.Google Scholar
Bagolini, B., and Cremonesi, G.. (1987). Il processo di Neolitizzazione in Italia. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:21–30.Google Scholar
Bagolini, B., Ferrari, A., and Steffè, G.. (1998). Il recente Neolitico di Spilamberto (Modena). Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 89:93–200.Google Scholar
Bagolini, B., and Cremonesi, R. Grifoni. (1994). Il Neolitico italiano: Facies culturali e manifestazioni funerarie. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 85:139–170.Google Scholar
Bailey, D. W. (2005). Prehistoric figurines: Representation and corporeality in the Neolithic. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Modesti, Bailo G. (2003). Rituali funerari eneolitici nell'Italia peninsulare: L'Italia meridionale. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:283–297.Google Scholar
Modesti, Bailo G., and Salerno, A.. (1998). Pontecagnano II.5, La necropoli eneolitica: L'età del Rame in Campania nei villaggi dei morti. Napoli: Istituto Universitario Orientale.Google Scholar
Balista, C., and G. Leonardi. (1985). Hill slope evolution: Pre- and proto-historic occupation in the Veneto, in Papers in Italian archaeology IV: The Cambridge Conference (Vol. I). BAR International Series. Edited by Malone, C. and Stoddart, S.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 135–152.Google Scholar
Barfield, L. (1981). Patterns of N. Italian trade, 5000–2000 B.C, in Archaeology and Italian Society. International Series. Edited by Barker, G. and Hodges, R.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 27–51.Google Scholar
Barfield, L.. (1986). Chalcolithic burials in Northern Italy: Problems of social interpretation. Dialoghi di Archeologia 4:241–248.Google Scholar
Barfield, L., Bernabò Brea, M., Maggi, R., and Pedrotti, A.. (2003). Processi di cambiamento culturale nel neolitico dell'Italia settentrionale. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:665–685.Google Scholar
Barker, G. (1975). Prehistoric territories and economies in Central Italy, in Palaeoeconomy. Edited by Higgs, E.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 111–175.Google Scholar
Barker, G.. (1981). Landscape and society: Prehistoric central Italy. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Barker, G.. (1985). Prehistoric farming in Europe. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Barker, G.. (1989). The archaeology of the Italian shepherd. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 215:1–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barley, N. (1989). Not a hazardous sport. London: Penguin.Google Scholar
Barley, N.. (1990). Native land. London: Penguin.Google Scholar
Barra, A., Cremonesi, R. Grifoni, Mallegni, F., Piancastelli, M., Vitiello, A., and Wilkens, B.. (1992). La Grotta Continenza di Trasacco: i livelli a ceramiche. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 42:31–100.Google Scholar
Barrett, J. (1994). Fragments from antiquity: An archaeology of social life in Britain, 2900–1200 BC. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Barrett, J.. (2001). Agency, the duality of structure, and the problem of the archaeological record, in Archaeological theory today. Edited by Hodder, I.. Oxford: Polity, pp. 140–164.Google Scholar
Barth, F. (1987). Cosmologies in the making: A generative approach to cultural variation in inner New Guinea. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barth, F.. (2002). An anthropology of knowledge. Current Anthropology 43:1–18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, R. (1974). Fate and honor, family and village: Demographic and cultural change in rural Italy since 1800. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Bender, B. (1978). Gatherer–hunter to farmer: A social perspective. World Archaeology 10:204–222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berger, P. L., and Luckmann, T.. (1967). The social construction of reality: A treatise in the sociology of knowledge. Harmondsworth: Penguin.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L. (1946). Gli scavi nella caverna delle Arene Candide. Parte I: Gli strati con ceramiche. Bordighera: Istituto di Studi Liguri.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L.. (1947). Esplorazione archeologica dell'isola e scavo di una stazione neolitica al Piano Quartera. Notizie di Scavi 72:222–230.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L.. (1947). Tomba neolitica di Malfa. Notizie di Scavi 72:220–221.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L.. (1954). La Sicilia prehistorica y sus relaciones con oriente e con la peninsula Iberica. Ampurias 16:135–235.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L.. (1957). Sicily before the Greeks. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L.. (1987). Il neolitico delle Isole Eolie. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:351–360.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. (1956). Civiltà preistoriche delle Isole Eolie e del territorio del Milazzo. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 66:7–98.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. . (1957). Stazioni preistoriche delle Isole Eolie. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 66:97–151.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. . (1960). Meligunís Lipàra. Volume I: La stazione preistorica della contrada Diana e la necropoli preistorica di Lipari. Pubblicazioni del Museo Eoliano di Lipari. Palermo: S. F. Flaccovio.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. . (1968). Meligunís Lipàra, Volume III: Stazioni preistoriche delle isole Panarea, Salina e Stromboli. Publications of the Museo Eolio. Palermo: Flaccovio.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. . 1980. Meligunís Lipàra, Volume IV: l'acropoli di Lipari nella preistoria. Publications of the Museo Eolio. Palermo: Flaccovio.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. . (1991). Isole Eolie: vulcanologia archeologia. Lipari: Oreste Ragusi Editore.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, L., and Cavalier, M.. . (1995). Meligunís Lipàra. Volume VIII: Salina (ricerche archeologiche 1989–1993). Publications of the Museo Eolio. Palermo: Flaccovio.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, M. (1987). Il popolamento neolitico della Val Trebbia (PC). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:565–573.Google Scholar
Bernabò Brea, M., Castagna, D., and Occhi, S.. (2003). Le strutture dell'abitato Chassey-Lagozza a S. Andrea di Travo (PC). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:785–789.Google Scholar
Biagi, P. (2003). A review of the Late Mesolithic in Italy and its implication for the Neolithic transition, in The widening harvest:The Neolithic transition in Europe: Looking back, looking forward. Edited by Ammerman, A. J. and Biagi, P.. Boston: Archaeological Institute of America, pp. 133–156.Google Scholar
Biagi, P., Maggi, R., and Nisbet, R.. (1987). Primi dati sul neolitico della Liguria orientale. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:523–532.Google Scholar
Bianco, S., and Sampò, M. Cipolloni. (1987). Il neolitico della Basilicata. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:301–320.Google Scholar
Biancofiore, F. (1965). I nuovi dipinti preistorici della Lucania. Rivista di Antropologia 52:103–109.Google Scholar
Biddittu, I., Bruni, N., Cerqua, M., Mattioli, T., and Riva, A.. (2004). Ritrovamenti neolitici e dell'Età del Rame nell'altopiano silano. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:761–764.Google Scholar
Bigazzi, G., S. Meloni, M. Oddone, and G. Radi. (1991). Nuovi dati sulla diffusione dell'ossidiana negli insediamenti preistorici italiani, in Papers of the Fourth Conference of Italian Archaeology, Volume 3: New developments. Edited by Herring, E., Whitehouse, R., and Wilkins, J.. London: Accordia Research Centre, pp. 8–18.Google Scholar
Bigazzi, G., and Radi, G.. (1981). Datazione con le tracce di fissione per l'identificazione della provenienza dei manufatti di ossidiana. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 36:223–250.Google Scholar
Bistolfi, F., and I. Muntoni. (1997). Lo scavo delle area A, B, D, E, in Casale del Dolce: Ambiente, Economia, e Cultura di una comunità preistorica del Valle del Sacco. Edited by Zarattini, A. and Petrassi, L.. Roma: Soprintendenza Archeologica per il Lazio, pp. 59–159.Google Scholar
Black-Michaud, J. (1986). Sheep and land: The economics of power in a tribal society. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Blanton, R. E., Feinman, G. M., Kowalewski, S. A., and Peregrine, P. N.. (1996). A dual-processual theory for the evolution of Mesoamerican civilization. Current Anthropology 37:1–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blitz, J. H. (1993). Big pots for big shots: Feasting and storage in a Mississippian community. American Antiquity 58:80–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boenzi, F., Caldara, M., Moresi, M., and Pennetta, L.. (2001). History of the Salpi lagoon-sabhka (Manfredonia Gulf, Italy). Il Quaternario 14:93–104.Google Scholar
Bogucki, P. (1988). Forest farmers and stockherders: Early agriculture and its consequences in north-central Europe. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bogucki, P.. (2000). How agriculture came to north-central Europe, in Europe's first farmers. Edited by Price, T. D.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 197–218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bökönyi, S. (1977/1982). The early neolithic fauna of Rendina. Origini 11:237–249.Google Scholar
Bökönyi, S.. (1983). Animal remains from the test excavations, in Studi sul Neolitico del Tavoliere della Puglia. International Series 160. Edited by Cassano, S. and Manfredini, A.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 237–249.Google Scholar
Bonanno, A. (1996). Temple megalithism vs. funerary megalithism: the case of the Maltese Islands. XIII International Congress of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences (Forlì, Italy, 8–14 September 1996) Colloquia 9:103–107.Google Scholar
Bonato, M., F. Lorenzo, A. Nonza, G. Radi, C. Tozzi, M. Weiss, and B. Zamagni. (2000). Le nuove ricerche a Pianosa: gli scavi del 1998. in Les Premier Peuplements Olocenes de l'Aire Corso-Toscane/Il Primo Popolamento Olocenico dell'Area Corso-Toscana. Edited by Tozzi, C. and Weiss, M.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, pp. 91–132.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, P. (1977). Outline of a Theory of Practice. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradford, J. (1949). “Buried landscapes” in Southern Italy. Antiquity 23:58–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R. (1984). The social foundations of prehistoric Britain. London: Longmans.Google Scholar
Bradley, R.. (1991). Ritual, time, and history. World Archaeology 23:209–219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R.. (1998). The significance of monuments: On the shaping of human experience in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bradley, R.. (2000). An archaeology of natural places. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bradley, R., and Edmonds, M.. (1993). Interpreting the axe trade: Production and exchange in Neolithic Britain. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Braithwaite, M. (1984). Ritual and prestige in the prehistory of Wessex, c.2200–1400 BC: A new dimension to the archaeological evidence, in Ideology, power, and prehistory. Edited by Miller, D. and Tilley, C.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 93–110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bringsvaerd, T. A. (1976). The man who collected the First of September, 1973, in The book of fantasy. Edited by Borges, J. L., Casares, A. B., and Ocampo, S.. New York: Carroll and Graf, pp. 77–80.Google Scholar
Brock, S., and Ruff, C.. (1988). Diachronic patterns of change in structural properties of the femur in the prehistoric American Southwest. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 75:113–127.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Broodbank, C. (1993). Ulysses without sails: Trade, distance, power, and knowledge in the early Cyclades. World Archaeology 24:315–331.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, K. (1991). A passion for excavation: Labour requirements and possible functions for the ditches of the “villaggi trincerati” of the Tavoliere, Apulia. Journal of the Accordia Research Center 2:7–30.Google Scholar
Brown, K.. (2003). Aerial archaeology of the Tavoliere: The Italian Air Photographic Record and the Riley Archive. Journal of the Accordia Research Center 9: 123–146.Google Scholar
Brück, J. (1999). Houses, lifecycles, and deposition on Middle Bronze Age settlements in Southern England. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 65:145–166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brumfiel, E. M. (1991). Weaving and cooking: Women's production in Aztec Mexico, in Engendering archaeology. Edited by Gero, J. and Conkey, M.. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 224–251.Google Scholar
Bulgarelli, G. M., D'Erme, L., and Pellegrini, E.. (2003). L'insediamento neo-eneolitico di Poggio Olivastro (Canino – VT): le strutture. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:803–806.Google Scholar
Burton, J. (1984). Quarrying in a tribal society. World Archaeology 16:234–247.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Butler, J. (1993). Bodies that matter: On the discursive limits of “sex.”London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Caldara, M., Pennetta, L., and Simone, O.. (2002). Holocene evolution of the Salpi lagoon (Puglia, Italy). Journal of Coastal Research 36 (Special Issue):124–133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Campana, N., Maggi, R., Pearce, M., and Ottomano, C.. (2006). Quanto rame? stima della produzione mineraria del distretto di Sestri Levante fra IV e III millennio a.C. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 39: in press.Google Scholar
Campetti, S., Giachi, G., and Perrini, L.. (2003). Tracce di sostanze collanti su cuspidi litiche provenienti da Grotta dell'Onda e dal Lago di Massaciuccoli (Lucca): analisi composizionali. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:999–1004.Google Scholar
Canci, A. (1998). Lesioni del cranio in resti scheletrici umani di epoca neolitica rinvenuti presso l'Arma dell'Aquila (Finale Ligure, Savona). Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 89:81–92.Google Scholar
Canci, A., and Marini, E.. (2003). La suddivisione dei ruoli nelle attività di sussistenza durante il Neolitico medio: I risultati di uno studio paleobiologico. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:1103–1108.Google Scholar
Cann, J. R., and Renfrew, C.. (1964). The characterization of obsidian and its application to the Mediterranean region. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 1964 30:111–133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Canuto, M., and Yaeger, J. (Eds.). (2000). The archaeology of communities: A new world perspective. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Carancini, G., and Guerzani, R.. (1987). Gli scavi nella Grotta Pavolella presso Cassano allo Jonio (CS). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:783–792.Google Scholar
Cardarelli, A. (1992). L'età dei metalli nell'Italia settentrionale, in Italia preistorica. Edited by Guidi, A. and Piperno, M.. Rome: Laterza, pp. 366–420.Google Scholar
Cardini, L. (1970). Praia a Mare: relazione degli scavi 1957–1970. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 79:31–59.Google Scholar
Cardosa, M. (1996). Castello di Bova Superiore (Reggio Calabria): Nuovi dati sulla prima età del Bronzo nella Calabria meridionale ionica, in L'antica età del Bronzo in Italia: Atti del Congresso di Viareggio, 9–12 gennaio 1995. Edited by Genick, D. Cocchi. Viareggio: Franco Cantini/Museo A. C. Blanc, pp. 592–593.Google Scholar
Carnieri, E., and B. Zamagni. (2000). La malacofauna marina di Pianosa, Cala Giovanna Piano, in Les premier peuplements olocenes de l'aire Corso-Toscane/Il primo popolamento olocenico dell'area Corso-Toscana. Edited by Tozzi, C. and Weiss, M.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, pp. 117–122.Google Scholar
Cassano, S., Cazzella, A., Manfredini, A., and Moscoloni, M.. (1987). Coppa Nevigata e il suo territorio: testimonianze archeologiche dal VII al II millennio a.C. Roma: Edizioni Quasar.Google Scholar
Cassano, S., and Manfredini, A.. (1983). Studi sul Neolitico del Tavoliere della Puglia. International Series. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Cassano, S., and Manfredini, A.. . (1990). Rinvenimento di una sepoltura Serra d'Alto a Masseria Candelaro: Scavo 1990. Atti Convegno Nazionale sulla Preistoria, Protostoria e Storia della Daunia 12:31–36.Google Scholar
Cassano, S., Manfredini, A., Carboni, G., Marconi, N., and Muntoni, I.. (2003). Il villaggio neolitico di Masseria Candelaro (FG): una premessa archeologica. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:813–818.Google Scholar
Cassano, S., Muntoni, I., and Barbaro, C. Conati. (1995). Dall'argilla al vaso: Fabbricazione della ceramica in una comunità neolitica di 7000 anni fa. Rome: Museo delle Origini.Google Scholar
Castellana, G. (1995). La necropoli protoeneolitica di Piano Vento nel territorio di Palma di Monte-chiaro. Agrigento: Regione Sicilia Assessorato Regionale Beni Culturali Ambientali e Pubblica Istruzione.Google Scholar
Castelletti, L. (1996). Mele e pere selvatiche (Malus sylvestris e Pyrus sp.) carbonizzate, in La Grotta Sant'Angelo sulla Montagna dei Fiori (Teramo). Edited by Fraia, T. Di and Cremonesi, R. Grifoni. Pisa: Istituti Editoriali e Poligrafici Internazionali, pp. 295–303.Google Scholar
Castelletti, L., Castiglioni, E., Leoni, L., and Rottoli, M.. (1998). Resti botanici dai contesti del Neolitico medio-recente. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 89:191–200.Google Scholar
Castelletti, L., Costantini, L., and Tozzi, C.. (1987). Considerazioni sull'economia e l'ambiente durante il neolitico in Italia. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:37–55.Google Scholar
Berlinghieri, Castignino E. (2003). The Aeolian Islands: Crossroads of Mediterranean maritime routes. International Series Vol. 1181. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Catlin, G. (1973). Letters and notes on the manners, customs, and conditions of North American Indians (Vol. 1). New York: Dover.Google Scholar
Cavalier, M. (1971). Il riparo della Sperlinga di S. Basilio (Novara di Sicilia). Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 80:7–63.Google Scholar
Cavalier, M.. (1985). Nuovi rinveninenti sul Castello di Lipari. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 40:223–254.Google Scholar
Cavanagh, W. G. (2004). WYSIWYG: Settlement and territoriality in Southern Greece during the Early and Middle Neolithic periods. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 17:165–189.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cazzella, A. (1994). Dating the “Copper Age” in the Italian peninsula and adjacent islands. European Journal of Archaeology 2:1–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cazzella, A.. (2003). Rituali funerari eneolitici nell'Italia penisulare: l'Italia centrale. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:275–282.Google Scholar
Cazzella, A., and M. Moscoloni. (1985). Dislevelli culturali nel Mediterraneo centro-orientale fra terzo e secondo millennio a.C, in Studi di paletnologia in onore di Salvatore M. Puglisi. Edited by Liverani, M., Palmieri, A., and Peroni, R.. Rome: Università di Roma “La Sapienza,” pp. 531–547.Google Scholar
Cazzella, A., and Moscoloni, M.. (1992). Neolitico ed eneolitico. Popoli e civiltà dell'Italia antica. Rome: Biblioteca di Storia Patria.Google Scholar
Cazzella, A., and M. Moscoloni. (1999). Coppa Nevigata: risulatati degli scavi in extensione 1983–1997, in Ipogei della Daunia: Preistoria di un Territorio. Edited by Sisto, A. M. Tunzi. Foggia: Claudio Grenzi Editore, pp. 102–107.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. (2000). Fragmentation in archaeology: Peoples, places, and broken objects in the prehistory of south-eastern Europe. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Chapman, J.. (2002). Colourful prehistories: The problem with the Berlin and Kay colour paradigm, in Colouring the past: the significance of colour in archaeological research. Edited by Jones, A. and MacGregor, G.. Oxford: Berg, pp. 45–72.Google Scholar
Chapman, R. (2003). Archaeologies of Complexity. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Childe, V. G. (1957). The dawn of European civilization. New York: Knopf.Google Scholar
Sampò, Cipolloni M. (1982). Gli scavi nel villaggio neolitico di Rendina (1970–76): relazione preliminare. Origini 11:183–323.Google Scholar
Cipolloni Sampò, M.. (1986). Le tombe di Toppo Daguzzo (Basilicata nord-orientale): considerazioni sulle comunità della media età del Bronzo nel sud-est italia, in Traffici micenei nel Mediterraneo. Edited by Marazzi, M., Tusa, S., and Vagnetti, L.. Taranto: Istituto per la storia e l'archeologia della Magna Grecia, pp. 27–35.Google Scholar
Cipolloni Sampò, M.. (1992). Il Neolitico nell'Italia meridionale e in Sicilia, in Italia Preistorica. Edited by Guidi, A. and Piperno, M.. Roma: Laterza, pp. 334–365.Google Scholar
Clendinnen, I. (2003). Ambivalent conquests: Maya and Spaniard in Yucatan, 1517–1570. (2nd ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Genick, Cocchi D., and Cremonesi, R. Grifoni. (1985). L'età dei metalli nella Toscana nord-occidentale. Pisa: Pacini Editore.Google Scholar
Collier, J., and M. Rosaldo. (1981). Politics and gender in simple societies, in Sexual meanings: The cultural construction of gender and sexuality. Edited by Ortner, S. and Whitehead, H.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 275–329.Google Scholar
Coltorti, M., and L. Dal Ri. (1985). Human impact on the landscape: some examples from the Adige valley, in Papers in Italian Archaeology IV: the Cambridge Conference, vol. I. BAR International Series. Edited by Malone, C. and Stoddart, S.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 105–134.Google Scholar
Barbaro, Conati C., Lemorini, C., Ciarico, A., and Sivilli, S.. (2003). Attività produttive nel villaggio neolitico di Masseria Candelaro: L'apporto dell'indagine tecnologica e funzionale dell'industria litica. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:819–824.Google Scholar
Conkey, M., and S. Williams. (1991). Original narratives: The political economy of gender in archaeology, in Gender at the crossroads of knowledge: feminist anthropology in the postmodern era. Edited by Leonardo, M. di. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 102–139.Google Scholar
Coote, J. (1992). “Marvels of everyday vision:” The anthropology of aesthetics and the cattle-keeping Nilotes, in Anthropology, Art, and Aesthetics. Edited by Coote, J. and Shelton, A.. Oxford: Clarendon, pp. 245–273.Google Scholar
Corrain, C. (1963). I resti scheletrici umani della stazione eneolitica di Remedello (Brescia). Atti dell'Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti 121:165–208.Google Scholar
Costabile, F. (1972). La stazione neolitica di Prestarona in comune di Canolo. Klearchos 53–56:5–27.Google Scholar
Costantini, L., L. C. Biasini, and A. Lentini. (2003). Indagini archeobotaniche sugli intonaci neolitici di Torre Sabea, in Torre Sabea: un Établissement du Néolithique Ancien en Salento. Edited by Guilaine, J. and Cremonesi, G.. Rome: École Française de Rome, pp. 234–246.Google Scholar
Coubray, S. (1997). Analisi preliminare dei macroresti vegetali, in Casale del Dolce: Ambiente, Economia, e Cultura di una comunità preistorica del Valle del Sacco. Edited by Zarattini, A. and Petrassi, L.. Roma: Soprintendenza Archeologica per il Lazio, pp. 273–281.Google Scholar
Cremonesi, G. (1965). Il villaggio di Ripoli alla luce dei recenti scavi. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 20:85–155.Google Scholar
Cremonesi, G.. (1976). La Grotta dei Piccioni di Bolognano nel quadro delle culture dal neolitico all'età del bronzo in Abruzzo. Pisa: Giardini.Google Scholar
Cremonesi, G.. (1988). Osservazioni su alcune strutture in abitati neolitici dell'Italia meridionale. Origini 14:83–99.Google Scholar
Cremonesi, G., and Tozzi, C.. (1987). Il Neolitico dell'Abruzzo. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:229–238.Google Scholar
Crown, P. L. (2001). Learning to make pottery in the prehispanic American Southwest. Journal of Anthropological Research 57:451–470.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Csordas, T. (1999). The body's career in anthropology, in Anthropological Theory Today. Edited by Moore, H.. Cambridge, UK: Polity, pp. 172–205.Google Scholar
Cuda, M. T., and Murgano, R.. (2004). Il sito neolitico di Sovereto di Nicotera (RC). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:163–174.Google Scholar
Curci, A., and Tagliacozzo, A.. (2003). Aspetti economici e culturali nel villaggio neolitico Masseria Candelaro (Manfredonia – FG): l'analisi faunistica della “grande struttura.”Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:825–828.Google Scholar
D'Ambrosio, B., and Sfrecola, S.. (1990). Le collane eneolitiche e del Bronzo Antico della Liguria: materie prime e fonti di approvvigionamento. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 41:331–344.Google Scholar
D'Amico, C., Minale, M., Starnini, E., and Trentini, P.. (2003). L'officina di produzione di asce in pietra levigata di Rivanazzano (PV): dati archeometrici e catena operativa, nota preliminare. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:981–986.Google Scholar
d'Errico, F. (1987). Technologie et fonction du burin de Ripabianca dans le cadre culturel du néolithique ancien de l'Italie septentrionale. Anthropologie 91:411–431.Google Scholar
d'Ottavio, F. (2001). La caratterizzazione chimica della selce delle miniere preistoriche del Gargano: proposta di un metodo archeometrico basato sulle analisi chimiche eseguite con la tecnica strumentale ICP-AES. Origini 23:111–143.Google Scholar
Dahl, G., and Hjort, A.. (1976). Having herds: Pastoral herd growth and household economy. Stockholm Studies in Social Anthropology. Stockholm: Department of Social Anthropology, University of Stockholm.Google Scholar
Davidson, I. (1989). Escaped domestic animals and the introduction of agriculture to Spain, in The walking larder: patterns of domestication, pastoralism and predation. Edited by Clutton-Brock, J.. London: Unwin Hyman, pp. 59–71.Google Scholar
Dawson, H. (2005). Island Colonisation and Abandonment in Mediterranean Prehistory. London: Ph.D. Thesis, Institute of Archaeology, University College London.Google Scholar
Certeau, M. (2002). The Practice of Everyday Life. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Lucia, A., Ferri, D., Geniola, A., Giove, C., Maggiore, M., Melone, N., Delfino, V. Pesce, Pieri, P., and Scattarella, V.. (1977). La comunità neolitica di Cala Colombo presso Torre a Mare, Bari. Bari: Società per lo Studio di Storia Patria per la Puglia.Google Scholar
Deetz, J. (1977). In small things forgotten: The archaeology of early North American life. New York: Doubleday.Google Scholar
Deith, M. (1987). La raccolta dei molluschi nel Tavoliere in epoca preistorica, in Coppa Nevigata e il suo territorio: testimonianze archeologiche dal VII al II millennio a.C. Edited by Cassano, S., Cazzella, A., Manfredini, A., and Moscoloni, M.. Rome: Quasar, pp. 101–108.Google Scholar
Deith, M.. (1989). Shellfish gathering and site function: a case study from Neolithic Apulia. ArchaeoZoologia 3:163–176.Google Scholar
Delamont, S. (1995). Appetites and identities: an introduction to the social anthropology of western Europe. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Delano C. (1979). Western Mediterranean Europe: A historical geography. New York: Academic.Google Scholar
Delano Smith, C.. (1983). L'ambiente, in Passo di Corvo e la civiltà neolitica del Tavoliere. Edited by Tinè, S.. Genova: Sagep, pp. 11–22.Google Scholar
DeMarrais, E., Castillo, L. J., and Earle, T. K.. (1996). Ideology, materialization, and power strategies. Current Anthropology 37:15–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dering, P. (1999). Earth-oven plant processing in Archaic period economies: An example from a semi-arid savannah in south-central North America. American Antiquity 64:659–674.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lampedusa, di G. T. (1960). The Leopard. New York: Pantheon.Google Scholar
Di Lernia, S., and Galiberti, A.. (1993). Archeologia mineraria della Selce nella preistoria. Firenze: All'insegna del Giglio.Google Scholar
Díaz-Andreu, M., and Champion, T.. (1996). Nationalism and archaeology in Europe. London: UCL Press.Google Scholar
Dietler, M. (1996). Feasts and commensal politics in the political economy: food, power, and status in prehistoric Europe, in Food and the status quest. Edited by Wiessner, P. and Schiefenhövel, W.. Oxford: Berghahn, pp. 87–126.Google Scholar
Dietler, M., and B. Hayden. (2001). Digesting the feast: good to east, good to drink, good to think, in Feasts: archaeological and ethnographic perspectives on food, politics and power. Edited by Dietler, M. and Hayden, B.. Washington, DC: Smithsonian, pp. 1–22.Google Scholar
Dietler, M., and Hayden, B.. (2001). Feasts: archaeological and ethnographic perspectives. Washington, DC: Smithsonian.Google Scholar
Dobres, M.-A. (2001). Technology and social agency: Outlining a practice framework for archaeology. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Dobres, M.-A., and Robb, J.. (Eds.). (2000). Agency in archaeology. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Dobres, M.-A., and Robb, J.. . (2005). “Doing” agency: introductory remarks on methodology. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 12:159–166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dobres, M.-A., and J. E. Robb. (2000). Agency in Archaeology: Paradigm or Platitude? in Agency in Archaeology. Edited by Dobres, M.-A. and Robb, J.. London: Routledge, pp. 3–17.Google Scholar
Donahue, R. (1991). Desperately seeking Ceres: a critical examination of current models for the transition to agriculture in Mediterranean Europe, in Transitions to agriculture in prehistory. Monographs in World Archaeology. Edited by Gebauer, A. and Price, T. D.. Madison: Prehistory Press, pp. 73–81.Google Scholar
Dornan, J. L. (2002). Agency and archaeology: Past, present, and future directions. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 9:303–329.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Douglas, N. (1938). Old Calabria. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ducci, S., Perazzi, P., and Ronchitelli, A.. (1987). Gli insediamenti neolitici abbruzzesi con ceramica impressa di Tricalle (CH) e Fontanelle (PE). Rassegna di Archeologia 6:65–142.Google Scholar
Earle, T., and Ericsson, J.. (1977). Exchange systems in prehistory. New York: Academic.Google Scholar
Edmonds, M. (1999). Ancestral geographies of the Neolithic: Landscape, monuments and memory. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Ehrenberg, M. (1989). Women in prehistory. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.Google Scholar
Ehrenreich, R. M., Crumley, C. L., and Levy, J.. (1995). Heterarchy and the analysis of complex societies. (Vol. 6), Archaeological Papers. Washington, DC: American Anthropological Association.Google Scholar
Evans-Pritchard, E. (1940). The Nuer. Oxford: Clarendon.Google Scholar
Evans, J. (1971). Prehistoric Antiquities of the Maltese Islands. London: Athlone.Google Scholar
Evans, J.. (1976). Archaeological evidence for religious practices in the Maltese Islands during the Neolithic and Copper Ages. Kokalos 22:130–146.Google Scholar
Evett, D. (1975). A preliminary note on the typology, functional variability and trade of Italian Neolithic ground stone axes. Origini 7:35–54.Google Scholar
Farr, R. H. (2001). Cutting Through Water: An Analysis of Neolithic Obsidian from Bova Marina, Calabria. MA Dissertation, University of Southampton.
Farr, R. H.. (2006). Seafaring as social action. Journal of Maritime Archaeology 1:1–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Farr, R. H., and J. Robb. (2005). Substances in Motion: Neolithic Mediterranean “Trade.” in The archaeology of Mediterranean prehistory. Edited by Blake, E. and Knapp, A. B.. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 24–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fedele, F. (1990). L'altopiano di Ossimo-Borno nella preistoria: ricerche 1988–1990. Capo di Ponte: Edizioni del Centro.Google Scholar
Feil, D. (1987). The evolution of highland Papua New Guinea societies. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feinman, G. (2001). Corporate/network: a new perspective on leadership in the American Southwest, in Hierarchies in action: Cui bono. Edited by Diehl, M.. Carbondale: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, pp. 152–180.Google Scholar
Feinman, G. M., and Neitzel, J.. (1984). Too many types: an overview of prestate societies in the Americas. Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory 7:39–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fiorentino, G., Torre, M., Muntoni, I., Pierattini, D., Picsciello, M., and Radina, F.. (2003). Dinamiche di crollo e ricostruzione dell'alzato di capanna: approccio integrato all'analisi degli intonaci dell'insediamento del Neolitico antico di Balsignano (Modugno, Bari). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:807–812.Google Scholar
FitzGerald, E. (1957). The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam. Garden City: Doubleday.Google Scholar
Flannery, K. (1976). The early Mesoamerican village. New York: Academic.Google Scholar
Flannery, K.. (1999). Process and agency in early state formation. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 9:3–12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forenbaher, S., and Miracle, P.. (2005). The spread of farming in the Eastern Adriatic. Antiquity 79:514–528.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Formentini, R. (1991). L'immagine femminile nelle statue-menhirs, in Second Deyà International Conference of Prehistory: Recent developments in Western Mediterranean prehistory: Archaeological techniques, technology and theory, vol. 2, BAR International Series. Edited by Waldren, W., Ensenyat, J., and Kennard, R.. Oxford: Tempus Reparatum, pp. 365–385.Google Scholar
Formicola, V. (1983). Stature in Italian prehistoric samples with particular reference to methodological problems. Homo 34:33–47.Google Scholar
Fornaciari, G. (1979). Lesione traumatica su una calotta dell'Eneolitico dell'Isola di Elba. Quaderni di Scienze Antropologiche 3:28–36.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. (1977). Discipline and punish: The birth of the prison. London: Allen Lane.Google Scholar
Fowler, C. (2004). The archaeology of personhood. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Francalacci, P. (1989). Dietary reconstruction at Arene Candide Cave (Liguria, Italy) by means of trace-element analysis. Journal of Archaeological Science 16:109–124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frayer, D. (1981). Body size, weapon use and natural selection in the European Upper Paleolithic and Mesolithic. American Anthropologist 83:57–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fried, M. (1967). The evolution of political society. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Delpino, Fugazzola M. A. (2001). La piccola “dea madre” del Lago di Bracciano. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 91–92:27–46.Google Scholar
Delpino, Fugazzola M. A., D'Eugenio, G., and Pessina, A.. (1993). “La Marmotta” (Anguillara Sabazia, RM): Scavi 1989 – un abitato perilacustre di età neolitica. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 84:181–342.Google Scholar
Delpino, Fugazzola M. A., Manfredini, A., Martini, F., Radi, G., Sarti, L., and Silvestrini, M.. (2003). Insediamenti e strutture neolitiche ed eneolitiche dell'Italia centrale. Atti Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:93–112.Google Scholar
Delpino, Fugazzola M. A., and Mineo, M.. (1995). La piroga neolitica del lago di Bracciano, La Marmotta 1. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiano (Rome) 86:197–266.Google Scholar
Delpino, Fugazzola M. A., and Tinè, V.. (2003). Le statuine fittili femminili del Neolitico Italiano: iconografia e contesto culturale. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 93–95:19–51.Google Scholar
Galaty, J. (1989). Cattle and cognition: aspects of Maasai practical reasoning, in The walking larder: Patterns of domestication, pastoralism and predation. Edited by Clutton-Brock, J.. London: Unwin Hyman, pp. 215–230.Google Scholar
Galiberti, A. (1987). La miniera preistorica della Defensola (Vieste): note preliminare. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:721–732.Google Scholar
Galiberti, A.. (1999). La miniera della Defensola, in Ipogei della Daunia: Preistoria di un Territorio. Edited by Sisto, A. M. Tunzi. Foggia: Claudio Grenzi Editore, pp. 30–33.Google Scholar
Galli, E. (1950). Nuove scoperte nella necropoli di “Fonte Noce” presso Recanati. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 8:1–19.Google Scholar
Gardner, A. (2004). Agency uncovered: Archaeological perspectives on social agency, personhood, and being human. London: UCL Press.Google Scholar
Gathercole, P., and Lowenthal, D.. (Eds). (1990). The politics of the past. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Geertz, C. (1973). The interpretation of cultures. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Gell, A. (1992). The technology of enchantment and the enchantment of technology, in Anthropology, Art and Aesthetics. Edited by Coote, J. and Shelton, A.. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 40–67.Google Scholar
Gell, A.. (1998). Art and agency: An anthropological theory. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Geniola, A. (1987). La cultura di Serra d'Alto nella Puglia centrale. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:771–781.Google Scholar
Geniola, A.. (1992). Marcianese: il villaggio Rossi: entità del neolitico medio arcaico abruzzese. Lanciano: Itinerari.Google Scholar
Geniola, A., Camerini, V., and Lionetti, G.. (1995). Villaggi trincerati Neolitici negli agri di Matera, Santeramo, Laterza. Matera: Grafiche Paternoster.Google Scholar
Geniola, A., and Ponzetti, F.. (1987). Ricerche sul neolitico delle murge altamurane. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 25:209–221.Google Scholar
Geniola, A., and Sisto, A. Tunzi. (1980). Espressioni cultuali e d'arte nella Grotta di Cala Scizzo presso Torre a Mare (Bari). Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 35:125–146.Google Scholar
Germanà, F., and Fornaciari, G.. (1992). Trapanazioni, craniotomie e traume cranici in Italia dalla preistoria all'età moderna. Pisa: Giardini.Google Scholar
Germanà, F., Mallegni, F., Pompeis, C., and Ronco, D.. (1990). Il villaggio neolitico di Villa Badessa (Pescara): aspetti paletnologici, antropologici e paleopatologici. Atti, Società Toscana di Scienze Naturali 97:271–310.Google Scholar
Gero, J. (1991). Genderlithics: Women's role in stone tool production, in Engendering Archaeology. Edited by Conkey, M. and Tringham, R.. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 163–193.Google Scholar
Giampietri, A., and Tozzi, C.. (1989). L'industria litica del villaggio di Ripa Tetta (Lucera). Atti Convegno Nazionale sulla Preistoria, Protostoria e Storia della Daunia 11:57–78.Google Scholar
Giannitrapani, M. (2002). Coroplastica Neolitica antropomorfa d'Italia: Simboli ed iconografie dell'arte mobiliare quaternaria post-glaciale. International Series (Vol. 1020). Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Giddens, A. (1979). Central problems in social theory: Action, structure, and contradiction in social analysis. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giddens, A.. (1984). The constitution of society. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Gillespie, S. D. (2001). Personhood, agency, and mortuary ritual: A case study from the ancient Maya. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 20:73–112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilman, A. (1981). The development of social stratification in Bronze Age Europe. Current Anthropology 22:1–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilman, A.. (1991). Trajectories towards social complexity in the later prehistory of the Mediterranean, in Chiefdoms: Power, economy, ideology. Edited by Earle, T.. New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 146–168.Google Scholar
Gimbutas, M. (1991). The civilization of the Goddess: The world of Old Europe. San Francisco: Harper and Row.Google Scholar
Glass, M. (1991). Animal production systems in Neolithic Central Europe. BAR International Series. Oxford: Tempus Reparatum.Google Scholar
Gnoli, G., and Vernant, J.-P.. (1982). La mort, les morts dan les sociétés anciennes. Cambridge, UK and Paris: Cambridge University Press/Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme.Google Scholar
Godelier, M. (1986). The making of great men: Male domination and power among the New Guinea Baruya. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Godelier, M.. (1991). An unfinished attempt at reconstructing the social processes which may have prompted the transformation of great-men societies into big-men societies, in Big men and great men: Personifications of power in Melanesia. Edited by Godelier, M. and Strathern, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 275–304.Google Scholar
Godelier, M., and Strathern, A.. (1991). Big men and great men: Personifications of power. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gosden, C. (1994). Social being and time. London: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Gosden, C., and Marshall, Y.. (1999). The cultural biography of objects. World Archaeology 31:169–178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gravina, A. (1975). Fossati e strutture ipogeiche dei villaggi neolitici in agro di S. Severo. Attualità Archeologiche 1:14–34.Google Scholar
Graziosi, P. (1974). L'arte preistorica in Italia. Firenze: Sansoni.Google Scholar
Graziosi, P.. (1975). Nuove manifestazioni d'arte mesolitica e neolitica nel Riparo Gaban presso Trento. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 30:237–278.Google Scholar
Graziosi, P.. (1980). Le pitture preistoriche di Porto Badisco. Firenze: Martelli.Google Scholar
Gregg, S. (1988). Foragers and farmers: Population interaction and agricultural expansion in prehistoric Europe. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Grifoni Cremonesi, R. (1992). Il Neolitico nell'Italia Centrale e in Sardegna, in Italia preistorica. Edited by Guidi, A. and Piperno, M.. Roma: Laterza, pp. 306–333.Google Scholar
Cremonesi, Grifoni R.. (2003). Sepolture neolitiche dell'Italia centro-meridionale e loro relazioni con gli abitati. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:259–274.Google Scholar
Grifoni Cremonesi, R., F. Mallegni, and A. Tramonti. (2003). La sepoltura del Neolitico antico di Torre Sabea, in Torre Sabea: un Établissement du Néolithique Ancien en Salento. Edited by Guilaine, J. and Cremonesi, G.. Rome: École Française de Rome, pp. 96–105.Google Scholar
Cremonesi, Grifoni R., and Radmilli, A.. (2001). La grotta Patrizi al Sassi di Furbara (Cerveteri, Roma). Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 91–92:63–120.Google Scholar
Grifoni Cremonesi, R., C. Tozzi, and M. Weiss. (2000). Il Neolitico antico dell'area corso-toscana, in Les Premier Peuplements Olocenes de l'Aire Corso-Toscane/Il Primo Popolamento Olocenico dell'Area Corso-Toscana. Edited by Tozzi, C. and Weiss, M.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, pp. 259–271.Google Scholar
Guidi, A. (1992). Le età dei metalli nell'Italia centrale e in Sardegna, in Italia preistorica. Edited by Guidi, A. and Piperno, M.. Rome: Laterza, pp. 420–470.Google Scholar
Guidi, A.. (2000). Preistoria della complessità sociale. Bari: Laterza.Google Scholar
Guilaine, J. (Ed.). (1993). Dourgne: Derniers chasseurs-collecteurs et premiers éleveurs de la Haute-Vallée de l'Aude. Toulouse: Centre d'Anthropologie des Sociétés Rurales.Google Scholar
Guilaine, J., and Cremonesi, G.. (1987). L'habitat néolithique de Trasano (Matera, Basilicate). Premiers résultats. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:707–719.Google Scholar
Guilaine, J., and Cremonesi, G.. . (Eds.). (2003). Torre Sabea: Un Établissement du Néolithique Ancien en Salento (Vol. 315). Collection de l'École Française de Rome. Rome: École Française de Rome.Google Scholar
Guzzardi, L., Iovino, M. R., and Rivoli, A.. (2003). L'organizzazione del villaggio neolitico di Vulpiglia presso Pachino (Siracusa). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:845–849.Google Scholar
Hagerstrand, T. (1977). Culture and ecology: four time-geographic essays. Lund: Lund Universitets Kulturgeografiska Institutionen.Google Scholar
Hallam, B., Warren, S., and Renfrew, C.. (1976). Obsidian in the western Mediterranean: characterization by neutron activation analysis and optical emission spectroscopy. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 42:85–110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Halstead, P. (1981). Counting sheep in Neolithic and Bronze Age Greece, in Pattern of the past: studies in honour of David Clarke. Edited by Hodder, I., Isaac, G., and Hammond, N.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 307–339.Google Scholar
Halstead, P.. (1989). The economy has a normal surplus: economic stability and social change among early farming communities of Thessaly, Greece, in Bad year economics. Edited by Halstead, P. and O'Shea, J.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 68–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Halstead, P.. (1994). The North–South divide: Regional paths to complexity in prehistoric Greece, in Development and decline in the Mediterranean. Edited by Mathers, C. and Stoddart, S.. Sheffield: J. R. Collis Publications, pp. 195–219.Google Scholar
Halstead, P., and J. O'Shea. (1982). A friend in need is a friend indeed: Social storage and the origins of ranking, in Ranking, resource, and exchange. Edited by Renfrew, C. and Shennan, S.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 92–99.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y. (1998). Eating the dead: Mortuary feasting and the politics of memory in the Aegean Bronze Age societies, in Cemetery and Society in the Aegean Bronze Age. Edited by Branigan, K.. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, pp. 115–132.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y.. (1999). Food technologies, technologies of the body: The social context of wine and oil production and consumption in Bronze Age Crete. World Archaeology 31:38–54.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hamilakis, Y., Pluciennik, M., and Tarlow, S.. (Eds.). (2002). Thinking through the body: archaeologies of corporeality. London: Kluwer/ Plenum Academic.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardy, K., and Sillitoe, P.. (2003). Material perspectives: Stone tool use and material culture among the Wola, Papua New Guinea. Internet Archaeology 14.Google Scholar
Hastorf, C. A. (1991). Gender, space and food in prehistory, in Engendering Archaeology. Edited by Conkey, M. and Gero, J.. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 132–161.Google Scholar
Hatch, E. (1989). Theories of social honor. American Anthropologist 91:341–353.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayden, B. (1990). Nimrods, Piscators, Pluckers, and Planters: The emergence of food production. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 9:31–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hegmon, M., and Kulow, S.. (1995). Painting as agency, style as structure: Innovations in Mimbres pottery designs from Southwest New Mexico. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 12:313–334.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helms, M. (1983). Ulysses' sail. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Helms, M.. (1998). Access to origins: affines, ancestors, and aristocrats. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Herbert, E. W. (1994). Iron, gender, and power: Rituals of transformation in African societies. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Hirth, K. (Ed.) (2003). Mesoamerican lithic technology: Experimentation and interpretation. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.Google Scholar
Hobsbawn, E., and Ranger, T.. (1993). The invention of tradition. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hodder, I. (1990). The domestication of Europe. London: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar
Hodder, I., and Cessford, C.. (2004). Daily practice and social memory at Çatalhöyük. American Antiquity 69:17–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodder, I., and Malone, C.. (1984). Intensive survey of prehistoric sites in the Stilo region, Calabria. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 50:121–150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holloway, R. (1974). Buccino. Rome: de Luca.Google Scholar
Holloway, R.. (1975). Buccino: the Early Bronze Age village of Tufariello. Journal of Field Archaeology 2:11–81.Google Scholar
Holmes, K., and R. Whitehouse. (1998). Anthropomorphic figurines and the construction of gender in Neolithic Italy, in Gender and italian archaeology: Challenging the stereotypes. Edited by Whitehouse, R.. London: Accordia Research Center, pp. 95–126.Google Scholar
Hopf, M. (1991). South and Southwest Europe, in Progress in Old World palaeoethnobotany. Edited by Zeist, W., Wasylikowa, K., and Behre, K.-E.. Rotterdam: Balkema, pp. 241–277.Google Scholar
Horden, P., and Purcell, N.. (2000). The corrupting sea: A study of Mediterranean history. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Hosler, D. (1995). Sound, color, and meaning in the metallurgy of ancient West Mexico. World Archaeology 27:100–115.Google Scholar
Houston, S., and Taube, K.. (2000). An archaeology of the senses: perception and cultural expression in ancient Mesoamerica. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 10:261–294.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hurcombe, L. (1992). New contributions to the study of the function of Sardinian obsidian artifacts, in Sardinia in the Mediterranean: A footprint in the sea. Edited by Tykot, R. H. and Andrews, T. K.. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, pp. 83–97.Google Scholar
Iacopini, A. (2000). Il sito neolitico di Casa Querciolaia (Livorno). Rassegna di Archeologia 17:127–178.Google Scholar
Ingold, T. (2000). The perception of the environment: Essays on livelihood, dwelling, and skill. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ingravallo, E. (1999). Le cose della preistoria, in Fonti di Informazione e Contesto Archeologico: Manufatti Ceramici e Neolitizazzione Meridionale. Edited by Ingravallo, E.. Galatina: Mario Congedi, pp. 9–20.Google Scholar
Ingravallo, E.. (2001). Il sito neolitico di Serra Cicora (Nardò, LE): note preliminari. Origini 26:87–118.Google Scholar
Irti, U. (1992). Due statuette preistoriche dal Fucino. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 28:433–440.Google Scholar
Jarman, M., and D. Webley. (1975). Settlement and land use in Capitanata, Italy, in Palaeoeconomy. Edited by Higgs, E.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 177–231.
Johnson, M. (1989). Conceptions of agency in archaeological interpretation. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 8:189–211.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, M.. (2000). The medieval castle and the fashioning of agency, in Agency in Archaeology. Edited by Dobres, M.-A. and Robb, J.. London: Routledge, pp. 213–231.Google Scholar
Jones, A., and MacGregor, G.. (Eds.). (2002). Colouring the past: the significance of colour in archaeological research. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Jones, G. B. D. (1987). Apulia. London: Society of Antiquaries.Google Scholar
Jones, R. (1989). Hunters of the dreaming: some ideational, economic, and ecological parameters of the Australian Aboriginal productive system. in Production systems in the Pacific. Edited by Yen, D. and Mummery, J.. Canberra: Department of Prehistory, Australian National University, pp. 25–55.Google Scholar
Jorgenson, D. (1991). Big men, great men and women: alternative logics of difference, in Big men and great men: personifications of power in Melanesia. Edited by Godelier, M. and Strathern, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 256–272.Google Scholar
Joyce, R. (2000). Girling the girl and boying the boy: The production of adulthood in ancient Mesoamerica. World Archaeology 31:473–483.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Joyce, R., and Lopiparo, J.. (2005). Doing agency in archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 12:365–374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaiser, T., and Forenbaher, S.. (1999). Adriatic sailors and stone knappers: Palagruza in the 3rd millenium BC. Antiquity 73:313–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kamp, K. A. (2001). Prehistoric children working and playing: A case study in learning ceramics. Journal of Anthropological Research 57:427–450.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keates, S. (2000). The ancestralization of the landscape: Monumentality, memory, and the rock art of Copper Age Vai Camonica, in Signifying place and space: World perspectives in rock art and landscape. International Series (Vol. 902) Edited by Nash, G.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 83–102.Google Scholar
Keates, S.. (2002). The flashing blade: copper, colour, and luminosity in North Italian Copper Age society, in Colouring the past: The significance of colour in archaeological research. Edited by Jones, A. and MacGregor, G.. Oxford: Berg, pp. 109–126.Google Scholar
Kelly, R. (1985). The Nuer conquest: Structure and development of an expansionist system. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Kelly, R.. (1993). Constructing inequality: the fabrication of a hierarchy of virtue among the Etoro. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Kensinger, K. (1989). Hunting and male domination in Cashinahua society, in Farmers as hunters: The implications of sedentism. Edited by Kent, S.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 18–26.Google Scholar
Kent, S. (1989). Cross-cultural perceptions of farmers as hunters and the value of meat, in Farmers as hunters: The implications of sedentism. Edited by Kent, S.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 1–17.Google Scholar
Knauft, B. (1985). Good company and violence: Sorcery and social action in a lowland New Guinea society. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Knauft, B.. (1987). Reconsidering violence in simple human societies: Homicide among the Gebusi of New Guinea. Current Anthropology 28:457–499.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knauft, B.. (1991). Violence and sociality in human evolution. Current Anthropology 32:391–428.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knauft, B.. (1993). South coast New Guinea cultures: History, comparison, dialectic. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuhn, S. L. (1995). Mousterian lithic technology: An ecological perspective. Princeton: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rocca, F. (2005). La Miniera Pre-Protostorica di Grotta della Monaca (Sant'Agata di Esaro, Cosenza). Roseto (Cosenza): Centro Regionale di Speleologia “Enzo dei Medici.”Google Scholar
Rosa, V. (1987). Un nuovo insediamento neolitico a Serra del Palco di Milena (CL). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:801–808.Google Scholar
Langella, M., Boscaino, M., Coubrai, S., Curci, A., Francesco, A. M., and Senatore, M. R.. (2003). Baselice (Benevento): Il sito pluristratificato neolitico di torrente Cervaro. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 59:259–336.Google Scholar
Latour, B. (2005). Reassembling the social: an introduction to actor-network-theory. Oxford: Clarendon.Google Scholar
Zambotti, Laviosa P. (1938). Le civiltà preistoriche e protostoriche dell'Alto Adige. Monumenti Antichi dei Lincei 37:9–578.Google Scholar
Leighton, R. (1989). Ground stone tools from Serra Orlando (Morgantina) and stone axe studies in Sicily and Southern Italy. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 55:135–159.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leighton, R.. (1992). Stone axes and exchange in south Italian prehistory: New evidence from old collections. Journal of the Accordia Research Center 3:11–40.Google Scholar
Leighton, R.. (1999). Sicily before History. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Leighton, R., and J. Dixon. (1991). Alcune considerazioni sulle asce levigate in Italian Meridionale ed in Sicilia, in Papers of the Fourth Conference of Italian Archaeology, Volume 3: New developments. Edited by Herring, E., Whitehouse, R., and Wilkins, J.. London: Accordia Research Centre, pp. 19–28.Google Scholar
Leighton, R., and Dixon, J.. (1992). Jade and greenstone in the prehistory of Sicily and Southern Italy. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 11:179–200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lemonnier, P. (1991). From great men to big men: peace, substitution and competition in the Highlands of New Guinea, in Big men and great men: Personifications of power in Melanesia. Edited by Godelier, M. and Strathern, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 7–27.Google Scholar
Lemonnier, P.. (1992). Elements for an anthropology of technology. Anthropological Papers. Ann Arbor: Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan.Google Scholar
Leone, M. (1984). Interpreting ideology in historical archaeology: using the rules of perspective in the William Paca Garden in Annapolis, Maryland, in Ideology, power, and prehistory. Edited by Miller, D. and Tilley, C.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 25–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levi, P. (1988). The Drowned and the Saved. New York: Vintage.Google Scholar
Levy, J. E. (1992). Orayvi revisited: social stratification in an “egalitarian” community. Santa Fe: School of American Research.Google Scholar
Lewthwaite, J. (1987). Three steps to leaven: applicazione del modello di disponibilità al neolitico italiano. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:90–101.Google Scholar
Liep, J. (1991). Great man, big man, chief: a triangulation of the Massim, in Big men and great men: Personifications of power in Melanesia. Edited by Godelier, M. and Strathern, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 28–47.Google Scholar
Lillios, K. (1999). Symbolic artifacts and spheres of meaning: groundstone tools from Copper Age Portugal, in Material symbols: Culture and economy in prehistory. Edited by Robb, J. E.. Carbondale, Illinois: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, pp. 173–187.Google Scholar
Lillios, K.. (1999b). Objects of memory: the ethnography and archaeology of heirlooms. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 6:235–262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lilliu, G. (1999). Arte e religione della Sardegna prenuragica. Sassari: Carlo Delfino editore.Google Scholar
Lindenlauf, A. (2004). Dirt, cleanliness, and social structure in ancient Greece, in Agency uncovered: Archaeological perspectives on social agency, power and being human. Edited by Gardner, A.. London: UCL Press, pp. 81–106.Google Scholar
Livi-Bacci, M. (1999). The population of Europe. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Porto, Lo F. (1972). La tomba neolitica con idola di pietra di Arnesano. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 27:357–372.Google Scholar
Porto, Lo F.. (1978). La preistoria del Materano alla luce delle ultime ricerche. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 20:275–294.Google Scholar
Porto, Lo F.. (1989). L'insediamento neolitico di Serra d'Alto nel Materano. Rome: Giorgio Bretschneider.Google Scholar
Lowenthal, D. (1985). The past is a foreign country. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lucas, G. (2004). The archaeology of time. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Lucifero, A. (1901). Girifalco. Rivistia Italiana di Scienze Naturali:115.Google Scholar
Lupton, D. (1996). Food, the body, and the self. London: Sage.Google Scholar
Maggi, R. (2001). Pietre della memoria, in Studie di Preistoria e Protostoria in onore di Luigi Bernabò Brea. Edited by Martinelli, M. C. and Spigo, U.. Lipari: Museo Archeologico Regionale Eoliano, pp. 175–186.Google Scholar
Maggi, R., and Pearce, M.. (2005). Mid-fourth-millennium copper mining in Liguria, north-west Italy: the earliest known copper mines in western Europe. Antiquity 79:66–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malafouris, L. (2005). The cognitive basis of material engagement: Where brain, body, and culture conflate, in Rethinking materiality: the engagement of mind with the material world. Edited by DeMarrais, E., Gosden, C., and Renfrew, C.. Cambridge, UK: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, pp. 53–62.Google Scholar
Malinowski, B. (1922). Argonauts of the western Pacific. Routledge: London.Google Scholar
Mallory, J. (1987). Lagnano da Piede: an Early Neolithic village on the Tavoliere. Origini 13:193–290.Google Scholar
Mallory, J.. (1989). In search of the Indo-Europeans. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Malone, C. (1985). Pots, prestige and ritual in Neolithic southern Italy. Papers in Italian archaeology IV: The Cambridge conference, Cambridge, 1985. International series 244 Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 118–151.Google Scholar
Malone, C.. (1994). The transition to agriculture, in Time, territory, and state: The archaeological development of the Gubbio basin. Edited by Malone, C. and Stoddart, S.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 67–80.Google Scholar
Malone, C., and Stoddart, S.. (1996). Maltese and Mediterranean megalithism in the light of the Brochtorff Circle. XIII International Congress of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences (Forlì, Italy, 8–14 September 1996) Colloquia 9:109–114.Google Scholar
Malone, C.. (2004). Towards an island of mind? in Explaining social change: studies in honour of Colin Renfrew. Edited by Cherry, J., Scarre, C., and Shennan, S.. Cambridge, UK: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, pp. 93–102.Google Scholar
Malone, C., Stoddart, S., Trump, D., Bonanno, A., and Pace, A.. (Eds.). (2007). Mortuary ritual in prehistoric Malta: The Brochtorff Circle at Xaghra excavations (1987–1994). Cambridge, UK: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.Google Scholar
Manfredini, A. (2001). Rituali funerari e organizzazione sociale: Una rilettura di alcuni dati della facies Diana in Italia meridionale, in Studie di Preistoria e Protostoria in onore di Luigi Bernabò Brea. Edited by Martinelli, M. C. and Spigo, U.. Lipari: Museo Archeologico Regionale Eoliano, pp. 71–88.Google Scholar
Manfredini, A.. (Ed.). (2002). Le dune, il lago, il mare: Una comunità di villaggio dell'età del Rame a Maccarese. Firenze: Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria.Google Scholar
Manfredini, A., and Muntoni, I.. (2003). Gli spazi del vivere: Funzioni e cronologia delle strutture d'abitato dell'insediamento neolitico di Casale del Dolce (Anagni – FR). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:187–198.Google Scholar
Mangili, G. (1954). I reperti ossei della Grotta Patrizi (Sasso Furbara): Il cranio trapanato. Rivista di Antropologia 41:52–67.Google Scholar
Maniscalco, L. (1989). Ocher containers and trade in the Central Mediterranean Copper Age. American Journal of Archaeology 93:537–541.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maniscalco, L.. (1997). I'insediamento preistorico presso Le Salinelle di San Marco (Paternò), in Prima Sicilia: alle origini della società siciliana (Vol. 1). Edited by Tusa, S.. Palermo: Ediprint, pp. 193–197.Google Scholar
Maniscalco, L., and Iovino, M. R.. (2004). La Sicilia Orientale e la Calabria Centro-Meridionale nel Neolitico. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:189–201.Google Scholar
Mann, T. (1952). The Magic Mountain. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Marino, D. (1993). Il neolitico nella Calabria centro-orientale: Ricerche 1974–1990. Annali della Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia dell'Università degli Studi di Bari 35–36:21–101.Google Scholar
Marx, K. (1978). Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, in The Marx–Engels Reader. Edited by Tucker, R.. New York: W. W. Norton, pp. 3–6.Google Scholar
Marx, K., and F. Engels. (1978). The German ideology, in The Marx-Engels reader, 2nd edition. Edited by Tucker, R.. New York: Norton, pp. 146–201.Google Scholar
McCall, J. C. (1999). Structure, agency, and the locus of the social: Why post-structural theory is good for archaeology, in Material symbols: Culture and economy in prehistory. Edited by Robb, J. E.. Carbondale, Illinois: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, pp. 16–21.Google Scholar
McConnell, B. E. (2003). Insediamenti dell'altopiano ibleo e l'architettura dell'Età del Rame in Sicilia. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:225–238.Google Scholar
McVicar, J., C. Backway, G. Clark, and R. Housley. (1994). Agriculture, in Time, territory, and state: The archaeological development of the Gubbio basin. Edited by Malone, C. and Stoddart, S.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 94–105.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. (1981). Maidens, meal, and money. New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Mello, E. (1983). Indagini scientifiche per l'individuazione della provenienza dei manufatti di ossidiana, in Passo di Corvo e la civiltà neolitica del Tavoliere. Edited by Tinè, S.. Genova: Sage, pp. 122–124.Google Scholar
Merleau-Ponty, M. (1962). Phenomenology of perception. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Meskell, L., and Joyce, R.. (2003). Embodied lives: Figuring ancient Maya and Egyptian experience. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Michelaki, K. (2006). Household economies: Ceramic production and consumption among the Maros villagers of Bronze Age Hungary. International Series, 1503. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Milisauskas, S. (1983). European prehistory. New York: Academic.Google Scholar
Milisauskas, S.. (Ed.). (2002). European Prehistory: a Survey. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, D. (Ed.). (2005). Materiality. Durham: Duke University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mintz, S. (1994). Eating and being: What food means, in Food: multidisciplinary perspectives. Edited by Harriss-White, B. and Hoffenberg, R.. Oxford: Blackwell, pp. 102–115.Google Scholar
Modjeska, N. (1991). Post-Ipomoean modernism: the Duna example, in Big men and great men: personifications of power in Melanesia. Edited by Godelier, M. and Strathern, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 234–255.Google Scholar
Morphy, H. (1992). From dull to brilliant: The aesthetics of spiritual power among the Yokgnu, in Anthropology, art, and aesthetics. Edited by Coote, J. and Shelton, A.. Oxford: Clarendon, pp. 181–208.Google Scholar
Morter, J. (1992). Capo Alfiere and the Middle Neolithic period in eastern Calabria, southern Italy. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas, Austin.
Morter, J., and J. Robb. (1998). Space, gender, and architecture in the southern Italian Neolithic, in Gender and Italian archaeology: Challenging the stereotypes. Edited by Whitehouse, R.. London: Accordia Research Center, pp. 83–94.Google Scholar
Mosso, A. (1908). La stazione preistorica di Coppa Nevigata presso Manfredonia. Monumenti Antichi dei Lincei 19:305–396.Google Scholar
Muntoni, I. M. (2003). Modellare l'argilla: Vasai del neolitico antico e medio nelle murge pugliesi. Firenze: Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria.Google Scholar
Muntoni, I. M.. (2004). Analisi archeometriche sulle ceramiche impresse di Favella: Caratterizzazione delle materie prime e tecnologia di manufattura. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:703–709.Google Scholar
Mussi, M. (2001). Earliest Italy: An overview of the Italian Paleolithic and Mesolithic. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum.Google Scholar
Naroll, R. (1962). Floor area and settlement population. American Antiquity 27:587–588.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, S. M. (1997). Gender in archaeology: Analyzing power and prestige. Walnut Creek: Altamira.Google Scholar
Nelson, S. M.. (2002). In pursuit of gender: Worldwide archaeological approaches. Walnut Creek: Altamira.Google Scholar
Nicoletti, F. (1997). Il commercio preistorico dell'ossidiana nel mediterraneo ed il ruolo di Lipari e Pantelleria nel più antico sistema di scambio, in Prima Sicilia: alle origini della società siciliana. Edited by Tusa, S.. Palermo: Regione Siciliana, pp. 259–273.Google Scholar
Nicoletti, G. (2004). L'insediamento neolitico di Ceraso (Acri – CS). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:737–742.Google Scholar
O'Hare, G. (1990). A preliminary study of polished stone artefacts in prehistoric southern Italy. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 56:123–152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Shea, J. M. (1996). Villagers of the Maros. New York: Plenum.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olsen, B. (2003). Material culture after text: Re-membering things. Norwegian Archaeological Review 36:87–104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Orsi, P. (1890). Stazione neolitica di Stentinello. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 16:177–200.Google Scholar
Orsi, P.. (1898). Miniere di selce e sepolcri eneolitici a Monte Tabuto e Monte Racello presso Comiso (Siracusa). Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 24:165–206.Google Scholar
Orsi, P.. (1921). Megara Hyblaea. Monumenti Antichi dei Lincei 27:109–150.Google Scholar
Orsi, P.. (1924). Villaggio trincerato dell'età della pietra scoperto a Megara Hyblaea. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 44:214–220.Google Scholar
Ortiz, A. (1969). The Tewa world: Space, time, being, and becoming in a Pueblo society. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Ortner, S. (1972). On key symbols. American Anthropologist 75:1338–1346.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ortner, S.. (1984). Theory in anthropology since the sixties. Comparative Studies in Society and History 1:126–166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palma di Cesnola, A., and A. Vigliardi. (1984). Il neo-eneolitico del promentorio del Gargano, in La Daunia antica dalla preistoria all'altomedioevo. Edited by Mazzei, M.. Milano: Electa, pp. 55–74.Google Scholar
Pandolfi, L., and B. Zamagni. (2000). La pietra verde in Toscana: i dati sulle analisi delle provenienze, in Les Premier Peuplements Olocenes de l'Aire Corso-Toscane/Il Primo Popolamento Olocenico dell'Area Corso-Toscana. Edited by Tozzi, C. and Weiss, M.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, pp. 245–248.Google Scholar
Papadopoulos, J. K. (2000). Skeletons in wells: towards an archaeology of social exclusion in the ancient Greek world, in Madness, disability, and social exclusion: The archaeology and anthropology of “difference.” Edited by Hubert, J.. London: Routledge, pp. 96–118.Google Scholar
Papathanassopoulos, G. A. (1996). Neolithic culture in Greece. Athens: N.P. Goulandris Foundation.Google Scholar
Pearson, Parker M. (1999). The archaeology of death and burial. Sutton: Stroud.Google Scholar
Pearson, Parker M., and Richards, C.. (1994). Architecture and order: approaches to social space. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patrizi, S., Radmilli, A., and Mangili, G.. (1954). Sepoltura ad inumazione con cranio trapanato nella Grotta Patrizi, Sasso Furbara. Rivista di Antropologia 41:33–68.Google Scholar
Patroni, G. (1902). Un villaggio siculo presso Matera. Monumenti Antichi dei Lincei 8:417–520.Google Scholar
Pauketat, T. R. (2001). Practice and history in archaeology: An emerging paradigm. Anthropological Theory 1:73–98.Google Scholar
Pellegrini, E. (1992). Le età dei metalli nell'Italia meridionale e in Sicilia, in Italia preistorica. Edited by Guidi, A. and Piperno, M.. Roma: Laterza, pp. 471–516.Google Scholar
Pennacchioni, M. (2003). Navigazione, commercianti e materie prime. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:1053–1058.Google Scholar
Peristiany, J. (1966). Honor and shame: The values of Mediterranean society. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Perlès, C., and K. D. Vitelli. (1999). Craft specialization in the Neolithic of Greece, in Neolithic society in Greece. Edited by Halstead, P.. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press., pp. 96–107Google Scholar
Peroni, R. (1971). L'età del Bronzo nella penisola Italiana. Firenze: Olschki.Google Scholar
Peroni, R.. (1979). From Bronze Age to Iron Age: Economic, historical, and social considerations, in Italy before the Romans. Edited by Ridgway, D. and Ridgway, F.. New York: Academic, pp. 7–30.Google Scholar
Delfino, Pesce V., Scattarella, V., Lucia, A., Ferri, D., and Giove, C.. (1979). Tomba megalitica a camera del III millennio in Rutigliano (Bari): triplice deposizione. Antropologia Contemporanea 2:453–457.Google Scholar
Petrequin, P. (1996). Management of architectural woods and variations in population density in the fourth and third millennia BC (Lakes Chalain and Clainvaux, Jura, France). Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 15:1–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pfaffenberger, B. (1992). Social anthropology of technology. Annual Review of Anthropology 21:491–516.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, P. (1992). Western Mediterranean obsidian distribution and the European Neolithic, in Sardinia in the Mediterranean: A footprint in the sea. Edited by Tykot, R. H. and Andrews, T. K.. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, pp. 71–82.Google Scholar
Pluciennik, M. (1997). Historical, geographical, and anthropological imaginations: Early ceramics in Southern Italy, in Not so much a pot, more a way of life, Oxbow Monographs. Edited by Cumberpatch, C. and Blinkhorn, P.. Oxford: Oxbow, pp. 37–56.Google Scholar
Pluciennik, M.. (1998). Representations of gender in prehistoric Southern Italy, in Gender and Italian archaeology: Challenging the stereotypes. Edited by Whitehouse, R.. London: Accordia Research Center, pp. 57–82.Google Scholar
Pollard, J. (2001). The aesthetics of depositional practice. World Archaeology 33:35–333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pred, A. (1990). Making histories and constructing human geographies: The local transformation of practice, power relations, and consciousness. Boulder: Westview.Google Scholar
Price, T. D. (2003). The arrival of agriculture in Europe as seen from the North, in The widening harvest: The Neolithic transition in Europe: Looking back, looking forward. Edited by Ammerman, A. J. and Biagi, P.. Boston: Archaeological Institute of America, pp. 273–295.Google Scholar
Priuli, A. (1985). Incisioni rupestri della Valcamonica. Torino: Priuli and Verlucca.Google Scholar
Puglisi, S. (1957). La civiltà apenninica: origine delle comunità pastorale in Italia. Firenze: Olshki.Google Scholar
Quagliati, Q. (1906). Tombe neolitiche in Taranto e nel suo territorio. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 32:17–49.Google Scholar
Quagliati, Q.. (1936). La Puglia preistorica. Rome: Società per la Storia Patria per la Puglia.Google Scholar
Quarta, G., D'Elia, M., Ingravallo, E., Tiberi, I., and Calcagnile, L.. (2005). The Neolithic site of Serra Cicora: Results of the AMS radiocarbon dating. Radiocarbon 47:207–210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Radi, G. (1987). Scavo preliminare a Fonte di San Callisto (L'Aquila). Rassegna di Archeologia 6:143–170.Google Scholar
Radi, G.. (2000). La distribuzione dell'ossidiana in Toscana nel neolitico antico, in Les Premier Peuplements Olocenes de l'Aire Corso-Toscane/ Il Primo Popolamento Olocenico dell'Area Corso-Toscana. Edited by Tozzi, C. and Weiss, M.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, pp. 249–252.Google Scholar
Radi, G., and Wilkens, B.. (1989). Il sito a ceramica impressa di Santo Stefano (Ortucchio, L'Aquila): Notizia preliminare. Rassegna di Archeologia 8:97–116.Google Scholar
Radina, F. (1999). La ricerca archeologica nell'insediamento neolitico di Balsignano (Modugno, Bari), in Fonti di informazione e contesto archeologico: Manufatti ceramici e neolitizazzione meridionale. Edited by Ingravallo, E.. Galatina: Mario Congedi, pp. 93–103.Google Scholar
Radina, F.. (2003). Le ricerche archeologiche, in Modellare l'argilla: Vasai del neolitico antico e medio nelle murge pugliesi. Edited by Muntoni, I.. Firenze: Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria, pp. 81–96.Google Scholar
Radmilli, A. (1974). Dal Paleolitico all'Età del Bronzo, in Popoli e culture dell'Italia antica, Volume 1. Edited by Radmilli, A.. Rome: Biblioteca di Storia Patria, pp. 69–404.Google Scholar
Radmilli, A.. (1997). I Primi agricoltori in abruzzo: Il neolitico. Pescara: Editrice Italica.Google Scholar
Randle, K., Barfield, L., and Bagolini, B.. (1993). Recent Italian obsidian analyses. Journal of Archaeological Science 20:503–509.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rappaport, R. (1979). Ecology, meaning, and religion. Berkeley: North Atlantic Press.Google Scholar
Redding, R. (1981). Decision making in subsistence herding of sheep and goats in the Middle East. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan.
Reid, A., and MacLean, R.. (1995). Symbolism and the social contexts of iron production in Karagwe. World Archaeology 27:144–161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rellini, U. (1923). La Grotta delle Felci a Capri. Monumenti Antichi dei Lincei 29:305–406.Google Scholar
Rellini, U.. (1934). La più antica ceramica dipinta d'Italia. Roma: Collana Meridionale Editrice.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C. (1975). Trade as Action at a Distance: Questions of Integration and Communication, in Ancient civilization and trade. Edited by Sabloff, J. and Lamberg-Karlovsky, C.. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, pp. 3–59.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C.. (1976). Megaliths, territories, and populations, in Acculturation and continuity in Atlantic Europe. Edited by Laet, S.. Brugge: De Tempel, pp. 198–220.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C., and J. E. Dixon. (1976). Obsidian in western Asia: A review, in Problems in economic and social archaeology. Edited by Sieveking, G. G., Longworth, I. H., and Wilson, K. E., London: Duckworth, pp. 137–150.Google Scholar
Rice, P. (1987). Pottery analysis: A sourcebook. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Ridola, D. (1924). Le grandi trincee preistoriche di Matera, I. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 44:97–122.Google Scholar
Ridola, D.. (1925). Le grandi trincee preistoriche di Matera, II. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 45:85–98.Google Scholar
Ridola, D.. (1926). Le grandi trincee preistoriche di Matera, III. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 46:135–174.Google Scholar
Robb, J. (1991). Neolithic skeletal remains from the Grotta Scaloria: The 1979 excavations. Rivista di Antropologia 69:111–124.Google Scholar
Robb, J.. (1994). The Neolithic of peninsular Italy: Anthropological synthesis and critique. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 85:189–214.Google Scholar
Robb, J.. (1994). Burial and social reproduction in the Peninsular Italian neolithic. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 7:29–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robb, J.. (1994). Gender contradictions: Moral coalitions and inequality in prehistoric Italy. Journal of European Archaeology 2:20–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robb, J.. (1995). From gender to class: Inequality in prehistoric Italy. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Robb, J.. (1997). Intentional tooth removal in Neolithic Italian women. Antiquity 71:659–669.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robb, J.. (1997). Violence and gender in early Italy, in Troubled times: osteological and archaeological evidence of violence. Edited by Martin, D. L. and Frayer, D.. New York: Gordon and Breach, pp. 108–141.Google Scholar
Robb, J.. (2001). Island identities: ritual, travel, and the creation of difference in Neolithic Malta. European Journal of Archaeology 4:175–202.Google Scholar
Robb, J.. (2001). Why do we find “Late Neolithic” burials in “Middle Neolithic” villages?” Paper presented at the International Union of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Sciences, Liege.
Robb, J.. (2002). Time and biography, in Thinking through the Body: Archaeologies of Corporeality. Edited by Hamilakis, Y., Pluciennik, M., and Tarlow, S.. London: Kluwer Academic, pp. 153–171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robb, J.. (2003). Bova Marina Archaeological Project survey and excavations: Preliminary report, 2003 season. Cambridge, UK: Department of Archaeology, Cambridge University.Google Scholar
Robb, J.. (2004). The extended artifact and the monumental economy: A methodology for material agency, in Rethinking materiality: The engagement of mind with the material world. Edited by DeMarrais, E., Gosden, C., and Renfrew, C.. Cambridge, UK: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, pp. 131–139.Google Scholar
Robb, J.. (2004). Il Neolitico dell'Aspromonte. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:175–188.Google Scholar
Robb, J., and Mallegni, F.. (1994). Anthropology and paleopathology of human remains from Catignano (Pescara, Italy). Rivista di Antropologia 72:197–224.Google Scholar
Robb, J., Mallegni, F., and Ronco, D.. (1991). New human remains from the southern Italian Neolithic: Ripa Tetta and Latronico. Rivista di Antropologia 69:125–144.Google Scholar
Robb, J., and P. Miracle. (2007). Beyond “migration” versus “acculturation”: new models for the spread of agriculture, in Going over: The Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Western Europe. Edited by Whittle, A. and Cummings, V.. London: British Academy, pp. 97–113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robb, J., and Tykot, R.. (2003). Ricostruzione tramite analisi GIS di aspetti marittimi e sociali nello scambio dell'ossidian durante il Neolitico. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:1021–1025.Google Scholar
Robb, J., and Hove, D.. (2003). Gardening, foraging and herding: Neolithic land use and social territories in Southern. Antiquity 77:241–254.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robertshaw, P. (1989). The development of pastoralism in East Africa, in The walking larder: Patterns of domestication, pastoralism and predation. Edited by Clutton-Brock, J.. London: Unwin Hyman, pp. 207–214.Google Scholar
Romito, M. (1987). Un insediamento neolitico a Palinuro. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:691–695.Google Scholar
Ronchitelli, A. (1983). L'industria litica dell'area B, in Passo di Corvo e la civiltà neolitica del Tavoliere. Edited by Tinè, S.. Genova: Sagep, pp. 101–121.Google Scholar
Rosaldo, R. (1980). Ilongot headhunting: A study in society and history, 1885–1974. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Rosaldo, R.. (1986). Ilongot hunting as story and experience, in The anthropology of experience. Edited by Turner, V. W. and Brunes, E. M.. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, pp. 97–138.Google Scholar
Roscoe, P. (2000). New Guinea leadership as ethnographic analogy: A critical review. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 7:79–126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rottoli, M. (1993). “La Marmotta” (Anguillara Sabazia (RM), scavi 1989. Analisi paletnobotaniche: prime risultanze. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 84:305–315.Google Scholar
Rottoli, M.. (2001). Zafferanone selvatico (Carthamus lanatus) e cardo della Madonna (Silybum marianun), piante raccolte o coltivate nel Neolitico antico a “La Marmotta”?Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 91–92:47–62.Google Scholar
Rowly-Conwy, P. (1997). The animal bones from Arene Candide: Final report, in Arene Candide: a functional and environmental assessment of the Holocene sequence. Edited by Maggi, R.. Rome: Il Calamo, pp. 153–277.Google Scholar
Runnels, C. (2003). The origins of the Greek Neolithic: A personal view, in The widening harvest: The Neolithic transition in Europe: Looking back, looking forward. Edited by Ammerman, A. J. and Biagi, P.. Boston: Archaeological Institute of America, pp. 121–132.Google Scholar
Russell, N. (1998). Cattle as wealth in Neolithic Europe: Where's the beef? in The archaeology of value. International Series (Vol. 730). Edited by Bailey, D. W.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 42–54.Google Scholar
Russell, N.. (1999). Symbolic dimensions of animals and meat at Opovo, Yugoslavia, in Material Symbols: Culture and economy in prehistory. Edited by Robb, J.. Carbondale, Illinois: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, pp. 153–172.Google Scholar
Russell, N., and L. Martin. (2000). Trashing rubbish, in Towards reflexive method in archaeology: The example at Ca¸talhoÿuk¨. Edited by Hodder, I.. Cambridge, UK: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, pp. 57–69.Google Scholar
Rye, O. S. (1981). Pottery technology: Principles and reconstruction. Washington, DC: Smithsonian.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M. (1963). Poor man, rich man, big man, chief: Political types in Melanesia and Polynesia. Comparative Studies in Society and History 5:285–303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sahlins, M.. (1968). Tribesmen. Engelwood Cliffs,Prentice-Hall.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M.. (1972). Stone Age economics. Chicago: Aldine.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M.. (1981). Historical metaphors and mythical realities. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sahlins, M.. (1985). Islands of history. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Saitta, D. J., and McGuire, R. H.. (1998). Dialectics, heterarchy, and Western Pueblo social organization. American Antiquity 63:334–336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salvadei, L., and R. Macchiarelli. (1983). Studi antropologici, in Studi sul Neolitico del Tavoliere della Puglia. International Series 160. Edited by Cassano, S. and Manfredini, A.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 253–264.Google Scholar
Salvadei, L., and Santandrea, E.. (2003). Condizioni di vita e stato di salute nel campione neolitico di Masseria Candelaro (FG). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 35:829–834.Google Scholar
Sammartino, F. (1990). Insediamenti neolitici e della prima età dei metalli in località La Puzzolente (Livorno): un'officina per la lavorazione della steatite. Rassegna di Archeologia 9:153–182.Google Scholar
Sargent, A. (1983). Exploitation territory and economy in the Tavoliere of Apulia, in Studi sul Neolitico del Tavoliere della Puglia. International Series 160. Edited by Cassano, S. and Manfredini, A.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 223–236.Google Scholar
Sargent, A.. (1983). Neolithic plant remains, in Studi sul Neolitico del Tavoliere della Puglia. International Series 160. Edited by Cassano, S. and Manfredini, A.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 250–252.Google Scholar
Sarti, L., Corridi, C., Martini, F., and Pallecchi, P.. (1991). Mileto: un insediamento Neolitico della ceramica a linee incise. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 43:73–154.Google Scholar
Sarti, L., Martini, F., Magi, M., Cioppi, E., Mazzini, M., Bernabei, M. L., Birtolo, R., Foggi, B., Mazzoni, G., Franchi, R., and Pallecchi, P.. (1985). L'insediamento Neolitico di Neto di Bolasse (Sesto Fiorentino, Firenze). Rassegna di Archeologia 5:63–118.Google Scholar
Saunders, N. J. (2002). The colours of light: Materiality and chromatic cultures of the Americas, in Colouring the past: The significance of colour in archaeological research. Edited by Jones, A. and MacGregor, G.. Oxford: Berg, pp. 209–226.Google Scholar
Service, E. (1962). Primitive social organisation. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Sewell, W. (1992). A theory of structure: Duality, agency and transformation. American Journal of Sociology 98:1–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shaffer, G. D. (1983). Neolithic building technology in Calabria, Italy. Ph.D. dissertation, State University of New York, Binghamton.
Shaffer, G. D.. (1985). Architectural resources and their effect on certain neolithic settlements in Southern Italy, in Papers in Italian Archaeology IV: The Cambridge conference. BAR International Series. Edited by Malone, C. and Stoddart, S.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 101–117.Google Scholar
Shaffer, G. D.. (1993). Archaeomagnetic study of a wattle and daub building collapse. Journal of Field Archaeology 20:59–75.Google Scholar
Shanks, M., and Tilley, C.. (1987). Social theory and archaeology. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.Google Scholar
Shaw, B. (1982–1983). “Eaters of flesh, drinkers of milk:” The ancient Mediterranean ideology of the pastoral nomad. Ancient Society 13–14:5–31.Google Scholar
Shennan, S. (1982). Ideology, change and the European Bronze Age, in Symbolic and structural archaeology. Edited by Hodder, I.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 155–161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shennan, S.. (1986). Interaction and change in third millennium BC Western and Central Europe, in Peer polity interaction and socio-political change. Edited by Renfrew, C. and Cherry, J.. New York: Cambridge University Press, pp. 137–148.Google Scholar
Shennan, S.. (1989). Archaeological approaches to cultural identity. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shepard, A. O. (1956). Ceramics for the archaeologist. Washington, DC: Carnegie Institution of Washington.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A. (1981). Plough and pastoralism: Aspects of the secondary products revolution, in Pattern of the past: Studies in honor of David Clarke. Edited by Hodder, I., Isaac, G., and Hammond, N.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 261–305.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A.. (1984). Social evolution: Europe in the Later Neolithic and Copper ages, in European social evolution: Archaeological perspectives. Edited by Bintliff, J.. Bradford: Bradford University Press, pp. 123–134.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A.. (1997). Cups that cheered: The introduction of alcohol to prehistoric Europe, in Economy and society in prehistoric Europe: Changing perspectives. Edited by Sherratt, A.. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 376–402.Google Scholar
Shilling, C. (2003). The body and social theory. (2nd ed.). London: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Sillitoe, P. (1988). Made in Niugini: Technology in the Highlands of New Guinea. London: British Museum.Google Scholar
Sillitoe, P.. (1997). The earth oven, in The anthropologist's cookbook. (2nd ed.). Edited by Kuper, J.. London: Kegan Paul, pp. 224–231.Google Scholar
Simone, L. (1982). Il villaggio neolitico della Villa Comunale di Foggia. Origini 11:129–182.Google Scholar
Sinclair, A. (1995). The technique as symbol in Late Glacial Europe. World Archaeology 27:50–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Singer, I. B. (1973). The fools of Chelm and their history. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux.Google Scholar
Skeates, R. (1991). Caves, cult and children in Neolithic Abruzzo, Central Italy, in Sacred and Profane. Edited by Garwood, P., Jennings, D., Skeates, R., and Toms, J.. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, pp. 122–134.Google Scholar
Skeates, R.. (1992). Thin-section analysis of Italian neolithic pottery, in Papers of the Fourth Conference of Italian Archaeology. Volume 3: New developments in Italian archaeology. Edited by Herring, E., Whitehouse, R., and Wilkins, J.. London: Accordia Research Center, pp. 29–34.Google Scholar
Skeates, R.. (1993). Early metal use in the central Mediterranean region. Accordia Research Papers 4:5–48.Google Scholar
Skeates, R.. (1994). Ritual, context, and gender in Neolithic south-eastern Italy. Journal of European Archaeology 2:199–214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skeates, R.. (1995). Animate objects: A biography of prehistoric ‘axe-amulets’ in the central Mediterranean region. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 61:279–301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skeates, R.. (1998). The social life of Italian Neolithic painted pottery, in The archaeology of value. International Series (Vol. 730). Edited by Bailey, D. W.. Oxford: British Archaeological Report, pp. 131–141s.Google Scholar
Skeates, R.. (2002). The social dynamics of enclosure in the Neolithic of the Tavoliere, south-east Italy. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 13:155–188.Google Scholar
Skeates, R.. (2003). Radiocarbon dating and interpretations of the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Italy, in The widening harvest: The Neolithic transition in Europe: Looking back, looking forward. Edited by Ammerman, A. J. and Biagi, P.. Boston: Archaeological Institute of America, pp. 157–187.Google Scholar
Sofaer, J. (Ed.). (2000). Children and material culture. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Soprintendenza Archeologica della Basilicata. (1976). Il Museo Nazionale Ridola di Matera. Matera: Edizioni Meta.
S⊘rensen, M. L. (2000). Gender archaeology. Oxford: Polity.Google Scholar
Sorrentino, C. (1983). La fauna, in Passo di Corvo e la civiltà neolitica del Tavoliere. Edited by Tinè, S.. Genova: Sagep, pp. 149–158.Google Scholar
Sorrentino, C.. 1984. Lo studio della fauna di Tirlecchia. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 39:73–84.Google Scholar
Spataro, M. (2002). The first farming communities of the Adriatic: Pottery production and circulation in the early and middle Neolithic. Quaderni 9. Trieste: Società per la Preistoria e Protostoria della Regione Friuli – Venezia Giulia.Google Scholar
Spindler, K. (1994). The man in the ice. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson.Google Scholar
Stark, M. (1998). The archaeology of social boundaries. Washington, DC: Smithsonian.Google Scholar
Steensberg, A. (1980). New Guinea gardens: a study of husbandry with parallels in prehistoric Europe. London: Academic.Google Scholar
Stevanovic, M. (1997). The age of clay: The social dynamics of house destruction. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 16:334–395.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stoddart, S., Bonanno, A., Gouder, T., Malone, C., and Trump, D. H.. (1993). Cult in an island society: Prehistoric Malta in the Tarxien period. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 3:3–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strathern, A., and M. Lambek. (1998). Embodying sociality: Africanist-Melanesianist comparison, in Bodies and Persons: Comparative Perspectives from Africa and Melanesia. Edited by Strathern, A. and Lambek, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 1–25.Google Scholar
Strathern, M. (1988). The gender of the gift: Problems with women and problems with society in Melanesia. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strathern, M.. (1991). One man and many men, in Big men and great men: Personifications of power in Melanesia. Edited by Godelier, M. and Strathern, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 197–214.Google Scholar
Striccoli, R. (1988). Le culture preistoriche di Grotta Pacelli (Castellana Grotte, Bari). Brindisi: Schena Editore.Google Scholar
Taçon, P. (1991). The power of stone: Symbolic aspects of stone use and tool development in western Arnhem-land, Australia. Antiquity 65:192–207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tagliacozzo, A. (1992). I mammiferi dei giacimenti pre-e protostorici italiani: Un inquadramento paleontologico e archeozoologico, in Italia preistorica. Edited by Guidi, A. and Piperno, M.. Rome: Laterza, pp. 68–102.Google Scholar
Tagliacozzo, A.. (1993). Archeozoologia della Grotta dell'Uzzo, Sicilia. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 84 (supplemento), (II):1–278.Google Scholar
Tagliacozzo, A.. (1997). Dalla caccia alla pastorizia: La domesticazione animale, le modificazioni economiche tra il mesolitico ed il neolitico e l'introduzione degli animali domestici in Sicilia, in Prima Sicilia: alle origini della società siciliana (Vol. 1). Edited by Tusa, S.. Palermo: Ediprint, pp. 237–248.Google Scholar
Tagliacozzo, A., and I. Fiore. (1997). Analisi dei resti ossei faunistici di una struttura neolitica (Fossa 116) dell' area E, in Casale del Dolce: ambiente, economia, e cultura di una comunità preistorica del Valle del Sacco. Edited by Zarattini, A. and Petrassi, L.. Roma: Soprintendenza Archeologica per il Lazio, pp. 227–247.Google Scholar
Talalay, L. (1993). Deities, dolls and devices: Neolithic figurines from Franchthi Cave, Greece. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Talalay, L.. (2004). Heady business: skulls, heads, and decapitation in Neolithic Anatolia and Greece. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 17:139–163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Talamo, P. (1994). La capanna di Contrada S. Martino a Taurasi (AV), in L'ultima pietro, il primo metallo. Pontecagnano: Museo Nazionale dell'Agro Picentino, pp. 70–73.
Thomas, J. (1999). Understanding the Neolithic. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Thomas, J.. (2003). Thoughts on the “repacked: Neolithic revolution. Antiquity 77:67–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thorpe, I. (1996). The origins of agriculture in Europe. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Thorpe, I., and C. Richards. (1984). The decline of ritual authority and the introduction of beakers into Britain, in Neolithic studies. British Series 133. Edited by Bradley, R. and Gardiner, J.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 67–78.Google Scholar
Tilley, C. (1994). A phenomenology of landscape: Places, paths, and monuments. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Tilley, C.. (1996). An ethnography of the Neolithic. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tinè, S. (1962). Successione delle culture preistoriche in Calabria alla luce dei recenti scavi in provincia di Cosenza. Klearchos 4:38–43.Google Scholar
Tinè, S.. (1964). La grotta di S. Angelo III a Cassano Ionio. Atti e Memorie della Società della Magna Grecia 5:11–55.Google Scholar
Tinè, S.. (1983). Passo di Corvo e la civiltà neolitica del Tavoliere. Genova: Sagep.Google Scholar
Tinè, S.. (1988). Il Neolitico, in Storia della Calabria Antica. Edited by Settis, S.. Reggio Calabria: Gangemi, pp. 39–63.Google Scholar
Tinè, S.. (1992). Bova Survey 1992. Genova: Istituto Italiano di Archeologia Sperimentale.Google Scholar
Tinè, S., and Isetti, E.. (1980). Culto neolitico delle acque e recenti scavi nella Grotta Scaloria. Bullettino di Paletnologia Italiana 82:31–70.Google Scholar
Tinè, V. (2004). Il Neolitico in Calabria. Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 37:115–144.Google Scholar
Tinè, V.. (2007). Favella: un villaggio neolitico della Sibaritide (Vol. 2). Studi di Paletnologia. Rome: Museo Pigorini.Google Scholar
Tinè, V., and E. Natali. (2005). Grotta San Michele di Saracena (CS): la campagna di scavo 2003, in Preistoria e Protostoria della Calabria 1: Scavi e ricerche 2003. Edited by Ambrogio, B. and Tinè, V.. Pellaro: Gruppo Archeologico Pellarese., pp. 17–28Google Scholar
Todisco, L., and Coppola, D.. (1980). Ceramica Neolitica nel Museo di Bisceglie. Bari: Dedalo.Google Scholar
Torrence, R. (1986). Production and exchange of stone tools: Prehistoric obsidian in the Aegean. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tozzi, C., and Tasca, G.. (1989). Ripa Tetta. Atti Convegno Nazionale sulla Preistoria, Protostoria e Storia della Daunia 11:39–54.Google Scholar
Tozzi, C., and Verola, L.. (1990). La campagna di scavo 1990 a Ripatetta (Lucera, Foggia). Atti Convegno Nazionale sulla Preistoria, Protostoria e Storia della Daunia 12:37–48.Google Scholar
Tozzi, C., and Weiss, M.. (Eds.). (2000). Les Premier Peuplements Olocenes de l'Aire Corso-Toscane/Il Primo Popolamento Olocenico dell'Area Corso-Toscana. Pisa: Edizioni ETS.Google Scholar
Tozzi, C., and B. Zamagni. (2000). Il Neolitico antico nella Toscana settentrionale (Valle del Serchio), in Les Premier Peuplements Olocenes de l'Aire Corso-Toscane/Il Primo Popolamento Olocenico dell'Area Corso-Toscana. Edited by Tozzi, C. and Weiss, M.. Pisa: Edizioni ETS, pp. 57–70.Google Scholar
Tozzi, C., and Zamagni, B.. (2001). Una statuetta fittile dal villaggio neolitico di Catignano (Pescara): nota preliminare. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 51:465–469.Google Scholar
Tozzi, C., and Zamagni, B.. (2003). Gli scavi nel villaggio Neolitico di Catignano, 1971–1980. Firenze: Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria.Google Scholar
Treherne, P. (1995). The warrior's beauty: The masculine body and self-identity in Bronze Age Europe. Journal of European Archaeology 3:105–144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trigger, B. G. (1969). The Huron: Farmers of the north. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.Google Scholar
Trigger, B. G.. (1978). Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 15: Northeast. Washington, DC: Smithsonian.Google Scholar
Tringham, R., Brukner, B., Kaiser, T., Borojevic, K., Bukvic, L., Steli, P., Russell, N., Stevanovic, M., and Voytek, B.. (1992). Excavations at Opovo, 1985–1987: Socioeconomic change in the Balkan Neolithic. Journal of Field Archaeology 19:351–386.Google Scholar
Trump, D. (1966). Skorba: excavations carried out on behalf of the National Museum of Malta, 1961–1963. London: Society of Antiquaries.Google Scholar
Trump, D.. (1981). Megalithic architecture in Malta, in Antiquity and man: Essays in honour of Glyn Daniel. Edited by Evans, J. D., Cunliffe, B., and Renfrew, C.. London: Thames and Hudson, pp. 128–140.Google Scholar
Sisto, Tunzi A. (1990). Nuova miniera preistorica sul Gargano. Atti Convegno Nazionale sulla Preistoria, Protostoria e Storia della Daunia 12:63–71.Google Scholar
Sisto, Tunzi A.. 1999. Ipogei della Daunia: Preistoria di un Territorio. Foggia: Claudio Grenzi Editore.Google Scholar
Turner, V. (1974). Dramas, fields, and metaphors: Symbolic action in human society. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Turner, V.. (1988). The anthropology of performance. New York: PAJ.Google Scholar
Tusa, S. (1993). La Sicilia nella preistoria. (2nd ed.) Palermo: Sellerio.Google Scholar
Tusa, S.. (1997). Origine della società agro-pastorale, in Prima Sicilia: Alle origini della società siciliana (Vol. 1). Edited by Tusa, S.. Palermo: Ediprint, pp. 173–191.Google Scholar
Tusa, S.. (Ed.). (1997). Prima Sicilia: Alle origini delle società siciliana. Palermo: Ediprint.Google Scholar
Tusa, S., and I. Valente. (1994). La ricerca archeologica in Contrada Stretto-Partanna: il fossato/trincea Neolitico, in La preistoria del Basso Belice e della Sicilia meridionale nel quadro della preistoria siciliana e mediterranean. Edited by Tusa, S.. Palermo: Società Siciliana per la Storia Patria, pp. 177–195.Google Scholar
Twiss, K. (Ed.). (2007). We were what we ate: The archaeology of food and identity. Carbondale: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University.Google Scholar
Tykot, R. H. (1997). Characterization of the Monte Arci Obsidian sources. Journal of Archaeological Science 24:467–479.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tykot, R. H.. (1998). Mediterranean Islands and Multiple Flows: The sources and exploitation of Sardinian obsidian, in Archaeological obsidian studies. Edited by Shackley, M. S.. New York: Plenum Press, pp. 67–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tykot, R. H., and Ammerman, A. J.. (1997). Mediterranean obsidian provenance studies. Antiquity 71:1000–1006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ucko, P. (1969). Ethnography and archaeological interpretation of funerary remains. World Archaeology 1:262–280.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van Hove, D. (2003). Imagining Calabria: A GIS Approach to Neolithic Landscapes. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Southampton.
Navarro, Vida M. C. (1992). Warriors and weavers: Sex and gender in Early Iron Age graves from Pontecagnano. Journal of the Accordia Research Center 3:67–100.Google Scholar
Vigne, J.-D. (2003). L'exploitation des animaux à Torre Sabea: Nouvelles analyses sur les débuts de l'élevage en Méditerranée centrale et occidentale, in Torre Sabea: un Établissement du Néolithique Ancien en Salento. Edited by Guilaine, J. and Cremonesi, G.. Rome: École Française de Rome, pp. 325–359.Google Scholar
Villa, P., Bouville, C., Courtin, J., Helmer, D., Mahieu, E., Shipman, P., Belluomini, G., and Branca, M.. (1986). Cannibalism in the Neolithic. Science 233:431–437.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Villari, P. (1995). Le fauna della tarda preistoria nella Sicilia orientale. Siracusa: Ente Fauna Siciliana.Google Scholar
Vinson, S. (1975). Excavations at Casa S. Paolo: 1971–1972. American Journal of Archaeology 79:49–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vitelli, K. D. (1995). Pots, potters, and the shaping of Greek Neolithic society, in The emergence of pottery: Technology and innovation in ancient societies. Edited by Barnett, W. K. and Hoopes, J. W.. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, pp. 55–64.Google Scholar
Masi, Eles P., and Steffè, G.. (1987). Primi risulatati delle ricerche nell'insediamento neolitico di Lugo di Romagna (Ravenna). Atti, Riunione Scientifica dell' I.I.P.P. 26:595–602.Google Scholar
Wagstaff, M., and C. Gamble. (1983). Island resources and their limitations, in Melos: an island polity. Edited by Renfrew, C. and Wagstaff, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 95–105.Google Scholar
Warren, S. E., and J. G. Crummett. (1985). Chemical analysis of Calabrian obsidian, in The Acconia survey: Neolithic settlement and the obsidian trade. Institute of Archaeology Occasional Publications. Edited by Ammerman, A. J.. London: Institute of Archaeology, University of London, pp. 107–114.Google Scholar
Wason, P. (1994). The archaeology of rank. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, A. (2001). Composing Avebury. World Archaeology 33:296–314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weiss, K. M. (1973). Demographic models for anthropology. Volume 27. Society for American Archaeology Memoirs. Washington, DC: Society for American Archaeology.Google Scholar
Weller, O. (2002). The earliest rocksalt exploitation in Europe: A salt mountain in the Spanish Neolithic. Antiquity 76:317–318.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitehead, H. (1987). Fertility and exchange in New Guinea, in Gender and kinship: Essays toward a unified theory. Edited by Collier, J. and Yanagisako, S.. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press, pp. 244–267.Google Scholar
Whitehead, N. (1992). Tribes make states and states make tribes: Warfare and the creation of colonial tribes and states in northeastern South America, in War in the tribal zone: expanding states and indigenous warfare. Edited by Ferguson, R. and Whitehead, N.. Santa Fe: School of American Research Press, pp. 127–150.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, R. (1969). The neolithic pottery sequence in Southern Italy. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 35:267–310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitehouse, R.. (1972). The rock-cut tombs of the Central Mediterranean. Antiquity 46:275–281.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitehouse, R.. (1981). Prehistoric settlement patterns in Southeast Italy, in Archaeology and Italian Society. International Series. Edited by Hodges, R. and Barker, G.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 157–165.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, R.. (1984). Social organization in the Neolithic of Southern Italy, in The Deyá Conference of prehistory. International Series 229 (iv). Edited by Waldren, W.. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, pp. 1109–1133.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, R.. (1992). Tools the manmaker: The cultural construction of gender in Italian prehistory. Accordia Research Papers 3:41–53.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, R.. (1992). Underground religion: Cult and culture in prehistoric Italy. London: Accordia Research Center.Google Scholar
Whitehouse, R.. (2001). Exploring gender in prehistoric Italy. Papers of the British School at Rome 68:49–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whittle, A. (1996). Europe in the Neolithic: the creation of new worlds. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Whittle, A.. (2003). The archaeology of people: Dimensions of Neolithic life. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whittle, A., and Cummings., V. (Eds.). (2007). Going over: The Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Western Europe. London: British Academy.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wiessner, P., and Schiefenhövel, W.. (1996). Food and the status quest: An interdisciplinary perspective. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Wiessner, P., and Tumu, A.. (1998). Historical vines: Enga networks of exchange, ritual and warfare in Papua New Guinea. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press.Google Scholar
Wilkens, B. (1989). Il cervo dal Mesolitico all' Età del Bronzo nell' Italia centro-meridionale. Rassegna di Archeologia 8:63–95.Google Scholar
Williams, J. L. (1980). A petrological examination of the prehistoric pottery from the excavation in the Castello and Diana plain of Lipari, in Meligunìs Lipára, Volume IV: L'acropoli di Lipari nella preistoria. Edited by Bernabò Brea, L. and Cavalier, M.. Palermo: Flaccovia, pp. 845–868.Google Scholar
Williams, J. L., and S. Levi. (1995). The characterisation of Neolithic Stentinellian pottery fabrics from the Aeolian Islands and the type site of Stentinello near Syracuse, Sicily, in Meligunís Lipàra. Volume VIII: Salina (ricerche archeologiche 1989–1993). Edited by Bernabò Brea, L. and Cavalier, M.. Palermo: Flaccovia, pp. 138–163.Google Scholar
Williams, J. L., and S. Levi. (2001). Archeometria della ceramica eoliana: nuovi risultati, sintesi, e prospettive, in Studie di Preistoria e Protostoria in onore di Luigi Bernabò Brea. Edited by Martinelli, M. C. and Spigo, U.. Lipari: Museo Archeologico Regionale Eoliano, pp. 265–304.Google Scholar
Winn, S., and Shimabuku, D.. (1988). The heritage of two subsistance strategies: Preliminary report on the excavations at the Grotta Scaloria, Southeastern Italy, 1978. Halifax, Nova Scotia: Saint Mary's University.Google Scholar
Wobst, H. (1974). Boundary conditions for Paleolithic social systems: A simulation approach. American Antiquity 39:147–178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wobst, H.. (1978). The archaeo-ethnology of hunter-gatherers or the tyranny of the ethnographic record in archaeology. American Antiquity 43:303–309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, E. (1982). Europe and the people without history. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Wood, J. W., Milner, G. R., Harpending, H., and Weiss, K.. (1992). The osteological paradox: Problems in inferring prehistoric health from skeletal samples. Current Anthropology 33:343–370.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yeats, W. B. (1962). Selected poems and two plays of William Butler Yeats. New York: Collier.Google Scholar
Zarattini, A., and Petrassi, L.. (Eds.). (1997). Casale del Dolce: Ambiente, economia, e cultura di una comunità preistorica del Valle del Sacco. Rome: Soprintendenza Archeologica per il Lazio.Google Scholar
Zarattini, A., and L. Petrassi. (1997). Il valore dell'ossidiana e le vie terrestri: Ipotesi dopo i primi risultati della fluorescenza ai raggi x, in Casale del Dolce: Ambiente, economia, e cultura di una comunità preistorica del Valle del Sacco. Edited by Zarattini, A. and Petrassi, L.. Roma: Soprintendenza Archeologica per il Lazio, pp. 191–207.Google Scholar
Zilhão, J. (2003). The Neolithic transition in Portugal and the role of demic diffusion in the spread of agriculture across West Mediterranean Europe, in The widening harvest: The Neolithic transition in Europe: Looking back, looking forward. Edited by Ammerman, A. J. and Biagi, P.. Boston: American Institute of Archaeology, pp. 207–226.Google Scholar
Zohary, D., and Hopf, M.. (1993). Domestication of plants in the Old World. Oxford: Clarendon.Google Scholar
Zvelebil, M., and P. Rowly-Conwy. (1986). Foragers and farmers in Atlantic Europe, in Hunters in transition: Mesolithic societies of temperate Eurasia and their transition to farming. Edited by Zvelebil, M.. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 67–93.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • John Robb, University of Cambridge
  • Book: The Early Mediterranean Village
  • Online publication: 28 July 2009
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511499647.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • John Robb, University of Cambridge
  • Book: The Early Mediterranean Village
  • Online publication: 28 July 2009
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511499647.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • John Robb, University of Cambridge
  • Book: The Early Mediterranean Village
  • Online publication: 28 July 2009
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511499647.011
Available formats
×