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Bibliography of the American Colonization

from Merriwether through Staller

By , About.com Guide

This bibliography was created to go along with the article on Human Colonization of America

Merriwether, D. A., Francisco Rothhammer, and Robert E. Ferrell. 1995. Distribution of the four founding lineage haplotypes in Native Americans suggests a single wave of migration for the New World. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 98:411-430.

Moore, John H. and Michael E. Moseley. 2001. How Many Frogs Does It Take to Leap around the Americas? Comments on Anderson and Gillam. American Antiquity 66(3):526-529.

Moss, Madonna L. and Jon M. Erlandson. 1998. Early Holocene adaptations on the southern northwest coast. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 20(1):13-25.

Neves, Walter A. and Max Blum. 2000. The Buhl burial: A comment on Green et al. American Antiquity 65(1):91-193. Neves, Walter A., et al. 2005. A new early Holocene human skeleton from Brazil: implications for the settlement of the New World. Journal of Human Evolution 48(4):403-414.

Neves, Walter A., et al. 2003. Early Holocene human skeletal remains from Santana do Riacho, Brazil: Implicaitons fo rthe settlement of the new world. Journal of Human Evolution 4:19-42.

Nichols, Johanna. 1995. The spread of language around the Pacific rim. Evolutionary Anthropology 3(6):205-215.

Owsley, Douglas W. and Richard L. Jantz. 2001. Archaeological Politics and Public Interest in Paleoamerican Studies: Lessons from Gordon Creek Woman and Kennewick Man. American Antiquity 66(4):565-576.

Parenti, Fabio, Michel Fontugue, and Claude Guerin. 1996. Pedra Furada in Brazil and its 'presumed' evidence: limitations and potential of the available data. Antiquity 70:416-421.

Preston, Douglas. 1997. The Lost Man. The New Yorker 73(16):70-81.

Rogers, Richard A., L. A. Rogers, and L. D. Martin. 1992. How the door opened: The peopling of the New World. Human Biology 64(3):281-302.

Ruhlen, Merrit. 1994. Linguistic evidence for the peopling of the Americas. In Method and Theory for Investigating the Peopling of the Americas. Robson Bonnichsen and D. G. Steele, eds. Pp. 177-188. Corvallis, Oregon: Oregon State University.

Schanfield, Moses S. 1992. Immunoglobulin allotypes (GM and KM) indicate multiple founding populations of Native Americas: Evidence of at least four migrations to the New World. Human Biology 64(3):381-402.

Sims-Williams, Patrick. 1998. Genetics, linguistics, and prehistory: Thinking big and thinking straight. Antiquity 72:505-527.

Slobodin, Sergey. 1999. Northeast Asia in the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene. World Archaeology 30(3):484-502.

Stafford, Thomas W.Jr. 1994. Accelerator C-14 dating of human fossil skeletons: Assessing accuracy and results on New World specimens. In Method and Theory for Investigating the Peopling of the Americas. Robson Bonnichsen and D. G. Steele, eds. Pp. 45-55. Corvallis, Oregon: Oregon State University.

Staller, John E. 2003. An examination of the paleobotanical and chronological evidence for an early introduction of maize into South America: A response to Pearsall. Journal of Archaeological Science 30:373-380.

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