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.

