Bodzsár, É.B., Susanne, C. (2002, Eds) Ecological Aspects of Past Human Settlements in Europe. EAA Biennial Books, 2.
Contents
Bennike, P., Alexandersen, V.: Foreword.
Alexeeva, T.I., Buzhilova, A.P., Kozlovskaya, M.V., Mednikova, M.B.: Ethnohistory ecology of the upper Palaeolithic humans from Sunghir, Russia.
Froment, A.: The biological evolution of populations during the early Holocene transitions.
Piontek, J., Vancata, V.: Genetic transition to agriculture in Europe: Evolutionary trends in body size and body shape.
Crubézy, E., Brozek, J., Guilaine, J.: The transition to agriculture in Europe: An anthropobiological perspective.
Bogatenkov, D.V.: Bio-archaeological reconstruction on data of prehistoric populations from South of Eastern Europe, III C. BC–III C. AD. Ecological aspects.
Jankauskas, R.: Anthropology of the Iron Age inhabitants of Lithuania
Haduch, E.: The human biology of the Neolithic and Bronze Age population of Poland.
Lynnerup, N.: The norse in greenland coping with ecological constraints.
Børglum, A.D., Madsen, B., Jensen, P.K.A., Vernesi, C., Barbujani, G.: Population genetic study of possible descendants of the Cimbri in Denmark and Italy.
Roberts, C.A., Lewis, M.E.: Ecology and infectious disease in Britain from prehistory to the present: The case of respiratory infections.
Pálfi, G.: Palaeoepidemiological reconstruction of tuberculosis, with particular attention to Europe.
Morillon, M., Mafart, B.Y., Mathon, T.: Yellow fever in Europe during 19th century.
Finke, L., Bruchhaus, H., Jaeger, U.: Dental anthropological investigations of Neolithic skeletal material in the area of the middle Elbe and Saale River, Germany.
Thurzo, M.: Dental disease as an indicator of ecological factors in Medieval skeletal populations from Slovakia.