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‘Forest Moss’: no part of the European Neanderthal diet
In recent years, the study of Palaeolithic people has been a vigorous, productive topic, with the increasing knowledge of diet contributing significantly to the debate's liveliness (e.g. Richards 2009; Henry et al. 2010; Hardy et al. 2012, 2016; El Zaatari et al. 2016).
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Published in: | Antiquity 2017-10, Vol.91 (359), p.1-6, Article e3 |
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container_title | Antiquity |
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creator | Dickson, James H. Oeggl, Klaus Stanton, Daniel |
description | In recent years, the study of Palaeolithic people has been a vigorous, productive topic, with the increasing knowledge of diet contributing significantly to the debate's liveliness (e.g. Richards 2009; Henry et al. 2010; Hardy et al. 2012, 2016; El Zaatari et al. 2016). |
doi_str_mv | 10.15184/aqy.2017.165 |
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source | International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Art, Design and Architecture Collection; International Bibliography of Art (IBA); Cambridge University Press; ProQuest One Literature; Humanities Index |
subjects | Archaeology Deduction Deoxyribonucleic acid Diet DNA Excavation Food Hominids Measurement Mosses Neanderthals Nutrition Project Gallery |
title | ‘Forest Moss’: no part of the European Neanderthal diet |
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