Publications by Prof. Nicole Boivin
Journal Article (12)
1.
Journal Article
32 (4), s10963-019-09136-x, pp. 353 - 392 (2019)
Asian crop dispersal in Africa and Late Holocene human adaptation to tropical environments. Journal of World Prehistory 2.
Journal Article
14 (11), e0224241 (2019)
Radiocarbon dating and cultural dynamics across Mongolia’s early pastoral transition. PLoS One 3.
Journal Article
69 (11), biz105, pp. 877 - 887 (2019)
Micro methods for megafauna: novel approaches to late quaternary extinctions and their contributions to faunal conservation in the anthropocene. Bioscience 4.
Journal Article
14 (10), pp. 1 - 36 (2019)
Microliths in the South Asian rainforest ~45-4 ka: New insights from Fa-Hien Lena Cave, Sri Lanka. PLoS One 5.
Journal Article
365 (6457), eaat7487 (2019)
The formation of human populations in South and Central Asia. Science 6.
Journal Article
365 (6456), pp. 897 - 902 (2019)
Archaeological assessment reveals Earth’s early transformation through land use. Science 7.
Journal Article
5 (6), eaaw1391 (2019)
The origins of cannabis smoking: chemical residue evidence from the first millennium BCE in the Pamirs. Science Advances 8.
Journal Article
39 (2), pp. 182 - 203 (2019)
Towards a historical ecology of intertidal foraging in the Mafia Archipelago: archaeomalacology and implications for marine resource management. Journal of Ethnobiology 9.
Journal Article
14 (5), e0216433. (2019)
Heading north: Late Pleistocene environments and human dispersals in central and eastern Asia. PLoS One 10.
Journal Article
10, 739 (2019)
Specialized rainforest hunting by Homo sapiens ~45,000 years ago. Nature Communications 11.
Journal Article
14 (4), pp. 478 - 514 (2019)
Long-term trends in terrestrial and marine invertebrate exploitation on the eastern African coast: Insights from Kuumbi Cave, Zanzibar. The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology 12.
Journal Article
10 (1), 3670 (2019)
Ancient DNA from the skeletons of Roopkund Lake reveals Mediterranean migrants in India. Nature Communications Blog Post (1)
13.
Blog Post
Surveying archaeologists across the globe reveals deeper and more widespread roots of the human age, the Anthropocene. (2019)