Publications of Alicia R. Ventresca Miller
All genres
Journal Article (24)
1.
Journal Article
13, 2848 (2023)
Adaptability of millets and landscapes: ancient cultivation in North-Central Asia. Agronomy 2.
Journal Article
9 (15), eadf3904 (2023)
Genetic population structure of the Xiongnu Empire at imperial and local scales. Science Advances 3.
Journal Article
6 (1), 351 (2023)
Permafrost preservation reveals proteomic evidence for yak milk consumption in the 13th century. Communications Biology 4.
Journal Article
61 (2), 0019, pp. 337 - 367 (2022)
Bioarchaeology in Central Asia: growing from legacies to enhance future research. Asian perspectives 5.
Journal Article
17 (5), e0265775 (2022)
The spread of herds and horses into the Altai: how livestock and dairying drove social complexity in Mongolia. PLoS One 6.
Journal Article
4 (3), 4030093, pp. 1681 - 1702 (2021)
Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Women and Early Career Archaeologists. Heritage 7.
Journal Article
38, 102973, pp. 1 - 8 (2021)
Iron age societies of Western Transbaikalia: reconstruction of diet and lifeways. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 8.
Journal Article
62 (3), 714245, pp. 251 - 286 (2021)
An imagined past?: Nomadic narratives in Central Asian archaeology. Current Anthropology 9.
Journal Article
16 (3), e0245996, pp. 1 - 25 (2021)
Re-evaluating Scythian lifeways: Isotopic analysis of diet and mobility in Iron Age Ukraine. PLoS One 10.
Journal Article
598, s41586-021-03798-4, pp. 629 - 633 (2021)
Dairying enabled Early Bronze Age Yamnaya steppe expansions. Nature 11.
Journal Article
183 (4), pp. 890 - 904.e29 (2020)
A dynamic 6,000-year genetic history of Eurasia’s eastern steppe. Cell 12.
Journal Article
10 (1), 11241 (2020)
The earliest domestic cat on the Silk Road. Scientific Reports 13.
Journal Article
8, 168 (2020)
Ecosystem engineering among ancient pastoralists in Northern Central Asia. Frontiers in Earth Science 14.
Journal Article
Close management of sheep in ancient Central Asia: evidence for foddering, transhumance, and extended lambing seasons during the Bronze and Iron Ages. Science and Technology of Archaeological Research: STAR, 1759316 (2020)
15.
Journal Article
10 (1), 3916 (2020)
Economic diversification supported the growth of Mongolia’s Nomadic Empires. Scientific Reports 16.
Journal Article
4 (3), pp. 346 - 355 (2020)
Dairy pastoralism sustained eastern Eurasian steppe populations for 5,000 years. Nature Ecology & Evolution 17.
Journal Article
10, 1001 (2020)
Early pastoral economies and herding transitions in Eastern Eurasia. Scientific Reports 18.
Journal Article
61 (6), 12493, pp. 1399 - 1416 (2019)
Mobility and diet in the Iron Age Pontic forest-steppe: A multi-isotopic study of urban populations at Bel'sk. Archaeometry 19.
Journal Article
365 (6456), pp. 897 - 902 (2019)
Archaeological assessment reveals Earth’s early transformation through land use. Science 20.
Journal Article
9 (1), 8363 (2019)
Intensification in pastoralist cereal use coincides with the expansion of trans-regional networks in the Eurasian Steppe. Scientific Reports