Publications of W. Christopher Carleton
All genres
Journal Article (10)
2022
Journal Article
9, 771683 (2022)
The 4.2 ka event and the end of the Maltese “Temple Period”. Frontiers in Earth Science 2021
Journal Article
9, 769107 (2021)
A song of neither ice nor fire: temperature extremes had no impact on violent conflict among european societies during the 2nd Millennium CE. Frontiers in Earth Science
Journal Article
37, 102995, pp. 1 - 10 (2021)
Mass-kill hunting and Late Quaternary ecology: New insights into the ‘desert kite’ phenomenon in Arabia. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports
Journal Article
12 (1), 965, pp. 1 - 15 (2021)
Climate change, not human population growth, correlates with Late Quaternary megafauna declines in North America. Nature Communications
Journal Article
597, s41586-021-03863-y, pp. 376 - 380 (2021)
Multiple hominin dispersals into Southwest Asia over the past 400,000 years. Nature 2020
Journal Article
36 (1), 3256, pp. 110 - 123 (2020)
Evaluating Bayesian Radiocarbon-dated Event Count (REC) models for the study of long-term human and environmental processes. Journal of Quaternary Science
Journal Article
Field-based sciences must transform in response to COVID-19. Nature Ecology & Evolution, s41559-020-01317-8 (2020)
2019
Journal Article
218, pp. 228 - 253 (2019)
Taphonomic and zooarchaeological investigations at the middle Pleistocene site of Ti's al Ghadah, western Nefud Desert, Saudi Arabia. Quaternary Science Reviews
Journal Article
28 (2), pp. 57 - 59 (2019)
Comparative analysis of Middle Stone Age artifacts in Africa (CoMSAfrica). Evolutionary Anthropology 2018
Journal Article
2, pp. 800 - 809 (2018)
Homo sapiens in Arabia by 85,000 years ago. Nature Ecology & Evolution Book (1)
2020
Book
Culture history and convergent evolution: Can we detect populations in prehistory? Springer, Cham (2020), 302 pp.
Book Chapter (1)
2020
Book Chapter
Groucutt, H. S.). Springer, Cham (2020)
Culture and Convergence: the curious case of the Nubian Complex. In: Culture history and convergent evolution: Can we detect populations in prehistory?, 4, pp. 55 - 86 (Ed.