scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P356 | DOI | 10.1007/S12520-020-01146-7 |
P953 | full work available at URL | https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s12520-020-01146-7.pdf |
P50 | author | Dave N. Schmitt | Q105730516 |
P2093 | author name string | David B. Madsen | |
Karen D. Lupo | |||
P2860 | cites work | On Mammalian Taphonomy, Taxonomic Diversity, and Measuring Subsistence Data in Zooarchaeology | Q59235188 |
Holocene Environmental Change, Artiodactyl Abundances, and Human Hunting Strategies in the Great Basin | Q59236678 | ||
Evaluating cost-efficiency and accuracy of hunter harvest survey designs | Q59849472 | ||
Pinniped behavior, foraging theory, and the depression of metapopulations and nondepression of a local population on the southern Northwest Coast of North America | Q60038636 | ||
Small prey hunting technology and zooarchaeological measures of taxonomic diversity and abundance: Ethnoarchaeological evidence from Central African forest foragers | Q60038998 | ||
Prey choice, mass collecting, and the wild European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) | Q60039357 | ||
When bigger is not better: The economics of hunting megafauna and its implications for Plio-Pleistocene hunter-gatherers | Q60039652 | ||
Climate, bone density, and resource depression: What is driving variation in large and small game in Fremont archaeofaunas? | Q60039653 | ||
A model of central place forager prey choice and an application to faunal remains from the Mimbres Valley, New Mexico | Q60039654 | ||
Agency and Adaptation: New Directions in Evolutionary Anthropology | Q60334711 | ||
Late Quaternary environmental change in the Bonneville basin, western USA | Q85557103 | ||
The Bonneville Estates Rockshelter rodent fauna and changes in Late Pleistocene–Middle Holocene climates and biogeography in the Northern Bonneville Basin, USA | Q96473638 | ||
Aboriginal Burning Regimes and Hunting Strategies in Australia’s Western Desert | Q108531079 | ||
ELK ALTER HABITAT SELECTION AS AN ANTIPREDATOR RESPONSE TO WOLVES | Q112772728 | ||
Behavioral Ecology and Archaeology | Q112863393 | ||
Evolutionary Foraging Models in Zooarchaeological Analysis: Recent Applications and Future Challenges | Q112863395 | ||
Testing the ?ecologically noble savage? hypothesis: Interspecific prey choice by Piro hunters of Amazonian Peru | Q113038164 | ||
Costly signaling and torch fishing on Ifaluk atoll | Q33909965 | ||
Hunting income patterns among the Hadza: big game, common goods, foraging goals and the evolution of the human diet | Q34549425 | ||
What Explains Differences in Men's and Women's Production? : Determinants of Gendered Foraging Inequalities among Martu | Q38911946 | ||
Why do good hunters have higher reproductive success? | Q42635300 | ||
Antilocapra americana | Q44826212 | ||
Ovis canadensis | Q44838707 | ||
Provisioning offspring and others: risk-energy trade-offs and gender differences in hunter-gatherer foraging strategies. | Q55661964 | ||
Hunting, healing, and hxaro exchange | Q55952284 | ||
The relation between maximal running speed and body mass in terrestrial mammals | Q56039241 | ||
Conservation and Subsistence in Small-Scale Societies | Q56139775 | ||
Showing off, handicap signaling, and the evolution of men's work | Q56485623 | ||
Family Provisioning Is Not the Only Reason Men Hunt | Q56699783 | ||
A simple quantitative method for assessing animal welfare outcomes in terrestrial wildlife shooting: the European rabbit as a case study | Q57009179 | ||
REVISITING HOGUP CAVE, UTAH: INSIGHTS FROM NEW RADIOCARBON DATES AND STRATIGRAPHIC ANALYSIS | Q57266240 | ||
Behavioral ecology and the future of archaeological science | Q57266246 | ||
Living outside the box: An updated perspective on diet breadth and sexual division of labor in the Prearchaic Great Basin | Q57266254 | ||
Megafauna in a continent of small game: Archaeological implications of Martu Camel hunting in Australia's Western Desert | Q57266259 | ||
Risky Pursuits: Martu Hunting and the Effects of Prey Mobility: Reply to Ugan and Simms | Q57266262 | ||
Explaining prehistoric variation in the abundance of large prey: A zooarchaeological analysis of deer and rabbit hunting along the Pecho Coast of Central California | Q57266264 | ||
Prey spatial structure and behavior affect archaeological tests of optimal foraging models: Examples from the Emeryville Shellmound vertebrate fauna | Q57665999 | ||
Foraging decisions among Aché hunter-gatherers: New data and implications for optimal foraging models | Q58298940 | ||
An Introduction to Pronghorn Biology, Ethnography and Archaeology | Q58509067 | ||
Running energetics in the pronghorn antelope | Q59048264 | ||
Showing off, Foraging Models, and the Ascendance of Large-Game Hunting in the California Middle Archaic | Q59224176 | ||
Sociopolitical Meaning of Faunal Remains from Baker Village | Q59228680 | ||
On Prey Mobility, Prey Rank, and Foraging Goals | Q59229284 | ||
Prey Body Size and Ranking in Zooarchaeology: Theory, Empirical Evidence, and Applications from the Northern Great Basin | Q59229376 | ||
P433 | issue | 8 | |
P921 | main subject | archaeological science | Q637284 |
P577 | publication date | 2020-07-08 | |
P1433 | published in | Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences | Q15816356 |
P1545 | series ordinal | 160 | |
P1476 | title | Size matters only sometimes: the energy-risk trade-offs of Holocene prey acquisition in the Bonneville basin, western USA | |
P478 | volume | 12 |
Q129517198 | Puma (Puma concolor) modifications on medium-sized mammals: Can its taphonomic signature be differentiated from other South American carnivores? | cites work | P2860 |
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