CITED WORK: EAST AFRICAN PERSPECTIVES

  1. Day MH et al. (1980) A new hominid fossil skull (L.H.18) from the Ngaloba Beds, Laetoli, northern Tanzania. Nature 284: 55-56.
  2. Bräuer G & Leakey RE (1986) The ES-11693 cranium from Eliye Springs, west Turkana, Kenya. JHE 15: 289-312.
  3. McDermott F et al. (1996) New Late Pleistocene uranium-thorium and ESR dates for the Singa hominid (Sudan). JHE 31: 507–516.
  4. Bräuer G (2008) The origin of modern anatomy: By speciation or intraspecific evolution? Ev Anth 17: 22–37.
  5. McBrearty S & Tryon C (2006) From Acheulean to Middle Stone Age in the Kapthurin Formation, Kenya. In E Hovers & SL Kuhn (Eds) Transitions Before the Transition, pp.257-277, Springer.
  6. Mirazon Lahr, M. (2013) Genetic and fossil evidence for modern human origins. In: P. Mitchell & P. Lane (Eds) Oxford Handbook of African Archaeology, pp.  323-338, Oxford: OUP.
  7. Leakey RE (1969) Early Homo sapiens remains from the Omo River region of South-west Ethiopia. Nature 222: 1132-1133.
  8. McDougall et al. (2005) Stratigraphic placement and age of modern humans from Kibish, Ethiopia. Nature 433: 733-736.
  9. Fleagle JG et al. (2008) Paleoanthropology of the Kibish Formation, southern Ethiopia: Introduction. JHE 55: 360-365.
  10. White TD et al. (2003) Pleistocene Homo sapiens from Middle Awash, Ethiopia. Nature 423: 742-747.
  11. Clark JD et al. (2003) Stratigraphic, chronological and behavioural contexts of Pleistocene Homo sapiens from Middle Awash, Ethiopia. Nature 423: 747-752.
  12. Shea J (2008) The Middle Stone Age archaeology of the Lower Omo Valley Kibish Formation: Excavations, lithic assemblages, and inferred patterns of early Homo sapiens behaviour. JHE 55: 448-485.
  13. Basell LS (2008) Middle Stone Age (MSA) site distributions in eastern Africa and their relationship to Quaternary environmental change, refugia and the evolution of Homo sapiens. QSR 27: 2484-2498.
  14. Tryon CA et al. (2010) The Pleistocene archaeology and environments of the Wasiriya Beds, Rusinga Island, Kenya. JHE 59: 657-671.
  15. Tryon CA et al. (2008) The Middle Stone Age of the northern Kenyan Rift: age and context of new archaeological sites from the Kapedo Tuffs. JHE 55: 652-664.
  16. Gliganic LA et al. (2012) New ages for Middle and Later Stone Age deposits at Mumba rockshelter, Tanzania: Optically stimulated luminescence dating of quartz and feldspar grains. JHE 62: 533-547.
  17. Ambrose SH (1998) Chronology of the Later Stone Age and food production in East Africa. JAS 25: 377-392..
  18. Černý V et al. (2011) Genetic structure of Pastoral and Farmer populations in the African Sahel. MBE 28: 2491-2011.
  19. O’Connell JF et al. (1988) Hadza hunting, butchering, and bone transport and their archaeological implications. JAR 44: 113-161.
  20. Hawkes K et al. (2001) Hadza meat sharing. EHB 22: 113-142.
  21. Trevor JC (1947) The physical characters of the Sandawe. JRAI 77: 61-78.
  22. Raa ET (1970) The couth and uncouth: Ethnic, social, and linguistic divisions among the Sandawe of Central Tanzania. Anthropos 65: 127-153.
  23. Gonder MK et al. (2007) Whole-mtDNA genome sequence analysis of ancient African lineages. MBE 24: 757-768.
  24. Tishkoff SA et al. (2007) History of click-speaking populations of Africa inferred from tmDNA and Y chromosome genetic variation. MBE 24: 2180-2195.
  25. Tishkoff S et al. (2009) The genetic structure and history of Africans and African Americans. Science 324: 1035-1044.
  26. Veeramah KR et al. (2012) An early divergence of KhoeSan ancestors from those of other modern humans is supported by an ABC-based analysis of autosomal resequencing data. MBE 29: 617-630.