BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Anthony, D. W. and Brown, D. R. 1991. The Origins of Horseback Riding, Antiquity, 65, 22–38
- Anon. 1901. Folklore, 12, 348
- Bahn, P. G. 1978. The ‘unacceptable face’ of the West European Upper Paleolithic, Antiquity, 52, 186–90
- Bahn, P. G., 1980–81. Crib-biting; tethered horses in the Paleolithic?, World Archaeology, 12, 212–17
- Barker, G. 1985. Prehistoric Farming in Europe, Cambridge
- Bender, B. 1978–79. Gatherer-Hunter to Farmer; a social perspective, World Archaeology, 10, 204–23
- Birrell, J. 1992. Deer and Deer Farming in Medieval England, Agric. History Review, 40(2), 118
- Clark, G. 1941. Horses and Battle-axes, Antiquity, 15, 50–70
- Cooper, M. and Johnson, A. W. 1984. Poisonous Plants in Britain and their effects on Animals and Man, London: H.M.S.O.
- Cunliffe, B. 1992. Pits, Preconceptions and Propitiation in the British Iron Age, Oxford J. Archaeology, 11(1), 70–80
- Cunliffe, B., 1991. Iron Age Communities in Britain, 3rd edn, London
- Davidsen, K. 1978. The Final TRB Culture in Denmark; A Settlement Study, Copenhagen: Akademisk Forlag
- Ely, S. 1848. On the cultivation of gorse as a feed for cattle, J. Royal Agricultural Society of England Ser. i(6), 523–28
- Fasham, P. J. 1985. The Prehistoric Settlement at Winnall Down, Winchester (Hampshire Field Club Monograph, 2)
- Fleming, A. 1972–73. The Genesis of Pastoralism in European Prehistory, World Archaeology, 4, 179–91
- Garner, R.J. and Papworth, D. S. 1967. Veterinary Toxicology, 3rd edn, London
- Grant, A. 1984. Animal Husbandry in Wessex and the Thames Valley, in Cunliffe, B. (ed.), Aspects of the Iron Age in Central Southern Britain, Oxford Committee for Archaeology, Monograph, 2, 102–19
- Grant, A., 1991. Animal Husbandry, in Cunliffe, B. and Poole, C. (eds. Danebury, A Hill Fort in Hampshire, 5, (C.B.A. Research Report, 73), 447–78
- Grant, A., 1991. Economic or Symbolic? Animals and Ritual Behaviour, in Garwood P., et al., (eds.), Sacred and Profane; Archaeology, Ritual and Religion, Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, 109–14
- Harcourt, R. A. 1979. The Animal Bones, in Wainright, G. (ed.), Gussage-All-Saints: An Iron Age Settlement in Dorset (Dept of the Environment Archaeological Report, 10, H.M.S.O.), 150–60
- Harding, D. W. 1972. The Iron Age in the Upper Thames Basin, Oxford
- Harris, D. R. and Hillman, G. L. (eds.), 1989. Farming and Foraging; the Evolution of Plant Exploitation, London
- Henderson, J. 1991. Industrial Specialization in Late Iron Age Britain and Europe, Archaeol. J., 148, 104–48
- Humphries, C. J. and Shaughnessy, E. 1987. Gorse, Aylesbury
- Jarman, M. R., Bailey, G. N., and Jarman, H. N. 1982. Early Agriculture; its foundations and Development, Cambridge
- Jockle, W. 1992. The Dangerous Mare Goddess, J. Equine Veterinary Science, 12(6), 332
- Johns, C. 1990. Romano-British Statuette of a mounted warrior god, Antiq. J., 70(2), 448–52
- Jones, M. L. 1984. Society and Settlement in Wales and the Marches, 500 B.C.-1100 A.D., Oxford: B.A.R., British Series, 121(1)
- Law, R. 1980. The Horse in West African History, Oxford
- Levine, M. 1990. Dereivka and the problem of horse domestication, Antiquity, 64, 727–40
- Littauer, M. and Bahn, P. 1980. Horse sense or nonsense? Antiquity, 54, 139–41
- Lloyd, J. D. K. 1969. A Discovery of Horses Skulls at Gunley, Montgomeryshire Collections, 61, 131–34
- Maltby, J. M. 1981. Iron Age, Romano-British and Anglo-Saxon Animal Husbandry, in Jones, M., and Dimbleby, G., (eds.), The Environment of Man; The Iron Age to the Anglo-Saxon Period, Oxford: B.A.R., British Series, 87, 155–204
- Mellars, P. 1976. Fire Ecology, Animal Populations and Man; a study of some ecological relationships in Prehistory, Proc. Prehistoric Soc., 14, 16–45
- Merrifield, R. 1987. The Archaeology of Ritual and Magic, London: Batsford
- Miller, R. 1981. Male Aggression, Dominance and Breeding Behaviour in Red Desert Feral Horses, Z. Tierpsychologie, 57, 340–51
- Moore-Colyer, R.J. 1994. On the Ritual of Horses, Folk Life, Journal of Ethnographic Studies, 32, 58–65
- Moorey, P. R. S. 1987. The Emergence of the light, horse-drawn chariot in the Near East, ca. 2000–1500 B.C., World Archaeology, 18(2), 196–215
- Needham, S. P. (ed.), 1991. Excavation and Salvage at Runnymede Bridge, the Late Bronze Age Waterfront site, London
- Piggott, S. 1962. Heads and Hooves, Antiquity, 36, 110–11
- Radley, J. 1961. Holly as a Winter Feed, Agric. History Review, 9
- Rees, S. 1979. Agricultural Implements in Prehistoric and Roman Britain, Oxford: B.A.R., British Series, 69(2)
- Rogers, R. and Rogers, S. 1988. Notching and Anterior Bevelling on Fossil Horse Incisors: Indicators of Domestication?, Quaternary Research, 28, 72–74
- Ross, A. 1967. Pagan Celtic Britain, London
- Rowley-Conwy, P. 1990. On the Osteological Evidence for Paleolithic Domestication: Barking up the Wrong Tree, Current Anthropology, 31(5), 543–47
- Simmons, I. G. and Dimbleby, G. W. 1974. The Possible role of ivy in the Mesolithic Economy of Western Europe, J. Archaeol. Sciences, 1(3), 291–94
- Spray, M. 1981. Holly as a fodder in England, Agric. History Review, 29(2), 101
- Stead, I. M. 1977. The Arras Culture, Yorks. Phil. Soc.
- Tyler, S. 1972. The Behaviour and Social Organization of the New Forest Ponies, Animal Behaviour Monograph, 5(2), 92–96
- Uerpmann, A. P. 1987. In Hedges, R. E. M., Housley, R. A., Law, I. A., Perry, C., and Gowlett, J., Radio carbon dates from the Oxford A.M.S. system: Archaeometry dateiist 6, Archaeometry, 29, 289–306
- Wainright, G. and Spratling, M. 1973. The Iron Age Settlement ofGussage-All-Saints, Antiquity, 47, 121–23
- Whimster, R. 1981. Burial Practice in Iron Age Britain, Oxford: B.A.R. British Series, 90(2)
- Windeis, F. 1949. The Lascaux Cave Paintings, London