References
- Bodmer W.F., Cavalli-Sforza L.L. A migration matrix model for the study of random genetic drift. Genetics 1968; 59: 565–592
- Chapman A.C., Jacquard A.M. Un isolat d'Amérique Centrale: les Indiens Jicaques de Honduras. Génétique et Population, Hommage à Jean Sutter. I.N.E.D., Paris 1971; 163–185, I.N.E.D., Travaux et Documents no. 60
- Friedl J. Kippel: A Changing Village in the Alps. Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York 1974
- Hollingsworth J.H. Historical studies of migration. Annales de Demographie Historique 1970; 87–96
- Jacquard A.M. The Genetic Structure of Populations. Springer Verlag, New York 1974
- Lasker G.W. Migration, isolation, and ongoing human evolution. Human Biology 1960; 32: 80–88
- Levine D. Family Formation in the Age of Nascent Capitalism. Academic Press, New York 1977
- Markle G.E., Pasco S. Family limitation among the Old Order Amish. Population Studies 1977; 31: 267–280
- Netting R.McC. Of men and meadows: Strategies of alpine land use. Anthropological Quarterly 1972; 45: 132–144
- Netting R.McC. What alpine peasants have in common: Observations on communal tenure in a Swiss village. Human Ecology 1976; 4: 135–146
- Roberts D.F. Genetic effects of population size reduction. Nature 1968; 220: 1084–1088
- Skolnick M., Cavalli-Sforza L.L., Moroni A., Siri E. A preliminary analysis of the genealogy of Parma Valley, Italy. The Demographic Evolution of Human Populations, R.H. Ward, K.M. Weiss. Academic Press, London 1976; 95–116, In
- Smith D.S. A homeostatic demographic regime: Patterns in West European family reconstitution studies. Population Patterns in the Past, R.D. Lee. Academic Press, New York 1977; 19–51, In
- Thestrup P. Methodological problems of a family reconstitution study in a Danish rural parish before 1800. Scandinavian Economic History Review 1972; 20: 1–26
- Tilly C. The historical study of vital processes. CRSO Working Paper no. 108. Center for Research on Social Organization, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 1974, mimeographed
- Wrigley E.A. Family limitation in pre-industrial England. Economic History Review 1966; 19: 82–109, 2nd Series