Publication Cover
Environmental Archaeology
The Journal of Human Palaeoecology
Volume 22, 2017 - Issue 2
4,929
Views
14
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Can't find a pulse? Celtic bean (Vicia faba L.) in British prehistory

&

References

  • Alldritt, D. 2005. Carbonised plant macrofossils and charcoal, pp. 184–186 in Roberts, I. (ed.), Ferrybridge Henge: The Ritual Landscape. Leeds: West Yorkshire Archaeological Services.
  • Allison, E., Carruthers, W. and Locker, A. 2010. Assessment of biological remains from the environmental samples, pp. 123–160 in Rady, J. (ed.), Excavations at Thanet Earth 2007–2008. Assessment Report Volume 1. Unpublished Report: Canterbury Archaeological Trust Report No. 2010/78.
  • Allot, A. 2009. The charred plant remains, pp. 21–23 in Stevens, S. (ed.), Archaeological Investigations at the Former Site of Highdown School, Durrington Lane, Worthing West Sussex. Unpublished Report: Archaeology South East Report No. 2009145.
  • Allot, L. 2010. Environmental remains, pp. 68–80 in Hart, D. (ed.), A Post-Excavation Assessment and Updated Project Design for Excavations at the Brighton and Hove Wastewater Treatment Works, Lower Hoddern Farm, Peacehaven, East Sussex. Unpublished Report: Archaeology South East Report No. 2010098.
  • Ballantyne, R. 2014. Archaeobotany, pp. 148–169 in Brittain, M., Sharples, N. and Evans, C. (eds.), Excavations at Ham Hill, Somerset (2013). Unpublished Report: Cambridge Archaeological Unit Report No. 1247.
  • Barrett, J. 1994. Fragments from Antiquity: An Archaeology of Social Life in Britain 2900 – 1200BC. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Behre, K-E. 2004. Coastal development, sea-level change and settlement history during the later Holocene in the Clay district of lower Saxony (Niedersachsen), northern Germany. Quaternary International 112, 37–53. doi: 10.1016/S1040-6182(03)00064-8
  • Bell, M. 2013. The Bronze Age in the Severn Estuary and Beyond. York: Council for British Archaeology.
  • Bogaard, A. and Jones, G. 2007. Neolithic farming in Britain and central Europe: contrast or continuity? pp. 357–375 in Whittle, A. and Cummings, V. (eds.), Going Over: The Mesolithic-Neolithic Transition in North-West Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Bogaard, A., Hodgson, J., Nitsch, E., Jones, G., Styring, A., Diffey, C., Pouncett, J., Herbig, C., Charles, M., Ertuğ, F., Tugay, O., Filipovic, D. and Fraser, R. 2016. Combining functional weed ecology and crop stable isotope ratios to identify cultivation intensity: a comparison of cereal production regimes in Haute Provence, France and Asturias, Spain. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 25, 57–73. doi: 10.1007/s00334-015-0524-0
  • Bradley, R. 2007. The Prehistory of Britain and Ireland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Britton, K., Müldner, G. and Bell, M. 2008. Stable isotope evidence for salt-marsh grazing in the Bronze age Severn estuary, UK: implications for palaeodietary analysis at coastal sites. Journal of Archaeological Science 35, 2111–2118. doi: 10.1016/j.jas.2008.01.012
  • Bronk-Ramsey, C. 2013. OxCal.4.2. Oxford: Oxford University, Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit.
  • Brown, T. A., Cappellini, E., Kistler, L., Lister, D. L., Oliveira, H. R., Wales, N. and Schlumbaum, A. 2015. Recent advances in ancient DNA research and their implications for archaeobotany. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 24, 207–214. doi: 10.1007/s00334-014-0489-4
  • Butler, E. A. 1990. Legumes in Antiquity: A Micromorphological Investigation of Seeds of the Vicieae. Unpublished PhD Dissertation, University College London.
  • Campbell, G. 1992a. Bronze age plant remains, pp. 103–112 in Moore, J. and Jennings, D. (eds.), Reading Business Park: A Bronze Age Landscape. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology.
  • Campbell, G. 1992b. The charred plant remains, pp. 45–49 in Cunliffe, B. (ed.), Le Câtel de Rozel, Jersey: The Excavations of 1988–1990. The Antiquaries Journal 72, 18–53.
  • Campbell, G. 2000. Plant utilization: The evidence from charred plant remains, pp. 45–59 in Cunliffe, B. (ed.), The Danebury Environs Programme: The Prehistory of a Wessex Landscape Vol 1: Introduction. London: English Heritage.
  • Campbell, G. and Straker, V. 2003. Prehistoric crop husbandry in southern England: development and regionality, pp. 14–30 in Robson Brown, K.A. (ed.), Archaeological Sciences 1999. Proceedings of the Archaeological Sciences Conference, University of Bristol, 1999. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, International Series 1111.
  • de Carle, D. E. 2014. Changing Plant Subsistence in Prehistoric Southwest Britain: Archaeobotanical and Anthracological Evidence from the South Cadbury Environs Project. Volumes I and II. Unpublished PhD Dissertation, University of Sheffield.
  • Carruthers, W. 1991a. The carbonised plant remains from Rowden, pp. 106–111 in Woodward, P. J. (ed.), The South Dorset Ridgeway: Survey and Excavations 19771984. Dorset: Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society (Monograph Series No. 8).
  • Carruthers, W. 1991b. Carbonised plant remains, pp. 203–209 in Allen, M. and Scaife, R. (eds.), Redeemed from the Heath: The Archaeology of the Wytch Farm Oilfield (19871990). Dorset: Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society (Monograph Series No. 9).
  • Carruthers, W. 2001. Charred plant remains from the Bronze-Age horizon, pp. 46–50 in Patton, M. (ed.), Le Pinacle, Jersey: A Reassessment of the Neolithic, Chalcolithic and Bronze-Age Horizons. Archaeological Journal 158, 1–61.
  • Carruthers, W. 2006. Waterlogged plant remains from Perry Oaks, Appendix 9 (CD Rom), in Framework Archaeology (ed.), Landscape Evolution in the Middle Thames Valley. Heathrow Terminal 5 Excavations, Volume 1, Perry Oaks. Oxford and Salisbury: Framework Archaeology.
  • Carruthers, W. 2009. The charred plant remains, pp. 339–348 in Ladle, L. and Woodward, A. (eds.), Excavations at Bestwall Quarry, Wareham 19922005: Volume 1, the Prehistoric Landscape. Dorchester: Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society Monograph 19.
  • Carruthers, W. 2010a. Heathrow terminal 5: Environmental overview, section 21 (CD Rom), in Framework Archaeology (ed.), Landscape Evolution in the Middle Thames Valley. Heathrow Terminal 5 Excavations, Volume 2. Oxford and Salisbury: Framework Archaeology.
  • Carruthers, W. 2010b. The plant remains, pp. 62–64 in McOmish, D., Field, D. and Brown, G. (eds.), The Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age Midden site at East Chisenbury, Wiltshire. Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine 104, 35–101.
  • Caseldine, A. E. 1987. Charcoal patches from Meare Village East 1982, pp. 223–226 in Coles, J. M. (ed.), Meare Village East: The Excavations of A. Bulleid and H. St. George Gray 1932–1956. Somerset Levels Papers 13, 6–254.
  • Caseldine, A. E., Griffiths, C. and Druce, D. 2013. The botanical evidence from Redwick, pp. 95–129 in Bell, M. (ed.), The Bronze Age in the Severn Estuary and Beyond. York: Council for British Archaeology.
  • Clapham, A. J. 1999a. Charred plant remains, pp. 112–118 in Butterworth, C. A., Hayne Lane, pp. 91–129 in Fitzpatrick, A. P., Butterworth, C. A. and Grove, J. (eds.), Prehistoric and Roman Sites in East Devon: The A30 Honiton to Exeter Improvement. Salisbury: Wessex Archaeology.
  • Clapham, A. J. 1999b. Charred plant remains, pp. 184–188 in Butterworth, C. A., Blackhorse, pp. 160–193 in Fitzpatrick, A. P., Butterworth, C. A. and Grove, J. (eds.), Prehistoric and Roman Sites in East Devon: The A30 Honiton to Exeter Improvement DBFO, 19969. Salisbury: Wessex Archaeology.
  • Coles, J. B., Rouillard, S. E. and Backway, C. 1986. The 1984 excavations at meare. Somerset Levels Papers 12, 30–57.
  • Cunliffe, B. 2005. Iron Age Communities in Britain: An Account of England, Scotland and Wales from the Seventh Century BC until the Roman Conquest. London: Routledge.
  • Davis, A. 2006. The Charred Plant Remains from Cobham Golf Course, Cobham, Kent. Unpublished Report, CTRL Specialist Report Series. Archaeology Data Service 2006. doi:10.5284/1000230.
  • Dennell, R. W. 1976. The economic importance of plant resources represented on archaeological sites. Journal of Archaeological Science 3, 229–247. doi: 10.1016/0305-4403(76)90057-1
  • Dyer, C. 1989. Standards of Living in the Later Middle Ages, c.12001520. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Evans, A. and Jones, M. 1979. The plant remains, pp. 172–178 in Wainwright, G. J. (ed.), Gussage All Saints: An Iron Age Settlement in Dorset. London: English Heritage.
  • Fairbairn, A. 2000. On the spread of crops across Neolithic Britain, with special reference to southern England, pp. 107–121 in Fairbairn, A. (ed.), Plants in Neolithic Britain and Beyond. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • Fraser, R., Bogaard, A., Heaton, T., Charles, M., Jones, G., Christensen, B. T., Halstead, P., Merbach, I., Poulton, P. R., Sparkes, D. and Styring, A. K. 2011. Manuring and stable nitrogen isotope ratios in cereals and pulses: Towards a new archaeobotanical approach to the inference of land use and dietary practices. Journal of Archaeological Science 38, 2790–2804. doi: 10.1016/j.jas.2011.06.024
  • Fuller, D. Q. and Harvey, E. L. 2006. The archaeobotany of Indian pulses: identification, processing and evidence for cultivation. Environmental Archaeology 11, 219–246. doi: 10.1179/174963106x123232
  • Gibson, A. 1998. Neolithic pottery from Ogmore, Glamorgan. Archaeologia Cambrensis 147, 56–67.
  • Gilbert, P. and Straker, V. 1999. Assessment of charred plant macrofossils, pp. 38–39 in Jones, A. M. (ed.), The excavation of a Later Bronze Age structure at Callestick. Cornish Archaeology 38, 5–55.
  • Giorgi, J. 2006a. The Plant Remains from White Horse Stone, Aylesford, Kent. Unpublished Report, CTRL Specialist Report Series. Archaeology Data Service 2006. idoi:10.5284/1000230.
  • Giorgi, J. 2006b. The Charred Plant Remains from Beechbrook Wood, Hothfield, Kent. Unpublished Report, CTRL Specialist Report Series. Archaeology Data Service 2006. idoi:10.5284/1000230.
  • Graham, P. 1812. A General View of the Agriculture of Stirlingshire. Edinburgh: Board of Agriculture.
  • Grime, J. P., Hodgson, J. G. and Hunt, R. 1988. Comparative Plant Ecology: A Functional Approach to Common British Species. London: Unwin Hyman.
  • Gross, A. and Butcher, A. 1995. Adaption and investment in the age of the great storms: Agricultural policy on the manors of the principal lords of the romney marshes and the marshland fringe, c. 1250–1320, pp. 107–117 in Eddison, J. (ed.), Romney Marsh: The Debateable Ground. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology Monograph 41.
  • Guarino, C. and Sciarrillo, R. 2004. Carbonized seeds in a protohistoric house: results of hearth and house experiments. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 13, 65–70. doi: 10.1007/s00334-003-0026-3
  • Gustaffson, S. 2000. Carbonized cereal grains and weed seeds in prehistoric houses – an experimental perspective. Journal of Archaeological Science 27, 65–70. doi: 10.1006/jasc.1999.0441
  • Hall, A. R. and Kenward, H. K. 2006. Development-driven archaeology: bane or boon for bioarchaeology? Oxford Journal of Archaeology 25, 213–224. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-0092.2006.00258.x
  • Halstead, P. 2014. Two Oxen Ahead: Pre-Mechanized Farming in the Mediterranean. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Hamilton, J. and Thomas, R. 2012. Pannage, pulses and pigs: Isotopic and zooarchaeological evidence for changing pig management practices in later medieval England. Medieval Archaeology 56, 234–259. doi: 10.1179/0076609712Z.0000000008
  • Hanawalt, B. A. 1986. The Ties That Bound: Peasant Families in Medieval England. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Helbaek, H. 1953. Early crops in Southern England. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 18, 194–233. doi: 10.1017/S0079497X00018326
  • Hillman, G. 1981a. Crop husbandry: Evidence form macroscopic remains, pp. 123–162 in Simmons, I. and Tooley, M. (eds.), The Environment in British Prehistory. London: Gerald Duckworth and Co. Ltd.
  • Hillman, G. 1981b. Reconstructing crop husbandry practices from charred remains of crops, pp. 123–162 in Mercer, R. (ed.), Farming Practice in British Prehistory. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
  • Hinton, P. 1982. Charred plant remains, pp. 382–390 in Drewett, P. L. (ed.), Late Bronze Age downland economy and excavations at Black Patch, East Sussex. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 48, 321–400.
  • Hinton, P. 2002a. Charred plant remains, pp. 197–199 in Rudling, D. (ed.), Excavations adjacent to Coldean Lane, pp. 141–202 in Rudling, D. (ed.), Downland Settlement and Land-Use: The Archaeology of the Brighton Bypass. London: English Heritage.
  • Hinton, P. 2002b. Charred plant remains, pp. 68–71 in Russell, M., Excavations at Mile Oak Farm, pp. 5–82 in Rudling, D. (ed.), Downland Settlement and Land-Use: The Archaeology of the Brighton Bypass. London: English Heritage.
  • Hinton, P. 2006. Charred plant remains, pp. 36–39 in Chadwick, A. M. (ed.), Bronze Age burials and settlement and an Anglo-Saxon settlement at Claypit Lane, Westhampnett, West Sussex. Sussex Archaeological Collections 144, 7–50.
  • Hinton, P. forthcoming. The charred plant remains, in James, R. (ed.), A Late Bronze Age Settlement at Centenary House, Worthing.
  • Housley, R. A. 1987. The carbonised plant remains from Meare 1984, pp. 226–230 in Coles, J. M. (ed.), Meare Village East: The Excavations of A. Bulleid and H. St. George Gray 1932–1956. Somerset Levels Papers 13, 6–254.
  • Hunter, K. 2012. Specialist report 19: Plant macrofossils, chapter 19 (CD Rom), in Biddulph, R., Foreman, S., Stafford, E., Stansbie, D. and Nicholson, R. (eds.), London Gateway: Iron Age and Roman Salt Making in the Thames Estuary. Excavation at Stanford Wharf Nature Reserve, Essex. Oxford: Oxford Archaeology (Monograph No. 18).
  • Huntley, J. P. 1988. Carbonised Plant Remains from Hardendale Nab, Cumbria. Unpublished Report, English Heritage: Ancient Monuments Laboratory Report 61/88.
  • Jones, G. 1981. The carbonised plant remains, pp. 33–35 in Orme, J., Coles, J. M., Caseldine, A. E. and Bailey, G. N. (eds.), Meare Village West 1979. Somerset Levels Papers 7, 12–69.
  • Jones, G. 1986. The carbonised plant remains from Meare West 1979: 2. Somerset Levels Papers 12, 57–60.
  • Jones, G. 1996. Distinguishing food from fodder in the archaeobotanical record. Environmental Archaeology 1, 95–98. doi: 10.1179/env.1996.1.1.95
  • Jones, G. 2005. Garden cultivation of staple crops and its implications for settlement location and continuity. World Archaeology 37, 164–176. doi: 10.1080/00438240500094564
  • Jones, G. and Rowley-Conwy, P. 2007. On the importance of cereal cultivation in the British Neolithic, pp. 391–419 in Colledge, S. and Conolly, J. (eds.), The Origins and Spread of Domestic Plants in Southwest Asia and Europe. California: Left Coast Press.
  • Jones, J. 2004. Analysis of charred plant macrofossil remains, pp. 73–80 in Jones, A. M. and Taylor, S. R. (eds.), What Lies Beneath… St Newlyn East and Mitchell. Archaeological Investigations 2001. Truro: Cornwall County Council.
  • Jones, J. 2009. Plant macrofossils, in Best, J., A Late Bronze Age Pottery Production Site and Settlement at Foster's Field, Tinney's Lane, Sherborne, Dorset. Unpublished Report. Archaeology Data Service 2009. idoi:10.5284/1000076.
  • Jones, J. 2010. Plant remains, pp. 142–148 in Jones, A. M. and Taylor, S. R. (eds.), Scarcewater, Pennance, Cornwall. Archaeological Excavation of a Bronze Age and Roman Landscape. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, British Series 516.
  • Jones, J. 2012. Plant macrofossils, pp. 239 in Best, J. and Woodward, A. (eds.), Late Bronze Age Pottery Production: Evidence from a 12th–11th Century Cal BC Settlement at Tinney's Lane, Sherborne, Dorset. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 78, 207–261.
  • Jones, J. 2015. Charred plant remains, pp. 121–136 in Jones, A. M., Gossip, J. and Quinnell, H. (eds.), Settlement and Metalworking in the Middle Bronze Age and Beyond. New Evidence from Tremough, Cornwall. Leiden: Sidestone Press.
  • Jones, M. K. 1981. The development of crop husbandry, pp. 95–127 in Jones, M. K. and Dimbleby, G. (eds.), The Environment of Man: The Iron Age to Anglo-Saxon Period. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, British Series 87.
  • Jones, M. K. 1984. Regional patterns in crop production, pp. 120–125 in Cunliffe, B. and Miles, D. (eds.), Aspects of the Iron Age in Central and Southern Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology.
  • Kirleis, W., Klooβ, S., Kroll, H. and Müller, J. 2012. Crop growing and gathering in the northern German Neolithic: a review supplemented by new results. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 21, 221–242. doi: 10.1007/s00334-011-0328-9
  • Marston, J. M. 2011. Archaeological markers of agricultural risk management. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 30, 190–205. doi: 10.1016/j.jaa.2011.01.002
  • Martin, J., Schuster, J. and Barclay, A. J. 2012. Evidence of an early Bronze age field system and spelt wheat growing, together with an Anglo-Saxon featured building, at Monkton Road, Minster in Thanet. Archaeologia Cantiana 132, 42–52.
  • McClatchie, M., Bogaard, A., Colledge, S., Whitehouse, N. J., Schulting, R. J., Barratt, P. and McLaughlin, T. R. 2014. Neolithic farming in north-western Europe: archaeobotanical evidence from Ireland. Journal of Archaeological Science 51, 206–215. doi: 10.1016/j.jas.2012.10.022
  • McLaren, S. L. 2000. Revising the wheat crops of Neolithic Britain, pp. 91–100 in Fairbairn, A. (ed.), Plants in Neolithic Britain and Beyond. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • Moffett, L. 1991. Gamston, Plant Remains from an Iron Age Site in Nottinghamshire. Unpublished Report, English Heritage Ancient Monuments Laboratory Report No. 110/91.
  • Moffett, L. 2004. The evidence from crop processing products from the Iron Age and Romano-British periods and some earlier prehistoric remains, pp. 421–455 in Lambrick, G. and Allen, T. (eds.), Gravelly Guy, Stanton Harcourt: The Development of a Prehistoric and Romano-British Community. Oxford: Oxford University School for Archaeology.
  • Moffett, L. 2006. The archaeology of medieval plant foods, pp. 41–55 in Woolgar, C., Serjeanston, D. and Waldron, T. (eds.), Food in Medieval England: Diet and Nutrition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Monckton, A. 1998. The plant remains, pp. 75–82 in Beamish, M. (ed.), A Middle Iron Age site at Wanlip, Leicestershire. Transactions of the Leicestershire Archaeological and Historical Society 72, 1–91.
  • Monckton, A. 2005. The charred plant remains, pp. 19–23, in Beamish, M., A Bronze Age Settlement at Ridlington, Rutland. The Leicestershire Archaeological and Historical Society 79, 1–26.
  • Monk, M. A. and Fasham, P. J. 1980. Carbonised plant remains from two Iron Age sites in central Hampshire. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 46, 321–344. doi: 10.1017/S0079497X00009427
  • Murphy, P. 1977. Early Agriculture and Environment on the Hampshire Chalklands: circa. 800 B.C. – 400 A.D. Unpublished M.Phil Dissertation, University of Southampton.
  • Murphy, P. 1983. Carbonised seeds, pp. 37–38 in Ashbee, P. (ed.), Halangy Porth, St. Mary's, Isles of Scilly, Excavations 1975–76. Cornish Archaeology 22, 3–46.
  • Murphy, P. 1988. Plant macrofossils, pp. 281–293 in Brown, N. (ed.), A Late Bronze Age Enclosure at Lofts Farm, Essex. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 54, 249–302.
  • Murphy, P. 1998. Charred plant remains, pp. 196–204 in Wallis, S. and Waughman, M. (eds.), Archaeology and the Landscape in the Lower Blackwater Valley. Chelmsford: Essex County Council (East Anglian Archaeology Reports No. 82).
  • Murphy, P. 2001. Carbonised beans from F11, pp. 11–12 in Brooks, H., A Bronze Age Occupation Site at Frog Hall Farm, Fingringhoe, Essex: 1975–76 Excavations. Unpublished Report, Colchester Archaeological Trust Report No. 123.
  • Murphy, P. 2013. Carbonised plant remains from Neolithic, Late Bronze Age and Roman contexts, pp. 126–140 in Brown, N. and Medlycott, M. (ed.), The Neolithic and Bronze Age Enclosures at Springfield Lyons, Essex: Excavations 19811991. Chelmsford: Essex County Council (Easton Anglian Archaeology Reports No. 149.
  • Nesbitt, M. and Samuel, D. 1996. From staple crop to extinction? The archaeology and history of the hulled wheats, pp. 41–100 in Paludosi, S., Hammer, K. and Heller, J. (eds.), Hulled Wheats. Promoting the Conservation and Use of Underutilized and Neglected Crops, Workshop on Hulled Wheats. Rome: International Plant Genetic Resources Institute.
  • Nye, S. and Jones, M. K. 1987. The carbonised plant remains, pp. 323–328 in Cunliffe, B. (ed.), Hengistbury Head, Dorset, Volume 1. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology.
  • Pailler, Y. and Stéphan, P. 2014. Landscape evolution and human settlement in the Iroise Sea (Brittany, France) during the Neolithic and Bronze Age. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 80, 105–139. doi: 10.1017/ppr.2014.9
  • Palmer, C. 1996. The role of fodder in the farming system: a case study from northern Jordan. Environmental Archaeology 1, 1–10. doi: 10.1179/env.1996.1.1.1
  • Palmer, C. and Jones, M. 1991. Plant resources, pp. 129–139 in Sharples, N. (ed.), Maiden Castle: Excavation and Field Survey 19856. London: English Heritage.
  • Pelling, R. 2003. Charred plant remains, pp. 71–73, in P. Hutchings (ed.), Ritual and Riverside Settlement: A Multi-Period Site at Princes Road, Dartford. Archaeologia Cantiana 123, 41–80.
  • Pelling, R. 2011. Charred plant remains, pp. 142–158 in Dinwiddy, K. E. and Bradley, P. (eds.), Prehistoric Activity and Romano-British Settlement at Poundbury Farm, Dorchester. Salisbury: Wessex Archaeology.
  • Pelling, R. and Campbell, G. 2013. Plant resources, pp. 37–60 in Canti, M., Campbell, G. and Gearey, S. (eds.), Stonehenge World Heritage Site Synthesis: Prehistoric Landscape, Environment and Economy. Swindon: English Heritage Research Department Report Series 45–2013.
  • Pelling, R., Campbell, G., Carruthers, W., Hunter, K. and Marshall, P. 2015. Exploring contamination (intrusion and residuality) in the archaeobotanical record: case studies from central and southern England. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 24, 85–99. doi: 10.1007/s00334-014-0493-8
  • Pelling, R., Thompson, G. and Francis, R. 2008. Charred plant remains and charcoal, pp. 98–101 in Poole, K. and Webley, L. (eds.), Prehistoric activity at Westwood, Broadstairs. Archaeologia Cantiana 128, 75–106.
  • Peña-Chocarro, L. and Zapata, L. 2014. Parching and dehusking hulled wheats, pp. 226–232 in van Gijn, A., Whittaker, J. C. and Anderson, P. C. (eds.), Explaining and Exploring Diversity in Agricultural Technology. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • Pounds, N. J. G. 1994. An Economic History of Medieval Europe (2nd ed.). New York: Routledge.
  • Ratcliffe, J. and Straker, V. 1996. The Early Environment of Scilly: Palaeoenvironmental Assessment of Cliff-face and Intertidal Deposits 19891993. Cornwall: Cornwall Archaeological Unit.
  • Reid, C. 1917. Plants, wild and cultivated, pp. 625–630 in Bulleid, A. and Gray, H. S. G. (eds.), The Glastonbury Lake Village: A Full Description of the Excavations and the Relics Discovered, 18921907, Vol. II. Glastonbury: Glastonbury Antiquarian Society.
  • Reimer, P. J., Bard, E., Bayliss, A., Beck, J. W., Blackwell, P. G., Bronk Ramsey, C., Buck, C. E., Cheng, H., Edwards, R. L., Freidrich, M., Grootes, P. M., Guilderson, T. P., Hafildason, H. Hajdas, I., Hatte, C., Heaton, T. J., Hoffmann, D. L., Hogg, A. G., Hughen, K. A., Kaiser, K. F., Kromer, B., Manning, S. W., Niu, M., Reimer, R. W., Richards, D. A., Scott, E. M., Southon, J. R., Staff, R. A., Turney, C. S. M., and van der Plicht, J. 2013. IntCal13 and Marine 13 radiocarbon age calibration curves 0–50 000 Years cal BP. Radiocarbon 55, 1869–1887. doi: 10.2458/azu_js_rc.55.16947
  • Renfrew, J. M. 1973. Palaeoethnobotany: The Prehistoric Food Plants of the Near East and Europe. London: Methuen.
  • Rippon, S. 2000. The historic landscapes of the Severn estuary levels. Archaeology in the Severn Estuary 11, 119–135.
  • Rippon, S. 2001. Adaption to a changing environment: The response of marshland communities to the late medieval ‘crisis’. Journal of Wetland Archaeology 1, 15–39. doi: 10.1179/jwa.2001.1.1.15
  • Rippon, S. 2004. Making the most of a bad situation? Glastonbury Abbey, Meare, and the medieval exploitation of wetland resources in the Somerset levels. Medieval Archaeology 48, 91–130. doi: 10.1179/007660904225022816
  • Rippon, S., Wainwright, A. and Smart, C. 2014. Farming regions in Medieval England: The archaeobotanical and zooarchaeological evidence. Medieval Archaeology 58, 195–255. doi: 10.1179/0076609714Z.00000000036
  • Roberts, B. W., Uckelmann, M. and Brandherm, D. 2013. Old father time: The chronology of the Bronze age in Western Europe, pp. 17–46 in Fokkens, H. and Harding, A. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Bronze Age Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Salavert, A. 2011. Plant economy of the first farmers of central Belgium (Linearbandkeramik, 5200–5000 BC). Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 20, 321–332. doi: 10.1007/s00334-011-0297-z
  • Scaife, R. 1982. An Early Bronze Age record of Vicia faba L. (Horsebean) from Newbarn Down, Isle of Wight. Unpublished Report, English Heritage: Ancient Monuments Laboratory Report No. 3051.
  • Scaife, R. 2000. Charred plant remains, pp. 346–347 in Guttmann, E. B. A. and Last, J. (eds.), A Late Bronze Age Landscape at South Hornchurch, Essex. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 66, 319–359.
  • Scaife, R. 2008. The charred plant remains, pp. 147–156 in Masefield, R. (ed.), Prehistoric and Later Settlement and Landscape from Chiltern Scarp to Aylesbury Vale: The Archaeology of the Aston Clinton Bypass, Buckinghamshire. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, British Series 473.
  • Smith, W. 2010. The charred plant remains, pp. 38–39 in Mullin, D., Biddulph, E. and Brown, R. (eds.), A Bronze Age Settlement, Roman Structures and a Field System at Hassocks, West Sussex. Sussex Archaeological Collections 148, 17–46.
  • Smith, W. 2011. Charred plant remains, pp. 155–169 in Simmonds, A., Wenban-Smith, F., Bates, M., Powell, K., Skyes, D., Devaney, R., Stansbie, D. and Score, D. (eds.), Excavations in North-West Kent 20052007: One Hundred Thousand Years of Human Activity in and Around the Darent Valley. Oxford: Oxford Archaeology (Monograph No. 11).
  • Stace, C. 2010. New Flora of the British Isles. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Stevens, C. 2006a. The Charred Plant Remains from Saltwood Tunnel, Kent. Unpublished Report, CTRL Specialist Report Series. Archaeology Data Service 2006. idoi:10.5284/1000230.
  • Stevens, C. 2006b. Charred plant remains, pp. 55–58 in Leivers, M., Chisham, C., Knight, S. and Stevens, C. (eds.), Excavations at Ham Hill Quarry, Hamdon Hill, Montacute, 2002. Somerset Archaeology and Natural History 150, 39–62.
  • Stevens, C. 2008. Cereal agriculture and cremation activities, pp. 296–299 in Allen, M.J., Leivers, M. and Ellis, C. (eds.), Neolithic causewayed enclosures and later prehistoric farming: Duality, imposition and the role of predecessors at Kingsborough, Isle of Sheppey, Kent, UK. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 74, 235–322.
  • Stevens, C. 2011. Charred plant remains from Springhead, pp. 95–105 in Barnett, C., McKinley, J. I., Stafford, E., Grimm, J. M. and Stevens, C. (eds.), Settling the Ebbsfleet Valley: High Speed 1 Excavations at Springhead and Northfleet, Kent. The Late Iron Age, Roman, Saxon, and Medieval Landscape. Volume 3: Late Iron Age to Roman Human Remains and Environmental Reports. Salisbury: Oxford-Wessex Archaeology.
  • Stevens, C. 2012. Archaeobotany, pp. 74–86 in Slater, A. and Brittain, M. (eds.), Excavations at Ham Hill, Somerset (2011). Unpublished Report, Cambridge Archaeological Unit Report No. 1101.
  • Stevens, C. 2013. Archaeobotany, pp. 92–104 in Brittain, M. (ed.), Excavations at Ham Hill, Somerset (2012). Unpublished Report, Cambridge Archaeological Unit Report No.1159.
  • Stevens, C. 2014. Environmental evidence charred and mineralised plant remains, pp. 193–199 in McKinley, J. I., Leivers, M., Schuster, J., Marshall, P., Barclay, A. J. and Stoodley, N. (eds.), Cliffs End Farm, Isle of Thanet, Kent: A Mortuary and Ritual Site of the Bronze Age, Iron Age and Anglo-Saxon Period with Evidence for Long-distance Maritime Mobility. Salisbury: Wessex Archaeology.
  • Stevens, C. n.d. Charred plant remains, pp. 19–22 in Leivers, M. and Dinwiddy, K. E. (eds.), Excavation of a Multi-Period Site at Herne Bay, Kent. Unpublished Report, Wessex Archaeology. Kent Archaeological Society eArchaeological Reports. http://www.kentarchaeology.org.uk/10/034.pdf
  • Stevens, C. and Challinor, D. 2009. Environmental evidence, pp. 91–92, in Dinwiddy, K. and Schuster, J., Thanet's Longest Excavation: archaeological investigations along the route of the Weatherlees-Margate-Broadstairs wastewater pipeline, pp. 57–174 in Andrews, P., Dinwiddy, K. E., Ellis, C., Hutcheson, A., Philpotts, C., Powell, A. B. and Schuster, J. (eds.), Kentish Sites and Sites of Kent: A Miscellany of Four Archaeological Excavations. Salisbury: Wessex Archaeology.
  • Stevens, C. and Fuller, D. Q. 2012. Did neolithic farming fail? The case of a Bronze age agricultural revolution in the British Isles. Antiquity 86, 707–722. doi: 10.1017/S0003598X00047864
  • Stika, H.-P. and Heiss, A. G. 2013. Plant cultivation in the Bronze age, pp. 348–369 in Fokkens, H. and Harding, A. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of European Bronze Age. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Straker, V. 1990. Charred plant macrofossils, pp. 211–219 in Bell, M. (ed.), Brean Down Excavations 19831987. London: English Heritage.
  • Straker, V. 1991. Charred plant macrofossils, pp. 161–179 in Nowakoski, J. A. (ed.), Trethellan Farm, Newquay: Excavation of a Lowland Bronze Age Settlement and Iron Age Cemetery. Cornish Archaeology 30, 5–242.
  • Straker, V. 1992. Isles of Scilly: Assessment of Environmental Potential of Sites at Porth Killier, St. Agnes, Samson, Tean and St. Mary's. Unpublished Report, English Heritage Ancient Monuments Laboratory Report No. 22/92.
  • Tapper, R. Q. 2011. Middle and Late Bronze Age Settlement on the South Downs: The Case Study of Black Patch. Unpublished PhD Dissertation, University of Sussex.
  • Treasure E. R. 2014. ‘Evidently Carbonised by Fire Action’: An Archaeobotanical and Experimental Study of Vicia faba L. (Broad bean, Horsebean) in Prehistoric Britain. Unpublished Undergraduate Dissertation, Durham University.
  • Treasure, E. R., Church, M. J. and Gröcke, D. R. 2015. The influence of manuring on stable isotopes (δ13C and δ15N) in Celtic bean (Vicia faba L.): archaeobotanical and palaeodietary implications. Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences. idoi:10.1007/s12520-015-0243-6.
  • Tusser, T. 1580. Five Hundred Pointes of Good Husbandrie. 1878 edition. London: English Dialect Society.
  • van der Veen, M. 1984. Sampling for seeds, pp. 193–199 in van Zeist, W. and Casparie, W.A. (eds.), Plants and Ancient Man: Studies in Palaeoethnobotany. Rotterdam: A.A. Balkema.
  • van der Veen, M. 1992. Crop Husbandry Regimes. An Archaeobotanical Study of Farming in Northern England: 1000 BC–AD 500. Sheffield: JR Collis Publications.
  • van der Veen, M. 1996a. The plant macrofossils from Dragonby, pp. 197–213 in May, J. (ed.), Dragonby: Report on Excavations at an Iron Age and Romano-British Settlement in North Lincolnshire. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • van der Veen, M. 1996b. Plant remains, pp. 613–639 in Jackson, R. P. J. and Pottery, T. W. (eds.), Excavations at Stonea, Cambridgeshire 19801985. London: British Museum Press.
  • van der Veen, M. 2007. Formation processes of desiccated and carbonized plant remain: The identification of routine practice. Journal of Archaeological Science 34, 968–990. doi: 10.1016/j.jas.2006.09.007
  • van der Veen, M. and Jones, G. 2006. A re-analysis of agricultural production and consumption: implications for understanding the British Iron age. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 15, 217–228. doi: 10.1007/s00334-006-0040-3
  • van der Veen, M. and O'Connor, T. 1998. The expansion of agricultural production in the late Iron Age and Roman Britain, pp. 127–143 in Bayley, J. (ed.), Science in Archaeology: An Agenda for the Future. London: English Heritage.
  • Walker, M.J.C., Caseldine, A.E., Crowther, J., Johnson, S., James, J.H. and Macphail, R. 1999. Palaeoenvironmental Assessment of Kite's Corner Late Bronze Age Site, Near Bristol. Unpublished Report prepared for Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust.
  • Wessex Archaeology. 2003. Green Island, Poole Harbour, Dorset. An Archaeological Evaluation and an Assessment of the Results. Unpublished Report, Wessex Archaeology Report No. 52568.07.
  • Wessex Archaeology. 2007. Portland Gas Pipeline, Dorset. Archaeological Evaluation. Unpublished Report, Wessex Archaeology Report No. 60715.03.
  • Williams, D. 1999. Plant macrofossils, pp. 109–112 in White, S.I. and Smith, G. (eds.), A Funerary and Ceremonial Centre at Capel Eithin, Gaerwen, Anglesey: Excavations of Neolithic, Bronze Age, Roman and Early Medieval features in 1980 and 1981. Transactions of the Anglesey Antiquarian Society 1999, 9–166.
  • Williams, J. H. and Howard-Davis, C. 2005. Excavations on a Bronze age cairn at Hardendale Nab, Shap, Cumbria. Archaeological Journal 161, 11–53. doi: 10.1080/00665983.2004.11020570
  • Yates, D. T. 2007. Land, Power and Prestige: Bronze Age Field Systems in Southern England. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
  • van Zeist, W. 1974. Palaeobotanical studies of settlement sites in the coastal area of the Netherlands. Palaeohistoria XVI, 223–371.
  • Zohary, D., Hopf, M. and Weiss, E. 2012. Domestication of Plants in the Old World: The Origin and Spread of Domesticated Plants in Southwest Asia, Europe, and the Mediterranean Basin. Oxford: Oxford University Press.