Manure matters : historical, archaeological and ethnographic perspectives / Richard Jones.
By: Jones, Richard
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Item type | Home library | Call number | Status | Loan | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monografías | 06. BIBLIOTECA HUMANIDADES | Sótano-51/2-109 (Browse shelf) | Available Shelving location | Bibliomaps® | PREST. LIBROS | 3742088567 |
Why manure matters, Richard Jones; Science and practice: the ecology of manure in historical retrospect, Robert Shiel; Middening and manuring in Neolithic Europe: issues of plausibility, intensity and archaeological method, Amy Bogaard; (Re)cycles of life in late Bronze Age southern Britain, Kate Waddington; Organic geochemical signatures of ancient manure use, Ian Bull and Richard Evershed; Dung and stable manure on waterlogged archaeological occupation sites: some ruminations on evidence from plant and invertebrate remains, Harry Kenward and Allan Hall; Manure and middens in English place-names, Paul Cullen and Richard Jones; The formation of anthropogenic soils across three marginal landscapes on Fair Isle and in The Netherlands and Ireland, Ben Pears; Zibl and zira'a: coming to terms with manure in Arab agriculture, Daniel Varisco; Understanding medieval manure, Richard Jones; Lost soles: ethnographic observations on manuring practices in a Mediterranean community, Hamish Forbes; Manure and soil in the Vedic literature: agricultural practice on the Indian subcontinent over the last two millennia, Vanaja Ramprasad; Postscript; References; Index.
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