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Human Insect Entanglement: Past, Present, and Future
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Human Insect Entanglement: Past, Present, and Future
Human Insect Entanglement: Past, Present, and Future
Volume 39.1 (Jun 2024)
Editors:
Nynke Blömer, Benny Shen and Jake Stone
1. Studying Human-Insect Co-History for the Past, Present and Future
General Perspectives
Nynke Blömer, Benny Shen and Jake Stone
2. Midge-Infested Wetlands and the Coevolution of Birch Tar Use in Late Pleistocene Neanderthals
Article
Tjaark Siemssen, Katherine Hearne and Sonja Rigterink
3. The Diachronic Use of Extensions in Ceramic Beehives in Greece and Their Relevance to “Unsmoked” and “Smoked” Honey Production
Article
Georgios Mavrofridis and Theodora Petanidou
4. How Insects Might Have Mediated Human Mobilities and the Intensification of Food Production in the Zambezian Bioregion of South Central Africa in the First and Second Millennium CE
Article
Jeremy Farr and Kathryn de la Luna
5. New Ways of “Seeing” Insects in the Archaeological Record of Early Medieval Ireland
Article
Eva Kourela and Anita Radini
6. Synanthropic Insects Suggest Early Agricultural Use of Anthropogenic Landscapes in the Philippines
Article
Vito C. Hernandez, Ian V. Lipardo, Juan Rofes, Mark Mabang and Grace Barretto-Tesoro
7. A Reconstructed Chaîne Opératoire for Mesoamerican Cochineal: Implications for the Archaeological Analysis of Insect Dye Production
Article
Samantha R. Nadel
8. Powerful Worms: Insects in 19th century Yup’ik and Iñupiaq Material Culture
Article
Amanda Althoff
9. When are insects seen as individuals? The king of bees and the anthropological archive
Article
Edward Moon-Little
10. Seeing the value of insects as food in archeological contexts
Article
Julie Julison and Julie Lesnik
11. False adversaries: Material heritage and human-insect relationships in museum collections
Article
Ayesha Fuentes