Academic literature on the topic 'Southeast Asian prehistory'

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Journal articles on the topic "Southeast Asian prehistory"

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McColl, Hugh, Fernando Racimo, Lasse Vinner, Fabrice Demeter, Takashi Gakuhari, J. Víctor Moreno-Mayar, George van Driem, et al. "The prehistoric peopling of Southeast Asia." Science 361, no. 6397 (July 5, 2018): 88–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.aat3628.

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The human occupation history of Southeast Asia (SEA) remains heavily debated. Current evidence suggests that SEA was occupied by Hòabìnhian hunter-gatherers until ~4000 years ago, when farming economies developed and expanded, restricting foraging groups to remote habitats. Some argue that agricultural development was indigenous; others favor the “two-layer” hypothesis that posits a southward expansion of farmers giving rise to present-day Southeast Asian genetic diversity. By sequencing 26 ancient human genomes (25 from SEA, 1 Japanese Jōmon), we show that neither interpretation fits the complexity of Southeast Asian history: Both Hòabìnhian hunter-gatherers and East Asian farmers contributed to current Southeast Asian diversity, with further migrations affecting island SEA and Vietnam. Our results help resolve one of the long-standing controversies in Southeast Asian prehistory.
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O’Connor, Sue. "Engendering Australian and Southeast Asian Prehistory ... ‘beyond epistemological angst’." Australian Archaeology 67, no. 1 (December 2008): 87–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03122417.2008.11681881.

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Crowther, Alison, Leilani Lucas, Richard Helm, Mark Horton, Ceri Shipton, Henry T. Wright, Sarah Walshaw, et al. "Ancient crops provide first archaeological signature of the westward Austronesian expansion." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113, no. 24 (May 31, 2016): 6635–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1522714113.

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The Austronesian settlement of the remote island of Madagascar remains one of the great puzzles of Indo-Pacific prehistory. Although linguistic, ethnographic, and genetic evidence points clearly to a colonization of Madagascar by Austronesian language-speaking people from Island Southeast Asia, decades of archaeological research have failed to locate evidence for a Southeast Asian signature in the island’s early material record. Here, we present new archaeobotanical data that show that Southeast Asian settlers brought Asian crops with them when they settled in Africa. These crops provide the first, to our knowledge, reliable archaeological window into the Southeast Asian colonization of Madagascar. They additionally suggest that initial Southeast Asian settlement in Africa was not limited to Madagascar, but also extended to the Comoros. Archaeobotanical data may support a model of indirect Austronesian colonization of Madagascar from the Comoros and/or elsewhere in eastern Africa.
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Lipson, Mark, Olivia Cheronet, Swapan Mallick, Nadin Rohland, Marc Oxenham, Michael Pietrusewsky, Thomas Oliver Pryce, et al. "Ancient genomes document multiple waves of migration in Southeast Asian prehistory." Science 361, no. 6397 (May 17, 2018): 92–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.aat3188.

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Southeast Asia is home to rich human genetic and linguistic diversity, but the details of past population movements in the region are not well known. Here, we report genome-wide ancient DNA data from 18 Southeast Asian individuals spanning from the Neolithic period through the Iron Age (4100 to 1700 years ago). Early farmers from Man Bac in Vietnam exhibit a mixture of East Asian (southern Chinese agriculturalist) and deeply diverged eastern Eurasian (hunter-gatherer) ancestry characteristic of Austroasiatic speakers, with similar ancestry as far south as Indonesia providing evidence for an expansive initial spread of Austroasiatic languages. By the Bronze Age, in a parallel pattern to Europe, sites in Vietnam and Myanmar show close connections to present-day majority groups, reflecting substantial additional influxes of migrants.
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Carter, Alison Kyra, and Nam C. Kim. "INTRODUCTION TO THE SPECIAL ISSUE: PAPERS FROM THE CONFERENCE “RECENT ADVANCES IN THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF EAST AND SOUTHEAST ASIA”." Journal of Indo-Pacific Archaeology 35 (January 2, 2015): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.7152/jipa.v35i0.14726.

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This special issue of the Journal of Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association presents some of the results of a small conference entitled “Recent Advances in the Archaeology of East and Southeast Asia.” The event was held in Madison, Wisconsin, and brought together a collection of scholars from the US and abroad. Organized by Nam Kim and Alison Carter, the conference was hosted at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (March 15-16, 2013), and was jointly sponsored by the Department of Anthropology, the Center for East Asian Studies, and the Center for Southeast Asian Studies.<br />
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Zangger, Andreas P. "Chops and Trademarks: Asian Trading Ports and Textile Branding, 1840–1920." Enterprise & Society 15, no. 4 (December 2014): 759–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1467222700016104.

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This article is a contribution to the prehistory of modern branding, presenting a case study of the textile trade in colonial Southeast Asia. The visual appearance of brands as well as their social meaning were altered in the cultural encounter of colonial trade. Through these encounters, trademarks were modernized: the reputation of a producer became less important than the distinctiveness of the product.
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Kirch, Patrick V. "Anything but a backwater." Antiquity 85, no. 328 (May 2011): 568–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00067958.

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In the spring of 1970, tired of the chilly Philadelphia winters where I was studying archaeology at the University of Pennsylvania, I arranged to spend a semester at the University of Hawai'i. There I enrolled in Professor Wilhelm G. Solheim II's course inthe prehistory of Southeast Asia. Bill Solheim — a colorful character if ever there was one, with his handle-bar mustache and endless anecdotes — was just then stirring up the sleepy field of Southeast Asian archaeology and prehistory. Together with his graduate students Chet Gorman and Don Bayard, Bill was making all kinds of startling claims about thecourse of cultural evolution in what most scholars had taken to be a secondary backwater: evidence for strikingly early plant domestication from Spirit Cave, precocious advances in bronze metallurgy at Non Nok Tah, and similar claims. At the time, Peter Bellwood, then based at the University of Auckland, was still focused on research among the islands of eastern Polynesia. But Peter saw the exciting developments coming out of Southeast Asia and soon decamped to The Australian National University in Canberra. Out of this new base he began his long and fruitful career of fieldwork in island Southeast Asia, and as the preeminent synthesiser of the region's prehistory.
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Murphy, Stephen A., and Miriam T. Stark. "Introduction: Transitions from late prehistory to early historic periods in mainland Southeast Asia, c. early to mid-first millennium CE." Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 47, no. 3 (September 26, 2016): 333–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022463416000229.

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Studies of early Southeast Asia focus largely on its ‘classical states’, when rulers and their entourages from Sukhothai and Ayutthaya (Thailand), Angkor (Cambodia), Bagan (Myanmar), Champa and Dai Viet (Vietnam) clashed, conquered, and intermarried one another over an approximately six-century-long quest for legitimacy and political control. Scholarship on Southeast Asia has long held that such transformations were largely a response to outside intervention and external events, or at least that these occurred in interaction with a broader world system in which Southeast Asians played key roles. As research gathered pace on the prehistory of the region over the past five decades or so, it has become increasingly clear that indigenous Southeast Asian cultures grew in sophistication and complexity over the Iron Age in particular. This has led archaeologists to propose much greater agency in regard to the selective adaptation of incoming Indic beliefs and practices than was previously assumed under early scholarship of the nineteenth and early to mid-twentieth century.
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Roberts, R. G. (Richard Graham), M. J. (Mike J. ). Morwood, and Kira E. Westaway. "Illuminating Southeast Asian Prehistory: New Archaeological and Paleoanthropological Frontiers for Luminescence Dating." Asian Perspectives 44, no. 2 (2005): 293–319. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/asi.2005.0028.

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Higham, Charles. "The Bronze Age of Southeast Asia: New Insight on Social Change from Ban Non Wat." Cambridge Archaeological Journal 21, no. 3 (September 20, 2011): 365–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0959774311000424.

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The expansion of copper-base metallurgy in the mainland of Eurasia began in the Near East and ended in Southeast Asia. The recognition of this Southeast Asian metallurgical province followed in the wake of French colonial occupation of Cambodia and Laos in the nineteenth century. Subsequently, most research has concentrated in Thailand, beginning in the 1960s. A sound chronology is the prerequisite to identifying both the origins of the Bronze Age, and the social impact that metallurgy may have had on society. This article presents the revolutionary results of excavations at the site of Ban Non Wat in northeast Thailand within the broader cultural context of Southeast Asian prehistory, concluding that the adoption of copper-base metallurgy from the eleventh century BC coincided with the rise of wealthy social aggrandizers.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Southeast Asian prehistory"

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Norquest, Peter Kristian. "A Phonological Reconstruction of Proto-Hlai." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194203.

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This dissertation presents a reconstruction of the phoneme inventory of Proto-Hlai, based on data from twelve Hlai languages spoken on Hainan, China. A classification of the Hlai languages is given with the innovations upon which it based, followed by a discussion of contact relationships and a discussion of reconstruction methodology. The inventory of Proto-Hlai initials is reconstructed, and original sesquisyllabic forms are shown to be necessary to account for the reflexes between the daughter languages; the initial inventory is also marked by the presence of aspiration on most consonants in word-initial position. This is followed by the reconstruction of the rime inventory, an outstanding features of which is two laryngeal components which are argued to have been the precursors to two of the synchronic tone categories in the daughter languages, and which conditioned segmental variation in most of the daughter languages. A comparison is made between Proto-Hlai, Proto-Be, and Proto-Southwest Tai, and a preliminary reconstruction of Proto-Southern Kra-Dai (the immediate ancestor of Proto-Hlai) is performed. When this reconstruction is compared with that of Proto-Hlai, it is shown that several important sound changes occurred in Pre-Hlai, including intervocalic obstruent lenition, vocalic transfer, aspiration of word-initial consonants, and peripheral vowel raising. The language Jiamao is examined in detail, and it is argued that Jiamao is a non-Hlai language which has been in close contact with Hlai since the Pre-Hlai period. An examination of the correspondences between Jiamao and Hlai reveal at least two layers of Hlai loanwords in Jiamao, and evidence Jiamao was originally very different from Hlai structurally. Finally, the Proto-Hlai lexicon is compared with those of other Southeast Asian language phyla, and it is shown that Hlai retains evidence of shared lexicon (via either a genetic or contact relationship) with Sino-Tibetan, Mon-Khmer, Hmong-Mien, and Austronesian, the last of which is particularly striking. The dissertation concludes with a summary of findings, empirical and theoretical contributions, and suggestions for future research.
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Rabett, Ryan John. "Bone technology and subsistence variability in prehistoric southeast Asia." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2002. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.620485.

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Halcrow, Sian Ellen, and n/a. "Subadult health and disease in late prehistoric mainland Southeast Asia." University of Otago. Department of Anatomy & Structural Biology, 2007. http://adt.otago.ac.nz./public/adt-NZDU20070621.161132.

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There is a general belief that a decline in health of prehistoric people occurred with the adoption and intensification of agriculture. However, recent bioarchaeological research in Southeast Asia does not seem to fit this model. An investigation of subadult health is particularly useful to assess this issue because immature individuals are very responsive to environmental changes. The increase of archaeological investigation in this region has provided an adequate sample to address this important aspect of human health using subadults. The aim of this thesis was to produce a synthesis of subadult health and disease from late prehistoric Mainland Southeast Asia and assess whether there was evidence for a change in health with agricultural intensification. The samples, comprising a total 325 individuals, are from seven sites in Thailand, six from the Northeast and one from the Southeast coast, and collectively span from c. 4000 to 1500 B.P. Two hypotheses were developed based on previous bioarchaeological research in Southeast Asia. Firstly, there would be maintenance in health with the intensification of agriculture. Secondly, contrary to the first hypothesis, an increase in infectious disease in the later samples was predicted. A biocultural research approach was used, where health and disease were assessed in relationship to evidence of the natural and cultural milieu. A comparative analysis of health indicators was carried out among the sites to assess whether there were any changes in health over time in response to environmental changes. Non-specific indicators of health were used in the assessment of palaeodemography, growth, growth disruption, dental health and skeletal pathology. Analysis of mortality, fertility, growth, growth disruption and dental health found no differences among the sites that could be explained by temporality. These results support the first hypothesis, that health was maintained. The skeletal pathology results tentatively suggested an increase in these indicators in the later sites. An analysis of multiple indicators of stress in the populations indicated a possible decline in health, interpreted with environmental evidence suggesting an increase of infectious disease at the later sites. However, they suggest that the earliest site of Khok Phanom Di had extremely poor health. Thus, the second hypothesis was only partially supported. Environmental evidence was used to provide possible explanations for these results. The heterogeneity of the health indicators support recent interpretations of localised environments of the sites. Also, retention of a broad-spectrum subsistence economy with agriculture may have overridden some of these changes that were seen in other parts of the world. Khok Phanom Di and the later sites were undergoing major changes in their natural and cultural environment, which could have resulted in an increase of infectious disease. These health results are consistent with suggestions that Khok Phanom Di was a distinct genetic population from those at the Northeast Thai sites. This biocultural interpretation emphasises the importance of understanding the environmental context in which these people lived.
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Hermkens, Anna-Karina. "The way of the objects analogical inference and the allocation of meaning and order in Lapita, Dongson and Lake Sentani material culture /." Website, 1997. http://www.papuaweb.org/dlib/s123/hermkens/_ma.html.

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Pryce, Thomas. "Prehistoric copper production and technological reproduction in the Khao Wong Prachan Valley of central Thailand." Phd thesis, 2009. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00601676.

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Employing a technological approach derived from the 'Anthropology of Technology' theoretical literature, this thesis concerns the identifi cation and explanation of change in prehistoric extractive metallurgical behaviour in the Khao Wong Prachan Valley of central Thailand. The 'Valley' metallurgical complex, amongst the largest in Eurasia, constitutes Southeast Asia's only documented industrial-scale copper-smelting evidence. The two smelting sites investigated, Non Pa Wai and Nil Kham Haeng, provide an interrupted but analytically useful sequence of metallurgical consumption and production evidence spanning c. 1450 BCE to c. 300 CE. The enormous quantity of industrial waste at these sites suggests they were probably major copper supply nodes within ancient Southeast Asian metal exchange networks. Excavated samples of mineral, technical ceramic, and slag from Non Pa Wai and Nil Kham Haeng were analysed in hand specimen, microstructurally by refl ected-light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and chemically by polarising energy dispersive x-ray fl uorescence spectrometry ([P]ED-XRF) and scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive x-ray fl uorescence spectrometry (SEM-EDS). Resulting analytical data were used to generate detailed technological reconstructions of copper smelting behaviour at the two sites, which were refi ned by a programme of fi eld experimentation. Results indicate a long-term improvement in the technical profi ciency of Valley metalworkers, accompanied by an increase in the human effort of copper production. This shift in local 'metallurgical ethos' is interpreted as a response to rising regional demand for copper in late prehistory.
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Books on the topic "Southeast Asian prehistory"

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Rethinking the prehistory of Japan: Language, genes and civilisation. New York: Routledge, 2008.

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Hutterer, Karl L. Economic Exchange and Social Interaction in Southeast Asia: Perspectives from Prehistory, History, and Ethnography. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2020.

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Charles, Higham. The archaeology of mainland Southeast Asia: From 10,000 B.C. to the fall of Angkor. Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]: Cambridge University Press, 1989.

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T, Douglas Michele, ed. Ban Chiang, a prehistoric village site in northeast Thailand. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, 2002.

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Piper, Philip, Hirofumi Matsumura, and David Bulbeck, eds. New Perspectives in Southeast Asian and Pacific Prehistory. ANU Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/ta45.03.2017.

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Piper, Philip J. New Perspectives in Southeast Asian and Pacific Prehistory: Terra Australis 45. ANU Press, 2017.

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Bellwood/Glover. Southeast Asia: From Prehistory to History. Routledge, 2006.

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Fitzpatrick, Scott M. The Archaeology of Western Micronesia. Edited by Ethan E. Cochrane and Terry L. Hunt. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199925070.013.012.

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Western Micronesia encompasses several major archipelagos and islands, including the Marianas, Yap, and Palau. Language and human biology suggest Western Micronesia was most likely colonized from Island Southeast Asia in a complex process, possibly involving multiple population movements from different areas during prehistory. A key archaeological question concerns the variable timing of this colonization, which could be as early as 4,500 years ago according to paleoenvironmental data or up to 1,000 years later when considering artifact-associated dates. Although sometimes perceived as similar, Micronesia’s western archipelagos comprise varying cultural sequences with, for example, the region’s earliest pottery, Achugao Incised and San Roque Incised, and megalithic stone structures, or Latte, in the Marianas, complexly constructed earthworks covering much of the main islands of Palau, and extensive prehistoric and historic exchange systems, such as the sawei, centered on Yap.
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Marc, Oxenham, and Tayles N. G, eds. Bioarchaeology of Southeast Asia. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2006.

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Douglas, Michele T., and Michael Pietrusewsky. Ban Chiang, a Prehistoric Village Site in Northeast Thailand: The Human Skeletal Remains (Thai Archaeology Monograph Series, 1). University of Pennsylvania Museum Publication, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "Southeast Asian prehistory"

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Peregrine, Peter N., and Peter Bellwood. "Southeast Asia Upper Paleolithic." In Encyclopedia of Prehistory, 307–9. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-1189-2_34.

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Bulbeck, David. "Island Southeast Asia Late Prehistoric." In Encyclopedia of Prehistory, 82–116. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-1189-2_15.

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Stark, Miriam T. "Mainland Southeast Asia Late Prehistoric." In Encyclopedia of Prehistory, 160–205. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-1189-2_22.

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Bellwood, Peter. "Southeast Asia Neolithic and Early Bronze." In Encyclopedia of Prehistory, 287–306. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-1189-2_33.

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Gunchinsuren, Byambaa. "The Development of Prehistoric Archaeology in Mongolia." In Handbook of East and Southeast Asian Archaeology, 293–308. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-6521-2_20.

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Higham, Charles F. W. "A Maritime Route Brought First Farmers to Mainland Southeast Asia." In Prehistoric Maritime Cultures and Seafaring in East Asia, 41–52. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-32-9256-7_2.

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Hayashi Tang, Maya, Kim Dung Nguyen, Mana Hayashi Tang, and Chung Tang. "Double-Shouldered Barkcloth Beaters and Prehistoric Seafaring in South China and Southeast Asia." In Prehistoric Maritime Cultures and Seafaring in East Asia, 269–91. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-32-9256-7_15.

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"Island Southeast Asian Prehistory." In First Islanders, 345–51. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781119251583.ch10.

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Higham, Charles. "The Prehistoric House: A Missing Factor in Southeast Asia." In New Perspectives in Southeast Asian and Pacific Prehistory, 369–84. ANU Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/ta45.03.2017.21.

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Sarjeant, Carmen. "An Son Ceramics in the Neolithic Landscape of Mainland Southeast Asia." In New Perspectives in Southeast Asian and Pacific Prehistory, 165–88. ANU Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/ta45.03.2017.09.

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Conference papers on the topic "Southeast Asian prehistory"

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HIGHAM, C. F. W. "PREHISTORY, LANGUAGE AND HUMAN BIOLOGY: IS THERE A CONSENSUS IN EAST AND SOUTHEAST ASIA?" In Genetic, Linguistic and Archaeological Perspectives on Human Diversity in Southeast Asia. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812810847_0001.

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SU, BING, and LI JIN. "ORIGINS AND PREHISTORIC MIGRATIONS OF MODERN HUMANS IN EAST ASIA." In Genetic, Linguistic and Archaeological Perspectives on Human Diversity in Southeast Asia. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812810847_0009.

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