Bibliography
This bibliography is the cited references for my PhD and six subsequent books:
Kelly, L. (2015). Knowledge and Power in Prehistoric Societies: orality, memory and the transmission of culture. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Kelly, L. (2016). The Memory Code. Crow’s Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin. Atlantic Books in the UK , Pegasus Books in the US and as an audio book by Audible, Traditional Chinese (Good Publishing Co., for Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau) and Czech (Anag Spol), Simplified Chinese for Mainland China (China Worker Publishing House).
Memory Craft, Allen & Unwin, (2019). Pegasus Books (North America), audio by Wavesound, Russian (Portal, imprint of Labirint Holding), Simplified Chinese for Mainland China (Cheers Publishing Company).
Neale, M., & Kelly, L (2020). Songlines: the power and promise (First Knowledges Series). Melbourne: Thames and Hudson.
Neale, M., & Kelly, L (2023). Songlines (First Knowledges for Young Readers series). Melbourne: Thames and Hudson.
Kelly, L. (2024). The Knowledge Gene. Crow’s Nest: Allen & Unwin (2024), Greystone Books (2025), Audible audio book.
(click on headings for bibliographic section)
African archaeology
African cultures
Animal knowledge
Anthropology theory
Archaeoacoustics
Archaeoastronomy
Archaeology theory
Asia
Art
Australian archaeology
Australian Indigenous cultures
British archaeology
Central & South American archaeology
Central & South American Indigenous cultures
European archaeology
European historic mnemonics
Genetics – NF1 and FOXP2
Irish archaeology
Learning Foreign Languages
Middle Eastern archaeology
Memory and mnemonics
Music
Neurodiversity
Neuroscience and metacognition
North American archaeology
North American Indigenous cultures
Orality and literacy
Pacific Indigenous cultures
Plant knowledge
Rock art
African archaeology
Asante, M., & Asante, K. (1983). Great Zimbabwe: An Ancient African City-State. In I. van Sertima (Ed.), Blacks and Science: Ancient and Modern (pp. 84-91). New Brunswick (USA): Transaction Books.
Backwell, L., Bradfield, J., Carlson, K., Jashashvili, T., Wadley, L., & D’Errico, F. (2018). The antiquity of bow-and-arrow technology: Evidence from Middle Stone Age layers at Sibudu Cave. Antiquity, 92(362), 289-303.
Chirikure, S., & Pikirayi, I. (2008). Inside and outside the dry stone walls: revisiting the material culture of Great Zimbabwe. Antiquity, 82, 976-993.
Clark, S., & Carrington, D. (2002 ). Eclipse brings claim of medieval African observatory. New Scientist Online. Retrieved 24 October 2012, from www.newscientist.com/article/dn3137-eclipse-brings-claim-of-medieval-african-observatory.html
Garlake, P. S. D. T. (1973). Great Zimbabwe. London: Thames and Hudson.
Lewis-Williams. (2001). Southern African shamanistic rock art in its social and cognitive contexts. In N. S. Price (Ed.), The archaeology of Shamanism (pp. 17-39). London: Routledge.
Malville, J. M., Wendorf, F., Mazar, A. A., & Schild, R. (1998). Megaliths and Neolithic astronomy in southern Egypt. Nature, 392(6675), 488-491.
Schmidt, P. R. (2006). Historical archaeology in Africa: representation, social memory, and oral traditions. Lanham, MD.: AltaMira Press.
African cultures
Agbontaen-Eghafona, K. A., & Okpokunu, E. (2005). Recollections of Time Past: the use of art objects as mnemonics in Benin Oral Traditions (Journal Article). Retrieved 19/10/08, from Art In Nigeria www.art-in-nigeria.com/art_field/recollections_of_time_past.htm
Akinnaso, F. N. (1981). The Consequences of Literacy in Pragmatic and Theoretical Perspectives. Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 12(3), 163-200.
Akinnaso, F. N. (1992). Schooling, Language, and Knowledge in Literate and Nonliterate Societies. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 34(1), 68-109.
Bascom, W. R. (1980). Sixteen cowries: Yoruba divination from Africa to the New World. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Bladt, S., & Wagner, H. (2007). From the Zulu medicine to the European phytomedicine Umckaloabo®. Phytomedicine, 14, Supplement 1(0), 2-4.
Clark, S., & Carrington, D. (2002 ). Eclipse brings claim of medieval African observatory. New Scientist Online. Retrieved 24 October 2012, from www.newscientist.com/article/dn3137-eclipse-brings-claim-of-medieval-african-observatory.html
Fentress, J., & Wickham, C. (1992). Social memory. Oxford, UK: Blackwell.
Finnegan, R. H. (1970). Oral literature in Africa London: Clarendon P.
Johnson, M. I. (2005). African oral traditions: riddles among the Haya of Northwestern Tanzania. International Review of Education, 51(2/3), 139-153.
Kaschula, R. H. (1999). Imbongi and Griot: toward a comparative analysis of oral poetics in Southern and West Africa. Journal of African Cultural Studies, 12(1), 55-76.
Keibel, C. B. (1990). Memory sticks and other mnemonic devices. The Nigerian Field, 55(3/4), 91-98.
Marshall, J. (2004). The hunters [videorecording]. Watertown, Mass.: Documentary Educational Resources.
Marshall, J. (2009). !Kung short films [videorecording]. Watertown, Mass.: Documentary Educational Resources.
Marshall, L. J. (1999). Nyae Nyae !Kung beliefs and rites. Cambridge, Mass.: Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University.
McClelland, E. M. (1982). The cult of Ifa among the Yoruba. London: Ethnographica.
Murphy, W. P. (1980). Secret knowledge as property and power in Kpelle society: elders versus youth. Africa: Journal of the International African Institute, 50(2), 193-207.
Murphy, W. P. (1981). The rhetorical management of dangerous knowledge in Kpelle brokerage. American Ethnologist, 8(4), 667-685.
Ong, W. J. (1977). African talking drums and oral noetics. New Literary History, 8(3), 411-429.
Reefe, T. Q. (1977). Lukasa: a Luba memory device. African Arts, 10(4), 49-88.
Roberts, J. W. (1993). African American diversity and the study of folklore. Western Folklore, 52(2/4), 157-171.
Nooter Roberts, M. & Roberts, A. F. (Eds.). (1996a). Memory: Luba art and the making of history. New York: Museum for African Art.
Nooter Roberts, M. & Roberts, A. F. (1996b). Memory: Luba art and the making of history. African Arts, 29(1), 23-103.
Nooter Roberts, M. & Roberts, A. F. (2007). Luba. Milan: 5 Continents Editions.
Ratnagar, Shereen (2017) The history of ancient Egypt. Bath: Worth Press.
Schmidt, P. R. (2006). Historical archaeology in Africa: representation, social memory, and oral traditions. Lanham, MD.: AltaMira Press.
Studstill, J. D. (1979). Education in a Luba secret society. Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 10(2), 67-79.
Vansina, J. (1960). Recording the oral history of the Bakuba. The Journal of African History, 1(1), 45-53.
Vansina, J. (1971). Once upon a time: oral traditions as history in Africa. Daedalus., 100(2), 442-468.
Vansina, J. (1985). Oral tradition as history Madison, Wis.: University of Wisconsin Press.
Wiessner, P. (2002). The vines of complexity: egalitarian structures and the institutionalization of inequality among the Enga. Current Anthropology, 43(2), 233-269.
Animal knowledge
Holzhaider, J., Hunt, G., & Gray, R. (2010). Social learning in New Caledonian crows. Learning & Behavior, 38(3), 206-219.
Hunn, E. S., & Thornton, T. F. (2010). Tlingit birds: an annotated list with statistical comparative analysis. In S. Tidemann & A. Gosler (Eds.), Ethno-ornithology: birds and indigenous people, culture and society (pp. 181-209). London: Earthscan.
Kelly, L. (2006). Crocodile: evolution’s greatest survivor. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.
Kelly, L. (2009). Spiders: learning to love them. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.
Lewinsohn, R. (1954). Animals, men and myths: a history of the influencce of animals on civilization and culture. London: V. Gollancz.
Madge, S., & Burn, H. (1994). Crows and jays: a guide to the crows, jays and magpies of the world. London: Christopher Helm.
Majnep, I. S., & Bulmer, R. (1977). Birds of my Kalam country. Auckland, NZ: Auckland University Press.
Marzluff, J. M., & Angell, T. (2005). In the company of crows and ravens. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Morcombe, M. K. (2000). Field guide to Australian birds (2nd ed., rev. and updated. ed.). Archerfield, Qld.: Steve Parish Pub.
Platnick, N. I. (2012). The world spider catalog, version 12.5. Retrieved 3 April, 2012, from http://research.amnh.org/iz/spiders/catalog
Ratcliffe, B. C. (2006). Scarab beetles in human culture. Coleopterists Society Monograph, 5, 85–101.
Rowland, B. (1974). Animals with human faces: a guide to animal symbolism. London: Allen & Unwin.
Rowland, B. (1978). Birds with human souls: a guide to bird symbolism (1st ed.). Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
Sault, N. (2010). Bird messages for all seasons: landscapes of knowledge among the Bribri of Costa Rica. In S. Tidemann & A. Gosler (Eds.), Ethno-ornithology: birds and indigenous people, culture and society (pp. 292-300). London: Earthscan.
Sutton, M. Q. (1995). Archaeological aspects of insect use. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, 2(3), 253-298.
Thomas, W. H. (2010). Everyone loves birds: using indigenous knowledge of birds to facilitate conservation in New Guinea. In S. Tidemann & A. Gosler (Eds.), Ethno-ornithology: birds and indigenous people, culture and society (pp. 265-278). London: Earthscan.
Tidemann, S., Chirgwin, S., & Sinclair, J. R. (2010). Indigenous knowledges, birds that have ‘spoken’ and science. In S. Tidemann & A. Gosler (Eds.), Ethno-ornithology: birds and indigenous people, culture and society (pp. 3-12). London: Earthscan.
Tidemann, S., & Gosler, A. (Eds.). (2010). Ethno-ornithology: birds and indigenous people, culture and society. London: Earthscan.
Tidemann, S., & Whiteside, T. (2010). Aboriginal stories: the riches and colour of Australian birds. In S. Tidemann & A. Gosler (Eds.), Ethno-ornithology: birds and indigenous people, culture and society (pp. 153-179). London: Earthscan.
Tyler, H. A. (1991). Pueblo birds and myths. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press.
Watkins, P., & Hughes, E. (1985). A book of animals. London: MacRae.
Yen, A. L. (2005). Insect and other invertebrate foods of the Australian Aborigines. In M. G. Paoletti (Ed.), Ecological implications of minilivestock: potential of insects, rodents, frogs, and snails. Enfield, (NH): Science Publishers.
Anthropology theory
Boas, F. (1953). Primitive art. New York: Dover Publications.
Diamond, J. M. (1997). Guns, germs and steel: the fates of human societies London: Jonathan Cape.
Diamond, S. (1971). Epilogue. In M. L. Wax, S. Diamond & F. O. Gearing (Eds.), Anthropological perspectives on education. New York: Basic Books.
Durkheim, E. (1976 [1915]). The elementary forms of the religious life (J. W. Swain, Trans. 2nd. ed. ed.). London: Allen & Unwin.
Durkheim, E., & Mauss, M. (1970 [1903]). Primitive classification (R. Needham, Trans. 2nd ed. ed.). London: Cohen and West.
Earle, T. K. (1987). Chiefdoms in Archaeological and Ethnohistorical Perspective. Annual Review of Anthropology, 16, 279-308.
Eliade, M. (1959). The sacred and the profane: the nature of religion (W. R. Trask, Trans. [1st American ed.]. ed.). New York: Harcourt, Brace.
Eliade, M. (1964). Myth and reality. London: George Allen & Unwin.
Eliade, M. (1992). Symbolism, the sacred, and the arts. New York: Continuum.
Fentress, J., & Wickham, C. (1992). Social memory. Oxford, UK: Blackwell.
Flanagan, J. G. (1989). Hierarchy in simple “egalitarian” societies. Annual Review of Anthropology, 18, 245-266.
Flannery, K. V. (1972). The cultural evolution of civilizations. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 3, 399-426.
Fowler, C. S. (1999). Ecological / cosmological knowledge and land-management among hunter-gatherers. In R. B. Lee & R. Daly (Eds.), The Cambridge encyclopedia of hunters and gatherers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Frazer, J. G. S. (1968 [1910]). Totemism and exogamy: a treatise on certain early forms of superstition and society ([1st ed.] reprinted. ed., Vol. 4). London: Dawsons.
Freud, S. (1960). Totem and taboo. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd.
Gell, A. (1985). How to Read a Map: Remarks on the Practical Logic of Navigation. Man, 20(2), 271-286.
Goldschmidt, W. (1951). Ethics and the Structure of Society: An Ethnological Contribution to the Sociology of Knowledge. American Anthropologist, 53(4), 506-524.
Goody, J. (1961). Religion and ritual: the definitional problem. The British Journal of Sociology, 12(2), 142-164.
Graeber, D. & Wengrow, D. (2021). The Dawn of Everything. UK: Allen Lane.
Ingold, T. (1993). The temporality of the landscape. World Archaeology, 25(2), 152-174.
Kelly, L. (2015). Knowledge and power in prehistoric societies: orality, memory and the transmission of culture. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Kelly, R. L. (1995). The foraging spectrum: diversity in hunter-gatherer lifeways. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press.
Little, K. L. (1949). The role of the secret society in cultural specialization. American Anthropologist, 51(2), 199-212.
Minc, L. D. (1986). Scarcity and survival: the role of oral tradition in mediating subsistence crises. Journal of anthropological archaeology, 5(1), 39-113.
Morley, I. (2006). Hunter-gatherer music and its implications for identifying intentionality in the use of acoustic space. In C. Scarre & G. Lawson (Eds.), Archaeoacoustics (pp. 95-105). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Ortman, S. G. (2000). Conceptual metaphor in the archaeological record: methods and an example from the American Southwest. American Antiquity, 65(4), 613-645.
Pfeiffer, J. E. (1982). The creative explosion: an inquiry into the origins of art and religion (1st ed. ed.). New York: Harper & Row.
Rappaport, R. A. (1971). Ritual, sanctity, and cybernetics. American Anthropologist, 73(1), 59-76.
Rappaport, R. A. (1979). Ecology, meaning and religion (2nd ed.). Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books.
Rubin, D. C. (1995). Memory in oral traditions: the cognitive psychology of epic, ballads, and counting-out rhymes. New York: Oxford University Press.
Service, E. R. (1960). Kinship terminology and evolution. American Anthropologist, 62(5), 747-763.
Sillitoe, P. (1998). The development of indigenous knowledge: a new applied anthropology. Current Anthropology, 39(2), 223-252.
Steadman, L. B., Palmer, C. T., & Tilley, C. F. (1996). The universality of ancestor worship. Ethnology, 35.
Testart, A., Arcand, B., Ingold, T., Legros, D., Linkenbach, A., Morton, J., . . . Zvelebil, M. (1988). Some major problems in the social anthropology of hunter-gatherers. Current Anthropology, 29(1), 1-31.
Turnbull, D. (1989). Maps are territories, science is an atlas: a portfolio of exhibits. Geelong, Vic.: Deakin University.
Turnbull, D. (2000). Masons, tricksters and cartographers: comparative studies in the sociology of scientific and indigenous knowledge. Amsterdam: Harwood Academic.
Turnbull, D. (2007). Maps narratives and trails: performativity, hodology and distributed knowledges in complex adaptive systems – an approach to emergent mapping. Geographical Research, 45(2), 140-149.
Watson-Verran, H., & Turnbull, D. (1995). Science and other indigenous knowledge systems. In S. e. a. Jasanoff (Ed.), Handbook of science and technology studies. Thousand Oaks, Calif: Sage Publications.
Whitehouse, H. (1992). Memorable religions: transmission, codification and change in divergent Melanesian contexts. Man, 27(4), 777-797.
Wiessner, P. (2002). The vines of complexity: egalitarian structures and the institutionalization of inequality among the Enga. Current Anthropology, 43(2), 233-269.
Archaeoacoustics
Abela, J. S., Rick, J. W., Huanga, P. P., Kolara, M. A., Smitha, J. O., & Chowninga, J. M. (2008). On the Acoustics of the Underground Galleries of Ancient Chavın de Huantar, Peru. Paper presented at the Acoustics-08 Paris, Paris.
Cox, T.J., Bruno M. Fazenda, B.M. & Susan E. Greaney, S.E.(2020) Using scale modelling to assess the prehistoric acoustics of Stonehenge. Journal of Archaeological Science 122: 105218. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2020.105218.
Darvill, T. (2022). Keeping time at Stonehenge. Antiquity, 96(386), 319-335. doi:10.15184/aqy.2022.5
Declercq, N. F., & Dekeyser, C. S. A. (2007). Acoustic diffraction effects at the Hellenistic amphitheater of Epidaurus: Seat rows responsible for the marvelous acoustics. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 121(4), 2011-2022.
Devereux, P. (2001). Stone Age soundtracks: the acoustic archaeology of ancient sites (Vol. GBA1-W1076). London: Vega.
Devereux, P. (2006). Ears & years: aspects of acoustics and intentionality in antiquity. In C. Scarre & G. Lawson (Eds.), Archaeoacoustics (pp. 23-30). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Devereux, P., & Jahn, R. G. (1996). Preliminary investigations and cognitive considerations of the acoustical resonances of selected archaeological sites. Antiquity, 70(269), 665-666.
Durkheim, E. (1976 [1915]). The elementary forms of the religious life (J. W. Swain, Trans. 2nd. ed. ed.). London: Allen & Unwin.
Farnetani, A., Prodi, N., & Pompoli, R. (2008). On the acoustics of ancient Greek and Roman theaters. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 124(3), 1557-1567.
Garate, D., Labarge, A., Rivero, O., Normand, C., Darricau, J. (2013). The Cave of Isturitz (West Pyrenees, France): One Century of Research in Paleolithic Parietal Art. Arts. 2. 253-272. 10.3390/arts2040253.
Morley, I. (2006). Hunter-gatherer music and its implications for identifying intentionality in the use of acoustic space. In C. Scarre & G. Lawson (Eds.), Archaeoacoustics (pp. 95-105). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Morley, I. (2013). The Prehistory of Music: Human Evolution, Archaeology, and the Origins of Musicality. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Reznikoff, I. (2006). The evidence of the use of sound resonance from paleolithic to medieval times. In C. Scarre & G. Lawson (Eds.), Archaeoacoustics (pp. 77-84). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Roberts, D. L. (1972). The ethnomusicology of the Eastern Pueblos. In A. Ortiz (Ed.), New perspectives on the Pueblos (1st ed., pp. 243-255). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Scarre, C. (2006). Sound, place and space: towards an archaeology of acoustics. In C. Scarre & G. Lawson (Eds.), Archaeoacoustics. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Till, R. (2009). Songs of the stones: the acoustics of Stonehenge. In S. Banfield (Ed.), The sounds of Stonehenge (pp. 17-39). Oxford: Archaeopress.
Waller, S. J. (2006). Intentionality of rock-art placement deduced from acoustical measurements and echo myths In C. Scarre & G. Lawson (Eds.), Archaeoacoustics. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Watson, A. (2001a). Composing Avebury. World Archaeology, 33(2), 296-314.
Watson, A. (2001b). The sounds of transformation: acoustics, monuments and ritual in the British Neolithic. In N. S. Price (Ed.), The Archaeology of Shamanism (pp. 178-192). London: Routledge.
Watson, A. (2006). (Un)intetional sound? In C. Scarre & G. Lawson (Eds.), Archaeoacoustics (pp. 11-22). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Watson, A., & Keating, D. (2000). The architecture of sound in Neolithic Orkney. In A. Ritchie (Ed.), Neolithic Orkney in its European context (pp. 259-263). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Wyatt, S. (2009). Soul music: instruments in an animalistic age. In S. Banfield (Ed.), The sounds of Stonehenge (pp. 11-16). Oxford: Archaeopress.
Archaeoastronomy
Aveni, A. (1993). Archaeoastronomyy in the Americas since Oxford 2. In C. L. N. Ruggles (Ed.), Archaeoastronomy in the 1990s (pp. 15-32). Loughborough, UK: Group D Publications.
Aveni, A. (Ed.). (2008). Foundations of New World cultural astronomy: a reader with commentary. Boulder, Colorado: University Press of Colorado.
Aveni, A. F., Hartung, H., & Kelley, J. C. (1982). Alta Vista (Chalchihuites), Astronomical Implications of a Mesoamerican Ceremonial Outpost at the Tropic of Cancer. American Antiquity, 47(2), 316-335.
Baker, L. L., & Mantonya, K. T. (1998). New evidence for the relationaship of archaeoastronomy to Chaco Anasazi sociopolitical complexity. Paper presented at the 63rd Annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Seattle, Washington.
Brandt, J. C., Maran, S. P., Williamson, R., Harrington, R. S., Cochran, C., Kennedy, M., . . . Chamberlain, V. D. (2008). Possible rock art records of the Crap Nebula Supernova in the Western United States. In A. Aveni (Ed.), Foundations of New World cultural astronomy: a reader with commentary (pp. 635-646). Boulder, Colorado: University Press of Colorado.
Brecher, K., & Haag, W. G. (1983). Astronomical alignments at Poverty Point. American Antiquity, 48(1), 161-163.
Hamacher, D., & Norris, R. (2011). “Bridging the Gap” through Australian Cultural Astronomy. In C. L. N. Ruggles (Ed.), Archaeoastronomy & Ethnoastronomy: building bridges between cultures (Vol. 7, pp. 282-290). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Hayden, B., & Villeneuve, S. (2011). Astronomy in the Upper Palaeolithic? Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 21(03), 331-355. doi: doi:10.1017/S0959774311000400
Haynes, R., Haynes, R. D., Malin, D., & McGee, R. (1996). Explorers of the southern sky: a history of Australian astronomy. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Haynes, R. D. (2000). Astronomy and the Dreaming: the astronomy of the Aboriginal Australians. In H. Selin (Ed.), Astronomy across cultures: the history of non-western astronomy. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
McCluskey, S. C. (1993). Space, time and the calendar in the traditional cultures of America. In C. L. N. Ruggles (Ed.), Archaeoastronomy in the 1990s (pp. 33-44). Loughborough, UK: Group D Publications.
Norris Norris, R.P., Norris, B.R.M. (2021). Why Are There Seven Sisters?. In: Boutsikas, E., McCluskey, S.C., Steele, J. (eds) Advancing Cultural Astronomy: Historical & Cultural Astronomy. New York: Springer.
Ruggles, C. (1993). Introduction: archaeoastronomy — the way ahead. In C. L. N. Ruggles (Ed.), Archaeoastronomy in the 1990s (pp. 1-12). Loughborough, UK: Group D Publications.
Ruggles, C. (1997). Astronomy and Stonehenge. In B. Cunliffe & C. Renfrew (Eds.), Science and Stonehenge (pp. 203-229). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Ruggles, C. (1999). Astronomy in prehistoric Britain and Ireland. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
Ruggles, C. (2007). Interpreting solstitial alignments in Late Neolithic Wessex. Archaeoastronomy: The Journal of Astronomy in Culture(21), 1-27.
Ruggles, C., & Barclay, G. (2000). Cosmology, calendars and society in Neolithic Orkney: a rejoinder to Euan MacKie. Antiquity, 74(283), 62.
Zeilik, M. (1985). Sun shrines and sun symbols in the U.S. Southwest. Archaeoastronomy: Journal for the History of Astronomy Supplement, JHA, xvi(9), S86-S96.
Zeilik, M. (2008). Keeping the sacred and planting calendar. In A. Aveni (Ed.), Foundations of New World cultural astronomy: a reader with commentary. Boulder, Colorado: University Press of Colorado.
Archaeology theory
Bender, B. (1978). Gatherer-Hunter to Farmer: A Social Perspective. World Archaeology, 10(2), 204-222.
Bradley, R. (1998). The significance of monuments: on the shaping of human experience in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe. London: Routledge.
Bradley, R. (2000). An archaeology of natural places. London: Routledge.
Bradley, R. (2003). The Translations of Time. In R. M. Van Dyke & S. E. Alcock (Eds.), Archaeologies of memory (pp. 221-227). Malden, MA Blackwell.
Bradley, R. (2009). Image and audience: rethinking prehistoric art. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Braun, D. P., & Plog, S. (1982). Evolution of “tribal” social networks: theory and prehistoric North American evidence. American Antiquity, 47(3), 504-525.
Darrow, D. (2001). From commune to household: statistics and the social construction of Chaianov’s theory of peasant economy. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 43(04), 788-818. doi: doi:null
Davidson, I. (2006). Getting power from old bones: two Mediterranean museums and their importance. Armidale, N.S.W.: Marketing Services and Publications, University of New England.
Davidson, I. (2010c). Stone tools and the evolution of hominin and human cognition. In A. Nowell & I. Davidson (Eds.), Stone tools and the evolution of human cognition (pp. 185-205). Boulder, CO: University Press of Colorado.
Davidson, I., & Noble, W. D. T. (1996). Human evolution language mind : a, psychological archaeological inquiry. Melbourne: Cambridge University Press.
Donald, M. (1991). Origins of the modern mind: three stages in the evolution of culture and cognition. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
Dowson, T. A. (1998). Rock art: handmaiden to studies of cognitive evolution. In C. Renfrew & C. E. Scarre (Eds.), Cognition and material culture: the archaeology of symbolic storage (pp. 67-76). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Dunnell, R. C. (1999). The concept of waste in an evolutionary archaeology. Journal of anthropological archaeology, 18(3), 243-250.
Earle, T. (Ed.). (1991). Chiefdoms: power, economy, and ideology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Earle, T. K. (1987). Chiefdoms in Archaeological and Ethnohistorical Perspective. Annual Review of Anthropology, 16, 279-308.
Earle, T. K. (1997). How chiefs come to power: the political economy in prehistory. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Flannery, K. V., & Marcus, J. (1996). Cognitive archaeology. In R. W. Preucel & I. Hodder (Eds.), Contemporary archaeology in theory: a reader (pp. 350-363). Cambridge, Mass: Blackwell.
Fleming, A. (2006). Post-processual Landscape Archaeology: a Critique. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 16(03), 267-280. doi: doi:10.1017/S0959774306000163
Gosden, C., & Lock, G. (1998). Prehistoric histories. World Archaeology, 30(1), 2-12.
Helvenston, P. A., Bahn, P. G., Bradshaw, J. L., & Chippindale, C. (2003). Testing the “Three Stages of Trance” Model. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 13(02), 213-224. doi: doi:10.1017/S0959774303000131
Houston, S. D. (2004). The archaeology of communication technologies. Annual Review of Anthropology, 33, 223-250.
Insoll, T. (2004). Archaeology, ritual, religion. New York: Routledge.
Johnson, A. W., & Earle, T. (2000). The evolution of human societies: from foraging group to agrarian state (2nd ed. ed.). Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
Jones, A. (2002). Archaeological theory and scientific practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Jones, A. (2007). Memory and material culture Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Kelly, L. (2015). Knowledge and power in prehistoric societies: orality, memory and the transmission of culture. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Kelly, R. L. (1991). Sedentism, sociopolitical inequality, and resource fluctuations. In S. A. Gregg (Ed.), Between bands and states (pp. 135-158). Carbondale: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.
Kuijt, I. (2000b). People and space in early agricultural villages: exploring daily lives, community size, and architecture in the Late Pre-Pottery Neolithic. Journal of anthropological archaeology, 19(1), 75-102.
Kuijt, I. E. (2000a). Life in Neolithic farming communities: social organization, identity, and differentiation. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers.
Lewis-Williams, J. D., & Pearce, D. (2005). Inside the neolithic mind: consciousness, cosmos and the realm of the gods. London: Thames & Hudson.
Lillios, K. T. (2008). Engaging memories of European prehistory. In A. Jones (Ed.), Prehistoric Europe: theory and practice (pp. 228-254). Chichester, West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell.
Lipe, W. D. (1984). Value and meaning in cultural resources. In H. Cleere (Ed.), Approaches to the archaeological heritage (pp. 1-11). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Longworth, I., & Cherry, J. (Eds.). (1986). Archaeology in Britain since 1945: new directions. London: British Museum Publications.
Madden, A. D., & Bryson, J. (2006). Information behavior in pre-literate societies. In A. Spink & C. Cole (Eds.), New directions in human information behavior (pp. 33-53). Dordrecht: Springer.
Meskell, L. (2003). Memory’s materiality: ancestral presence, commemorative practice and disjunctive locales. In R. M. Van Dyke & S. E. Alcock (Eds.), Archaeologies of memory Malden, MA Blackwell.
Mithen, S. J. (2003). After the ice: a global human history, 20,000-5000 BC London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
Moore, J. A. (1983). The trouble with know-it-alls: information as a social and ecological resource. In J. A. Moore & A. S. E. Keene (Eds.), Archaeological hammers and theories (pp. 173-191). New York: Academic Press.
Noble, W., & Davidson, I. (1993). Tracing the emergence of modern human behavior: methodological pitfalls and a theoretical path. Journal of anthropological archaeology, 12(2), 121-149.
Pfeiffer, J. E. (1982). The creative explosion: an inquiry into the origins of art and religion (1st ed. ed.). New York: Harper & Row.
Post, L. A. (1932). Ancient Memory Systems. The Classical Weekly, 25(14), 105-110. doi: 10.2307/4389681
Price, N. S. (Ed.). (2001). The archaeology of shamanism London: Routledge.
Renfrew, C. (1998). Mind and matter: cognitive archaeology and external symbolic storage. In C. Renfrew & C. Scarre (Eds.), Cognition and material culture: the archaeology of symbolic storage (pp. 1-6). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Renfrew, C. (2005). Before civilization: the radiocarbon revolution and prehistoric Europe. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
Renfrew, C. (2007). Prehistory: the making of the human mind. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
Renfrew, C., & Bahn, P. (2008). Archaeology: theories, methods and practice (5th ed.). London: Thames & Hudson.
Renfrew, C., & Scarre, C. (Eds.). (1998). Cognition and material culture: the archaeology of symbolic storage. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Rice, P. C., & Paterson, A. L. (1985). Cave art and bones: exploring the interrelationships. American Anthropologist, 87(1), 94-100.
Root, D. (1983). Information exchange and the spatial configurations of egalitarian societies. In J. A. Moore & A. S. Keene (Eds.), Archaeological hammers and theories (pp. 193-219). New York: Academic Press.
Rowlands, M. (1993). The role of memory in the transmission of culture. World Archaeology, 25(2), 141-151.
Scarre, C. (1989). Painting by resonance. Nature, 338(30 March), 382.
Scarre, C. (2006). Sound, place and space: towards an archaeology of acoustics. In C. Scarre & G. Lawson (Eds.), Archaeoacoustics. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Thomas, J. (1996). Time, culture, and identity: an interpretative archaeology. New York: Routledge.
Tilley, C. (1994). A phenomenology of landscape: places, paths, and monuments. Oxford, UK: Berg.
Van Dyke, R. M., & Alcock, S. E. (2003). Archaeologies of memory Malden, MA Blackwell.
Wetterstrom, W. (1978). Cognitive systems, food patterns, and paleoethnobotany. In R. I. Ford (Ed.), The nature and status of ethnobotany (pp. 81-95). Ann Arbor, Michigan: Museum of Anthropology and, University of Michigan.
Whitley, J. (2002). Too many ancestors. Antiquity, 76(291), 119-126.
Whittle, A. (2002). Conclusions: long conversations, concerning time, descent and place in the world. In C. Scarre (Ed.), Monuments and landscape in Atlantic Europe: perception and society during the Neolithic and early Bronze Age New York: Routledge.
Yoffee, N. (2005). Myths of the archaic state: evolution of the earliest cities, states, and civilizations. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Asia
Kwon, H. (1999). Play the bear: myth and ritual in East Siberia. History of Religions, 38(4), 373-387.
Simpson, B. (1997). Possession, dispossession and the social distribution of knowledge among Sri Lankan ritual specialists. The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 3(1), 43-59.
Terada, A. M. (1994). The magic crocodile and other folktales from Indonesia. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawaii Press.
Art (see also rock art)
Day, D. (2023) National Geographic team with Princeton anthropologist Agustín Fuentes makes news with potentially game-changing find. https://www.princeton.edu/news/2023/06/08/national-geographic-team-princeton-anthropologist-agustin-fuentes-makes-news. (Homo naledi and art)
Joordens, J., d’Errico, F., Wesselingh, F. et al. (2015) Homo erectus at Trinil on Java used shells for tool production and engraving. Nature 518, pp. 228–231.
Kellogg, R. 1970. Analyzing Children’s Art. Palo Alto, CA: Mayfield.
Morriss-Kay, Gillian M. (2010) The evolution of human artistic creativity. Journal of anatomy, vol. 216 (2), pp. 158–176.
The Scala Group (Editor) (2013) Precolumbian Art: The Pocket Visual Encyclopedia of Art. New York: Welcome Rain Publishers.
Australian archaeology
Brumm, A., & Moore, M. W. (2005). Symbolic Revolutions and the Australian Archaeological Record. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 15(02), 157-175. doi: doi:10.1017/S0959774305000089
Clark, P., & Barbetti, M. (1982). Fires, hearths and palaeomagnetism. In W. Ambrose & P. Duerden (Eds.), Archaeometry: an Australasian perspective (pp. 144-150). Canberra: Department of Prehistory, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University.
Davidson, I. (2010a). A lecture by the returning Chair of Australian Studies, Harvard University 2008-09: Australian archaeology as a historical science. Journal of Australian Studies, 14(3), 377-398.
Davidson, I. (2010b). Symbolism and becoming a hunter-gatherer. Paper presented at the IFRAO Congress: Pleistocene art of the world, Ariège, Pyrenees, France.
Davidson, I. (2010c). Stone tools and the evolution of hominin and human cognition. In A. Nowell & I. Davidson (Eds.), Stone tools and the evolution of human cognition (pp. 185-205). Boulder, CO: University Press of Colorado.
Davidson, I. (2013). Peopling the last new worlds: The first colonisation of Sahul and the Americas. Quaternary International, 285, 1-29. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2012.09.023
Davidson, I., & Roberts, D. A. (2008). 14,000 B C–on being alone: the isolation of Tasmania. In D. A. Roberts & M. Crotty (Eds.), Turning points in Australian history (pp. 18-31). Sydney: UNSW Press.
Dickins, J. (1996). A remote analogy?: From Central Australian tjurunga to Irish early Bronze Age axes. Antiquity, v70(n267), p161(167).
Flood, J. (2004). Archaeology of the Dreamtime: the story of prehistoric Australia and its people (Rev. ed. ed.). Marleston, S.A.: J.B. Publishing.
Flood, J. (2006). The original Australians: story of the Aboriginal people. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.
Garfinkel, A. P., Austin, D. R., Earle, D., & Williams, H. (2009). Myth, Ritual and Rock Art: Coso Decorated Animal-humans and the Animal Master. Rock Art Research: The Journal of the Australian Rock Art Research Association (AURA), 26(2), 179-197.
Gresser, P. J. (1964). New Distributional Records of Stone Implements in New South Wales and Queensland. Part 4. Mankind, 6(3), 120-135. doi: 10.1111/j.1835-9310.1964.tb01363.x
Hiscock, P. (2008). Archaeology of ancient Australia London: Routledge.
Holdgate, G. R., Wagstaff, B., & Gallagher, S. J. (2011). Did Port Phillip Bay nearly dry up between ~2800 and 1000 cal. yr BP? Bay floor channelling evidence, seismic and core dating. Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, 58(2), 157-175. doi: 10.1080/08120099.2011.546429
Isaacs, J. (1980). Australian Dreaming: 40,000 years of Aboriginal history. Sydney: Lansdowne Press.
King-Boyes, M. (1977). Patterns of Aboriginal culture: then and now. Sydney: McGraw-Hill Book Company.
McDonald, J. (2008). Dreamtime superhighway: Sydney Basin rock art and prehistoric information exchange. Canberra: ANU E Press.
Nunn, P. D. (2018). The Edge of Memory. London: Bloomsbury.
Nunn, P. D. (2021). Worlds in Shadow: Submerged Lands in Science, Memory and Myth. London: Bloomsbury.
Rademaker, L., Maralngurra, G., Goldhahn, J., Mangiru, K., Taçon, P.S.C & May, S.K. (2022) Friday essay: ‘this is our library’ – how to read the amazing archive of First Nations stories written on rock, The Conversation, https://theconversation.com/friday-essay-this-is-our-library-how-to-read-the-amazing-archive-of-first-nations-stories-written-on-rock-176886. Accessed 12 July 2023.
Ross, A. (2008). Managing Meaning at an Ancient Site in the 21st Century: the Gummingurru Aboriginal Stone Arrangement on the Darling Downs, Southern Queensland. Oceania, 78(1), 91-108.
Ross, J., & Davidson, I. (2006). Rock art and ritual: an archaeological analysis of rock art in arid Central Australia. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, 13(4), 305-341.
Tacon, P. S. C. (1991). The power of stone: symbolic aspects of stone use and tool development in western Arnhem Land, Australia. Antiquity, v65(n247), p192(116).
Tacon, P. S. C. (1999). Identifying ancient sacred landscapes in Australia: from physical to social. In W. Ashmore & K. A. Bernard (Eds.), Archaeologies of landscape: contemporary perspectives (pp. 33-57). Malden, Mass.: Blackwell.
Tacon, P. S. C. (2002). Rock-art and landscapes. In B. David & M. Wilson (Eds.), Inscribed landscapes: marking and making place (pp. 122-136). Honolulu: University of HawaiÏ Press.
Australian Indigenous cultures
Aboriginal Nations Australia (Writer). (2004). The Dreaming [videorecording]: a six series collection on DVD. Sydney: Aboriginal Nations Australia.
Anonymous. (1988). The teaching stones of the outcast tribe. Wembley, W.A: Aboriginal Culture Abroad (Australia) Pty Ltd.
Attwood, B., & Magowan, F. (2003). Introduction. In B. Attwood & F. Magowan (Eds.), Telling stories: indigenous history and memory in Australia and New Zealand (pp. xi-xvii). Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.
Australian Government. (2011). Uluru – Kata Tjuta National Park. Retrieved 28 February 2011, from http://www.environment.gov.au/parks/uluru/
Buku-Larrngay Mulka Centre. (1999). Saltwater: Yirrkala bark paintings of sea country: recognising indigenous sea rights. Neutral Bay, N.S.W.: Buku-Larrngay Mulka Centre in association with Jennifer Isaacs Publishing.
Beckett, J. (1994). Aboriginal histories, aboriginal myths: an introduction. Oceania, 65(2), 97- 116.
Benterrak, K., Muecke, S., & Roe, P. (1984). Reading the country: an introduction to nomadology. Fremantle, W.A.: Fremantle Arts Centre Press.
Berndt, R. M., & Berndt, C. H. (1954). Arnhem Land, its history and its people. Melbourne: F. W. Cheshire.
Biddle, J. L. (2007). Breasts, bodies, canvas: central desert art as experience. Sydney: UNSW Press.
Blake, B. J. (1979). Woiwurrung, the Melbourne language. In R. M. W. Dixon & B. J. Blake (Eds.), Handbook of Australian languages (Vol. 4). Canberra: Australian National University Press.
Bowdler, S. (1999). A study of Indigenous ceremonial (“Bora”) sites in eastern Australia. Paper presented at the Heritage Landscapes: Understanding Place &Communities, Southern Cross University, Lismore.
Bradley, J. (2010). Singing saltwater country: journey to the songlines of Carpentaria. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.
Bradley, J. J. (2008). When a Stone Tool Is a Dingo: country and relatedness in Australian Aboriginal notions of landscape. In B. David & J. Thomas (Eds.), Handbook of landscape archaeology Walnut Creek, Calif.: Left Coast Press.
Briggs, C. (2008). The Journey Cycles of the Boonwurrung: stories with Boonwurrung language. East Melbourne, Victoria: Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages (VACL).
Cameron, P. (Writer). (1993). Dance on your land [videorecording]. Woomera Aboriginal Corporation (Producer). Civic Square, ACT: Ronin Films.
Churchill, S. (2009). Australian bats (2nd ed.). Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Clarke, P. (2003). Where the ancestors walked: Australia as an Aboriginal landscape. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.
Clunies Ross, M. (1986). Australian Aboriginal oral traditions. Oral Tradition, 1(2), 231-271.
Davidson, I. (1995). Review: paintings, power, and the past: can there ever be an ethnoarchaeology of art? Current Anthropology, 36(5), 889-892.
Dixon, R. M. W. (1972). The Dyirbal language of North Queensland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Dixon, R. M. W., & Koch, G. (1996). Dyirbal song poetry: the oral literature of an Australian rainforest people St. Lucia, Qld: University of Queensland Press.
Doring, J. (2000). Gwion Gwion: Dulwan Mamaa: secret and sacred pathways of the Ngarinyin Aboriginal people of Australia Koln: Konemann
Ellis, C. J., & Barwick, L. (1989). Antikirinja women’s song knowledge 1963-72: its significance in Antikirinja culture. In P. Brock (Ed.), Women, rites and sites: aboriginal women’s cultural knowledge (pp. 21-40). Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Fletcher, N. (1996). The didgeridu (didgeridoo). Acoustics Australia, 24(1), 11-15.
Flood, J. (2006). The original Australians: story of the Aboriginal people. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.
Fuller, R. S., Anderson, M. G., Norris, R. P., & Trudgett, M. (2014). Emu Sky Knowledge of the Kamilaroi and Euahlayi Peoples. Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage, 17(2), 171–179.
Gammage, B. (2012). The Biggest Estate on Earth: How Aborigines made Australia. Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin.
Gardiner, G. (1996). Orality, myth and performance in traditional indigenous cultures Clayton, Vic: Koorie Research Centre, Monash University.
Gay’wu Group of Women. (2020). Songspirals: sharing women’s wisdom of Country through songlines. Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin.
Goddard, C., & Kalotas, A. (2002). Punu: Yankunytjatjara plant use: traditional methods of preparing foods, medicines, utensils and weapons from native plants North Ryde, N.S.W.: Angus & Robertson.
Graham, T. (Writer). (2006). Ceremony: the Djungguwan of Northeast Arnhem Land [videorecording]. Lindfield, N.S.W.: Film Australia.
Green, J., Algy, C., Meakins, F (2022), Tradition and innovation: how we are documenting sign language in a Gurindji community in northern Australia, The Conversation, https://theconversation.com/tradition-and-innovation-how-we-are-documenting-sign-language-in-a-gurindji-community-in-northern-australia-194524?
Hamacher, D., & Norris, R. (2011). “Bridging the Gap” through Australian Cultural Astronomy. In C. L. N. Ruggles (Ed.), Archaeoastronomy & Ethnoastronomy: building bridges between cultures (Vol. 7, pp. 282-290). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Hamacher, D. W. (2019). A Framework for Exploring Indigenous Astronomical Knowledge in the Torres Strait. Monash Indigenous Centre, Monash University. Melbourne.
Hamacher, D., Barsa, J., Passi, S., & Tapim, A. (2019). Indigenous use of stellar scintillation to predict weather and seasonal change. The Royal Society of Victoria, 131, 24–33.
Hamacher, D. (2022), The First Astronomers, Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin.
Haynes, R., Haynes, R. D., Malin, D., & McGee, R. (1996). Explorers of the southern sky: a history of Australian astronomy. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Haynes, R. D. (2000). Astronomy and the Dreaming: the astronomy of the Aboriginal Australians. In H. Selin (Ed.), Astronomy across cultures: the history of non-western astronomy. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
Hill, M. (1981). Untrammelled Art: Travelling Exhibition of Aboriginal Art From Earlier Fleets–11: An Aboriginal Anthology 1981. Melbourne: Ruskin press.
Howitt, A. W. (1889). Notes on Australian message sticks and messengers. The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 18, 314-332.
Hutcherson, G. (1995). Djalkiri wanga= The land is my foundation: 50 years of Aboriginal art from Yirrkala, Northeast Arnhem Land. Nedlands, W.A.: The University of W.A. Berndt Museum of Anthropology.
Isaacs, J. (1980). Australian Dreaming: 40,000 years of Aboriginal history. Sydney: Lansdowne Press.
Isaacs, J. (1984). Australia’s living heritage: arts of the Dreaming. Sydney: New Holland.
Keeler, C., & Couzens, V. (Eds.). (2010). Meerreeng-an here is my country: the story of Aboriginal Victoria told through art (1st ed. ed.). Melbourne: Koorie Heritage Trust Inc.
Kerwin, D. D. T. (2010). Aboriginal dreaming paths and trading routes: the colonisation of the Australian economic landscape. Brighton: Sussex Academic Press.
King-Boyes, M. (1977). Patterns of Aboriginal culture: then and now. Sydney: McGraw-Hill Book Company.
Levitt, D. (1981). Unwritten pharmacopoeia. In K. R. Henderson (Ed.), Hemisphere: an Aboriginal anthology 1981 (Vol. From Earlier Fleets – II, pp. 14-19). Dickson, ACT: Curriculum Development Centre.
Lewis, D., & Rose, D. (1988). The shape of the dreaming: the cultural significance of Victoria River rock art. Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press for the Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
Magowan, F. (2003). Crying to remember: reproducing personhood and community. In B. Attwood & F. Magowan (Eds.), Telling stories: indigenous history and memory in Australia and New Zealand (pp. 41-60). Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.
Massola, A. (1968). Bunjil’s Cave: myths, legends and superstitions of the Aborigines of South-East Australia. Melbourne: Landsdowne Press.
Mathews, R. H. (1895). The bora, or initiation ceremonies of the Kamilaroi tribe. The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 24, 411-427.
Mathews, R. H. (1897). Message-sticks used by the Aborigines of Australia. American Anthropologist, 10(9), 288.
Meggitt, M. J. (1965). Desert people: a study of the Walbiri Aborigines of Central Australia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Morphy, H. (1983). “Now you understand” : an analysis of the way Yolngu have used sacred knowledge to retain their autonomy. In N. Peterson & M. Langton (Eds.), Aborigines, land and land rights (pp. 110-133). Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
Morphy, H. (Ed.). (1988). Animals into art. London: Allen & Unwin.
Morphy, H. (1991). Ancestral connections: art and an aboriginal system of knowledge. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Morphy, H. (1998). Aboriginal art London: Phaidon Press.
Morwood, M. J. (2002). Visions from the past: the archaeology of Australian Aboriginal art. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.
Mountford, C. P. (1956). Records of the American-Australian scientific expedition to Arnhem Land / general editor: C.P. Mountford. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.
Mountford, C. P. (1977 [1965]). Ayers Rock. Adelaide: Seal Books.
Moyle, A. M. (1981). The Australian didjeridu: a late musical intrusion. World Archaeology, 12(3), 321-331.
Munn, N. D. (1973). Walbiri iconography: graphic representation and cultural symbolism in a central Australian society. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell Uiversity Press.
Museum Victoria. (2000). Bunjilaka: the Aboriginal Centre at Melbourne Museum. Melbourne: Museum Victoria.
Myers, F. R. (2001). Ways of placemaking. In K. Flint & H. Morphy (Eds.), Culture, Landscape, and the Environment (pp. 72-110). New York: Oxford University Press USA.
National Archives of Australia. (2011). Yirrkala bark petitions 1963 (Cth). Retrieved 29 April, 2012, from foundingdocs.gov.au/item-did-104.html
Neale, M. (Ed.) (2017). Songlines: tracking the Seven Sisters. Canberra: National Museum Australia Press.
Neale, M., & Kelly, L. (2020). Songlines: the power and promise. Port Melbourne: Thames & Hudson.
Norris, R., & Norris, C. (2009). Emu Dreaming: an introduction to Australian Aboriginal astronomy: Ray Norris.
Norris, R. P., & Hamacher, D. W. (2009). The astronomy of Aboriginal Australia In D. Valls-Gabaud & A. Boksenberg (Eds.), The role of astronomy in society and culture (pp. 10-17): Proceedings of the IAU Symposium No. 260.
Norris, R., & Harney, B. Y. (2014). Songlines and Navigation in Wardaman and other Australian Aboriginal Cultures. Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage, 17(2), 141–148.
Nunn, P. D. (2018). The Edge of Memory. London: Bloomsbury.
Nunn, P. D., & Reid, N. J. (2016). Aboriginal Memories of Inundation of the Australian Coast Dating from More than 7000 Years Ago. Australian Geographer, 47(1), 11-47.
Oodgeroo, N. (1995). Stradbroke Deamtime (Rev. ed. [re-illustrated ed.]. ed.). Pymble, N.S.W: Angus & Robertson.
Palmer, B., Blythe, J., Gaby, A., Hoffmann, D., & Ponsonnet, M. (2019). Geospatial natural language in indigenous Australia: Research priorities. CEUR Workshop Proceedings, 2455, 17-27. http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2455/
Parer, D., & Parer-Cook, E. (Writers). (2008). Australia: land of parrots [videorecording]. Australia: Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
Parks Victoria. (2009). Bunjil Shelter: Black Range Scenic Reserve, Stawell, Visitor Guide. Melbourne: State Government Victoria.
Pascoe, B. (2018). Dark Emu: Aboriginal Australia and the Birth of Agriculture. Broome, Western Australia: Magabala Books.
Perrurle Dobson, V. c. (2007). Arelhe-Kenhe Merrethene: Arrernte traditional healing. Alice Springs, N.T. : IAD Press.
Queensland Government. (2010). Mungkan Kandju (Kaanju) National Park. National parks, marine parks and forests. Retrieved 30 October, 2010, from http://www.derm.qld.gov.au/parks/mungkan-kandju-kaanju/culture.html
Reed, A. W. (1993). Aboriginal myths, legends and fables. Chatswood, N.S.W.: Reed.
Rogers, W. A. (1977). Aboriginal decorative art on sacred churinga and bull-roarers. Coffs Harbour, N.S.W.: Central North Coast Newspaper Co.
Rose, D. B. (1992). Dingo makes us human: life and land in an aboriginal Australian culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Rose, D. B. (1996). Nourishing terrains: Australian Aboriginal views of landscape and wilderness. Canberra: Australian Heritage Commission.
Rumsey, A. (1994). The Dreaming, human agency and inscriptive practice. Oceania, 65(2), 116-119).
Ryan, J. (1990). Spirit in land: bark paintings from Arnhem land in the National Gallery of Victoria [exhibition catalogue]. Melbourne: National Gallery of Victoria.
Satterthwait, L., & Heather, A. (1987). Determinants of Earth Circle site location in the Moreton region. Queensland Archaeological Research, 4, 5-53.
Seear, L., & Ewington, J. (Eds.). (1998). Brought to light : Australian art, 1850-1965: from the Queensland Art Gallery collection. South Brisbane: Queensland Art Gallery.
Stack, E. M. (1989). Aboriginal pharmacopoeia. Darwin: Northern Territory Library Service.
Stanner, W. E. H. (1979). White man got no dreaming: essays, 1938-1973. Canberra: Australian National University Press.
Strehlow, T. G. H. (1971). Songs of Central Australia. Sydney: Angus and Robertson.
Sveiby, Karl-Erik & Skuthorpe, Tex (2006), Treading Lightly: the hidden wisdom of the world’s oldest people. Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin.
Tacon, P. S. C. (1991). The power of stone: symbolic aspects of stone use and tool development in western Arnhem Land, Australia. Antiquity, v65(n247), p192(116).
Tacon, P. S. C. (1994). Socialising landscapes: the long term implications of signs, symbols and marks on the land. Archaeology in Oceania, 29(3), 117-129.
Tacon, P. S. C. (1999). Identifying ancient sacred landscapes in Australia: from physical to social. In W. Ashmore & K. A. Bernard (Eds.), Archaeologies of landscape: contemporary perspectives (pp. 33-57). Malden, Mass.: Blackwell.
Tacon, P. S. C. (2002). Rock-art and landscapes. In B. David & M. Wilson (Eds.), Inscribed landscapes: marking and making place (pp. 122-136). Honolulu: University of HawaiÏ Press.
Tacon, P. S. C. (2008). Rainbow colour and power among the Waanyi of Northwest Queensland. Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 18(02), 163-176.
Taçon, P. S. C. et al., (2022) Marra Wonga: Archaeological and contemporary First Nations interpretations of one of central Queensland’s largest rock art sites, Australian Archaeology, 88:2, 159-179, DOI: 10.1080/03122417.2022.2084666
The State of Queensland. (2010). Mungkan Kandju (Kaanju) National Park. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
Tidemann, S., & Whiteside, T. (2010). Aboriginal stories: the riches and colour of Australian birds. In S. Tidemann & A. Gosler (Eds.), Ethno-ornithology: birds and indigenous people, culture and society (pp. 153-179). London: Earthscan.
Verran, H. (1998). Re-imagining land ownership in Australia. Postcolonial Studies, 1(2), 237-254.
Watson, H., & Yolngu community at Yirrkala. (1989). Aboriginal-Australian maps. In D. Turnbull (Ed.), Maps are territories, science is an atlas: a portfolio of exhibits. Geelong, Vic.: Deakin University.
Watson, H., Yolngu community at Yirrkala, & Chambers, D. W. (1989). Singing the land, signing the land: a portfolio of exhibits Geelong, Vic: Deakin University.
Watson-Verran, H., & Turnbull, D. (1995). Science and other indigenous knowledge systems. In S. e. a. Jasanoff (Ed.), Handbook of science and technology studies. Thousand Oaks, Calif: Sage Publications.
Williams, N. M. (1986). The Yolngu and their land: a system of land tenure and the fight for its recognition. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
Wolfe, P. (1991). On being woken up: The Dreamtime in anthropology and in Australian settler culture. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 33(2), 197-224.
Yunkaporta, T. (2019). Sand Talk: how Indigenous thinking can save the world. Melbourne: Text Publishing.
British archaeology (primarily Neolithic)
Allen, M. J. (1997). Environment and Land-Use: the Economic Development of the Communities Who Built Stonehenge (An Economy to Support the Stones). In B. Cunliffe & C. Renfrew (Eds.), Science and Stonehenge (pp. 115-144). Oxford: Published for the British Academy by Oxford University Press.
Balter, M. (2008). Early Stonehenge Pilgrims Came From Afar, With Cattle in Tow. Science, 320(5884), 1704-1705.
Barrett, J. C. (1990). The Monumentality of Death: The Character of Early Bronze Age Mortuary Mounds in Southern Britain. World Archaeology, 22(2), 179-189.
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Helskog, K. (2004). Landscapes in Rock-Art: Rock-carving and ritual in the old European North. In C. Chippindale & G. Nash (Eds.), Pictures in place: the figured landscapes of rock-art (pp. 265-288). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Leder, D., Hermann, R., Hüls, M. et al. (2021) A 51,000-year-old engraved bone reveals Neanderthals’ capacity for symbolic behaviour. Nature Ecology & Evolution 5, pp. 1273–1282.
Lillios, K. T. (2003). Creating memory in prehistory: the engraved slate plaques of Southwest Iberia. In R. M. Van Dyke & S. E. Alcock (Eds.), Archaeologies of memory Malden, MA Blackwell.
Lillios, K. T. (2008). Engaging memories of European prehistory. In A. Jones (Ed.), Prehistoric Europe: theory and practice (pp. 228-254). Chichester, West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell.
Patton, M. (1993). Statements in stone: monuments and society in Neolithic Brittany. London: Routledge.
Prent, M. (2003). Glories of the past in the past: ritual activities at Palatial Ruins in eary Iron Age Crete. In R. M. Van Dyke & S. E. Alcock (Eds.), Archaeologies of memory Malden, MA Blackwell.
Robb, J. (2001). Island identities: ritual, travel and the creation of difference in Neolithic Malta. European Journal of Archaeology, 4(2), 175-202.
Scarre, C. (2011). Landscapes of Neolithic Brittany. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Sherratt, A. (1990). The genesis of megaliths: monumentality, ethnicity and social complexity in Neolithic north-west Europe. World Archaeology, 22(2), 147-167.
Sherratt, A. (1998). Point of exchange: the later Neolithic Monuments the Morbihan. In D. D. A. Simpson & A. M. Gibson (Eds.), Prehistoric ritual and religion (pp. 119-138). Thrupp, Stroud, Gloucestershire: Sutton.
Turnbull, D. (2002). Performance and narrative, bodies and movement in the construction of places and objects, spaces and knowledges: the case of the Maltese megaliths. Theory, culture & society, 19(5/6), 125-143.
Whittle, A. (2002). Conclusions: long conversations, concerning time, descent and place in the world. In C. Scarre (Ed.), Monuments and landscape in Atlantic Europe: perception and society during the Neolithic and early Bronze Age New York: Routledge.
European historic mnemonics
Burchill, J. (1962). De memoria et reminscentia. Retrieved 8 February, 2014, from http://dhspriory.org/thomas/english/MemoriaReminiscentia.htm
Carruthers, M. (2008). The book of memory: a study of memory in medieval culture (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Carruthers, M., & Ziolkowski, J. M. (Eds.). (2004). The medieval craft of memory: an anthology of texts and pictures Philadelphia, Pa.: University of Pennsylvania Press.
De Hamel, C. (1994). A history of illuminated manuscripts. Oxford: Phaidon.
Ferris, I. M. (1999). Invisible Architecture: Inside the Roman Memory Palace. Paper presented at the Theoretical Roman Archaeology and Architecture: The Third Conference Proceedings Glasgow.
Havelock, E. A. (1963). Preface to Plato. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Havelock, E. A. (1978). The Greek concept of justice: from its shadow in Homer to its substance in Plato. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Havelock, E. A. (1986). The muse learns to write: reflections on orality and literacy from antiquity to the present. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Hutton, P. H. (1987). The Art of Memory Reconceived: From Rhetoric to Psychoanalysis. Journal of the History of Ideas, 48(3), 371-392. doi: 10.2307/2709758
Sorabji, R. (2006). Aristotle on Memory (Second ed.). Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Spence, J. D. (1985). The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci. New York: Penguin.
Stocks, B., & Morgan, N. (Eds.). (2008). The medieval imagination: illuminated manuscripts from Cambridge, Australia and New Zealand. South Yarra, Vic.: Macmillan Art Pub.
Yates, F. A. (1966). The art of memory. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Genetics – NF1 and FOXP2
Riccardi V.M. (1999) Historical background and introduction. In Friedman JM, Gutmann DH, Maccollin M, Riccardi VM, editors. Neurofibromatosis: Phenotype, Natural History, and Pathogenesis. 3rd edn. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 1–25.
Summers, M.A., Quinlan, K.G., Payne, J.M., Little, D.G., North, K.N. & Schindeler, A.,(2015) Skeletal muscle and motor deficits in Neurofibromatosis Type 1, Journal of Musculoskeletal and Neuronal Interactions, 15(2), pp. 161–170.
Webb DM, Zhang J. (2005) FoxP2 in song-learning birds and vocal-learning mammals. Journal of Heredity, 96(3), pp. 212-6.
Irish archaeology
Bergh, S. (2002). Knocknarea – the ultimate monument: Megaliths and mountains in Neolithic Cúil Irra, north west Ireland. . In C. Scarre (Ed.), Monuments and landscape in Atlantic Europe: perception and society during the Neolithic and early Bronze Age (pp. 139-151). New York: Routledge.
Bradley, R. (2007). The prehistory of Britain and Ireland Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Brady, C. (2007). The lithic landscape of the Newgrange environs: an introduction. In M. Larsson & M. P. Pearson (Eds.), From Stonehenge to the Baltic: living with cultural diversity in the third millennium BC (pp. 213-220). London: Archaeopress.
Brennan, M. (1994). The stones of time: calendars, sundials, and stone chambers of ancient Ireland. Rochester, Vermont: Inner Traditions International.
Cooney, G. (1991). Irish Neolithic Landscapes and Land Use Systems: The Implications of Field Systems. Rural History, 2(02), 123-139. doi: doi:10.1017/S0956793300002727
Cooney, G. (2000). Landscapes of Neolithic Ireland. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.
Cunliffe, B. W. (1997). The ancient Celts Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Dickins, J. (1996). A remote analogy?: From Central Australian tjurunga to Irish early Bronze Age axes. Antiquity, v70(n267), p161(167).
McQuillan, L., & Logue, P. (2008). Funery querns: rethinking the role of the basin in Irish Passage Tombs. Ulster Journal of Archaeology, 67, 14-21. doi: 10.2307/41220766
Meyer, M. (1995). Dance and the politics of orality: a study of the Irish “scoil rince”. Dance Research Journal, 27(1), 25-39.
O’Kelly, M. J. (1982). Newgrange: archaeology, art and legend. London: Thames and Hudson.
Stout, G., & Stout, M. (2008). Newgrange. Cork: Cork University Press.
Thomas, J. (1990). Monuments from the inside: the case of the Irish megalithic tombs. World Archaeology, 22(2), 168-178.
Thompson, T. (2004). The Irish Sí tradition: connections between the disciplines, and what’s in a word? Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, 11(4), 335-368.
Whittle, A., Healy, F., & Bayliss, A. (2011). Gathering time: dating the early Neolithic enclosures of southern Britain and Ireland. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
Learning Foreign Languages
McLaughlin, B. (1992). Myths and Misconceptions about Second Language Learning: what every teacher needs to unlearn. National Center for Research on Cultural Diversity and Second Language Learning, Center for Applied Linguistics, Santa Cruz, CA, Educational Practice Report 5.
Wyner, G. (2014). Fluent Forever: how to learn any language fast and never forget it. New York: Harmony Books.
Memory and mnemonics
Anonymous. (1988). The teaching stones of the outcast tribe. Wembley, W.A: Aboriginal Culture Abroad (Australia) Pty Ltd.
Bascom, W. R. (1980). Sixteen cowries: Yoruba divination from Africa to the New World. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Bellezza, F. S. (1996). Mnemonic methods to enhance storage and retrieval. In R. A. Bjork & E. L. Bjork (Eds.), Memory: Handbook of perception and cognition (2nd ed.) (pp. 345-380). San Diego: Academic Press.
Bradley, R. (2003). The Translations of Time. In R. M. Van Dyke & S. E. Alcock (Eds.), Archaeologies of memory (pp. 221-227). Malden, MA Blackwell.
Brokaw, G. (2010). A history of the khipu. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Burchill, J. (1962). De memoria et reminscentia. Retrieved 8 February, 2014, from http://dhspriory.org/thomas/english/MemoriaReminiscentia.htm
By, O. (2007). Memo: the easiest way to improve your memory. Double Bay, NSW: Lunchroom Publishing.
Connerton, P. (1990). How societies remember. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Cooke, E. (2008). Remember, remember. London: Viking.
Foer, J. (2011). Moonwalking with Einstein: the art and science of remembering everything. New York: Penguin Press.
Jenness, D. (1923). Eskimo string figures. The Journal of American Folklore, 36(141), 281-294.
Keibel, C. B. (1990). Memory sticks and other mnemonic devices. The Nigerian Field, 55(3/4), 91-98.
O’Brien, D. (2000). Learn to remember: practical techniques and exercises to improve your memory. San Francisco: Chronicle Books.
Olick, J. K., & Robbins, J. (1998). Social memory studies: from “collective memory” to the historical sociology of mnemonic practices. Annual Review of Sociology, 24, 105-140.
Post, L. A. (1932). Ancient Memory Systems. The Classical Weekly, 25(14), 105-110. doi: 10.2307/4389681
Reefe, T. Q. (1977). Lukasa: a Luba memory device. African Arts, 10(4), 49-88.
Renfrew, C. (1998). Mind and matter: cognitive archaeology and external symbolic storage. In C. Renfrew & C. Scarre (Eds.), Cognition and material culture: the archaeology of symbolic storage (pp. 1-6). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Rowlands, M. (1993). The role of memory in the transmission of culture. World Archaeology, 25(2), 141-151.
Rubin, D. C. (1995). Memory in oral traditions: the cognitive psychology of epic, ballads, and counting-out rhymes. New York: Oxford University Press.
Sorabji, R. (2006). Aristotle on Memory (Second ed.). Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Tedlock, B. (1992). Time and the highland Maya (Revised edition ed.). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Yates, F. A. (1966). The art of memory. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Middle Eastern archaeology
Balter, M. (2005). The Goddess and the Bull New York: Free Press.
Banning, E. B. (2011). So Fair a House: Gobekli Tepe and the Identification of Temples in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic of the Near East. Current Anthropology, 52(5), 619-660.
Bar-Yosef, O., & Belfer-Cohen, A. (1991). From sedentary hunter-gatherers to territorial farmers in the Levant. In S. A. Gregg (Ed.), Between Bands and States (pp. 181-202). Carbondale: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.
Bell, G. (2008 [1907]). The desert and the sown: travels in Palestine and Syria. New York: Dover Publications.
Curry, A. (2008). Gobekli Tepe: the world’s first temple? Retrieved 26 September, 2011, from http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/gobekli-tepe.html
Ratnagar, Shereen (2017) The history of ancient Egypt. Bath: Worth Press.
Scham, S. (2008). The world’s first temple. Archaeology, 61(6), 22-27.
Music
Backwell, L., Bradfield, J., Carlson, K., Jashashvili, T., Wadley, L., & D’Errico, F. (2018). The antiquity of bow-and-arrow technology: Evidence from Middle Stone Age layers at Sibudu Cave. Antiquity, 92(362), 289-303.
Collins, A. (2020). The Music Advantage: How Music Helps Your Child’s Brain. Crow’s Nest: Allen and Unwin.
Crewdson, J., & Watson, A. (2009). New art – ancient craft: making music for the monuments. In S. Banfield (Ed.), The sounds of Stonehenge (pp. 4-10). Oxford: Archaeopress.
David, B. (2017). Cave Art. London: Thames & Hudson (World of art series).
Fazenda, B. et al. (2017) Cave acoustics in prehistory: Exploring the association of Palaeolithic visual motifs and acoustic response. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 142, 1332 (2017); doi: 10.1121/1.4998721
Gioia, T. (2019) Music: a subversive history. New York: Basic Books.
Harvey, A. (2017). Music, Evolution, and the Harmony of Souls. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Jäncke, L. (2008). Music, memory and emotion. Journal of Biology, 7(6), 21.
Kossykh, A. (2018), Music and Sounds in Ancient Europe in Contributions from the European Music Archaeology Project, eds. Stefano De Angeli, Arnd Adje Both, Stefan Hagel, Peter Holmes, Raquel Jiménez Pasalodos, Cajsa S. Lund (EMAP), pp. 34-39.
Mithen, S (2006). The Singing Neanderthals. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
Morley, I. (2006). Hunter-gatherer music and its implications for identifying intentionality in the use of acoustic space. In C. Scarre & G. Lawson (Eds.), Archaeoacoustics (pp. 95-105). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Morley, I. (2013). The prehistory of music: human evolution, archaeology, and the origins of musicality. Oxford :Oxford University Press.
Moyle, A. M. (1981). The Australian didjeridu: a late musical intrusion. World Archaeology, 12(3), 321-331.
Powell, J. (2010) How music works : a listener’s guide to harmony, keys, chords, perfect pitch and other secrets of a good tune. London: Particular Books.
Reznikoff, I. & Dauvois, M. (1988) La dimension sonore des grottes ornées. Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française, 85-8, 238-246.
Roberts, D. L. (1972). The ethnomusicology of the Eastern Pueblos. In A. Ortiz (Ed.), New perspectives on the Pueblos (1st ed., pp. 243-255). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Spitzer, M. (2021) The Musical Human: A History of Life on Earth. London: Bloomsbury Publishing.
Tomlinson, G (2018) A Million Years of Music: The Emergence of Human Modernity. New York: Zone Books.
Sacks, Oliver (2011) Musicophilia. London: Picador.
Wyatt, S. (2009). Soul music: instruments in an animalistic age. In S. Banfield (Ed.), The sounds of Stonehenge (pp. 11-16). Oxford: Archaeopress.
Neuroscience and metacognition
Dresler, M., Shirer, W. R., Konrad, B. N., Müller, N. C. J., Wagner, I. C., Fernández, G., . . . Greicius, M. D. Mnemonic Training Reshapes Brain Networks to Support Superior Memory. Neuron, 93(5), 1227-1235.e1226.
Ericsson, K. A. (2003). Exceptional Memorizers: Made, Not Born. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 7(6), 233–235.
Jäncke, L. (2008). Music, memory and emotion. Journal of Biology, 7(6), 21.
Kandel, E. A Place and a Grid in the Sun. Cell, 159(6), pp. 1239-1242.
King, M.J., David P. Katz, D.P., Lee A. Thompson, Lee A. & Macnamara, B.N. (2019). Genetic and environmental influences on spatial reasoning: A meta-analysis of twin studies, Intelligence 73 (2019) pp. 65–77.
Maguire, E. A., Valentine, E.R., Wilding, J.M., and Kapur, N. (2003). Routes to remembering: the brains behind superior memory. Nature Neuroscience, 6, 90–95.
Merzenich, M. (2013). Soft-wired: How the new science of brain plasticity can change your life. San Francisco: Parnassus Publishing.
Willingham, D. T. (Winter 2008-2009). What Will Improve a Student’s Memory? American Educator, 17-44.
Neurodiversity
Armstrong, Thomas (2010), The power of neurodiversity: unleashing the advantages of your differently wired brain. Da Capo, Cambridge, MA.
Spikins, Penny; Wright, Barry & Hodgson, Derek (2016) Are there alternative adaptive strategies to human pro-sociality? The role of collaborative morality in the emergence of personality variation and autistic traits, Time and Mind, 9:4, 289-313, DOI: 10.1080/1751696X.2016.1244949
Tilley, L. (2015). Accommodating difference in the prehistoric past: Revisiting the case of Romito 2 from a bioarchaeology of care perspective. International Journal of Paleopathology, Volume 8, March 2015, 64-74.
Silberman, Steve (2015), Neurotribes: the legacy of autism and how to think smarter about people who think differently. Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin.
North American archaeology
Adams, E. C. (1991). The origin and development of the Pueblo Katsina cult. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
Adler, M. A. (1989). The ritual facilities and social integration in nonranked societies. In W. D. Lipe & M. Hegmon (Eds.), The architecture of social integration in prehistoric pueblos (pp. 35-52). Cortez, Colorado: Crow Canyon Archaeological Center.
Adler, M. A., & Wilshusen, R. H. (1990). Large-Scale Integrative Facilities in Tribal Societies: Cross-Cultural and Southwestern US Examples. World Archaeology, 22(2), 133-146.
Anderson, D. G. (2004). Archaic mounds and the archaeology of Southeastern tribal societies. In J. L. Gibson & P. J. Carr (Eds.), Signs of Power: the rise of cultural complexity in the southeast (pp. 270-299). Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.
Anschuetz, K. F. (2002). A healing place: Rio Grande Pueblo cultural landscapes and the Petroglyph National Monument. In K. F. Anschuetz (Ed.), “That place people talk about”: the Petroglyph National Monument ethnographic landscape report (Vol. Unpublished manuscript, on file with National Park Service, Petroglyph National Monument, Albuquerque, N.M., pp. 3.1-47). Albuquerque: National Park Service.
Aveni, A. (1993). Archaeoastronomyy in the Americas since Oxford 2. In C. L. N. Ruggles (Ed.), Archaeoastronomy in the 1990s (pp. 15-32). Loughborough, UK: Group D Publications.
Baker, L. L., & Mantonya, K. T. (1998). New evidence for the relationaship of archaeoastronomy to Chaco Anasazi sociopolitical complexity. Paper presented at the 63rd Annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Seattle, Washington.
Bernardini, W. (2009). Hopi history in stone: the Tutuveni petroglyph site. Tucson: Arizona State Museum, The University of Arizona.
Brandt, J. C., Maran, S. P., Williamson, R., Harrington, R. S., Cochran, C., Kennedy, M., . . . Chamberlain, V. D. (2008). Possible rock art records of the Crap Nebula Supernova in the Western United States. In A. Aveni (Ed.), Foundations of New World cultural astronomy: a reader with commentary (pp. 635-646). Boulder, Colorado: University Press of Colorado.
Brecher, K., & Haag, W. G. (1983). Astronomical alignments at Poverty Point. American Antiquity, 48(1), 161-163.
Brookes, S. O. (2004). Cultural complexity in the Middle Archaic of Mississippi. In J. L. Gibson & P. J. Carr (Eds.), Signs of Power: the rise of cultural complexity in the southeast (pp. 97-113). Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.
Brown, J. A. (1997). The Archaeology of ancient religion in the Eastern Woodlands. Annual Review of Anthropology, 26, 465-485.
Bruseth, J. E. (1991). Poverty Point development as seen at the Cedarland and Claiborne Sites, Southern Mississippi. In K. M. Byrd (Ed.), The Poverty Point Culture: local manifestations, subsistence practices, and trade networks (Vol. 29, pp. 7-26). Baton Rouge, LA: Lousiana State University.
Buikstra, J. E., & Charles, D. K. (1999). Centering the Ancestors: cemeteries, mounds, and sacred landscapes of the ancient North American Midcontinent. In W. Ashmore & K. A. Bernard (Eds.), Archaeologies of landscape: contemporary perspectives (pp. 201-228). Malden, Mass.: Blackwell.
Byrd, K. M. (Ed.). (1991). The Poverty Point Culture: local manifestations, subsistence practices, and trade networks (Vol. 29). Baton Rouge, LA: Lousiana State University.
Cameron, C. M., & Toll, H. W. (2000). Organization of Production. Archaeology southwest, 14(1), 8-10.
Carlson, J. B. (1987). Romancing the stone, or moonshine on the Sun Dagger. In J. B. Carlson & J. W. Judge (Eds.), Astronomy and ceremony in the prehistoric Southwest. Albuquerque, N.M.: Maxwell Museum of Anthropology.
Carlson, J. B., & Judge, J. W. E. (1987). Astronomy and ceremony in the prehistoric Southwest. Albuquerque, N.M.: Maxwell Museum of Anthropology.
Carr, P. J., & Stewart, L. H. (2004). Poverty Point chipped-stone tool raw materials: inferring social and economic strategies. In J. L. Gibson & P. J. Carr (Eds.), Signs of power: the rise of cultural complexity in the southeast (pp. 129-145). Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.
Chang, K.-C. (1958). Study of the Neolithic social grouping: examples from the New World. American Anthropologist, 60(2), 298-334.
Clarke, J. E. (2004). Surrounding the sacred: geometry and design of early mound groups as meaning and function. In J. L. Gibson & P. J. Carr (Eds.), Signs of Power: the rise of cultural complexity in the southeast (pp. 162-213). Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.
Collins, J. M., & Chalfant, M. L. (1993). A second-terrace perspective on Monks Mound. American Antiquity, 58(2), 319-332.
Cordell, L. S., & Judge, W. J. (2000). Society and polity. Archaeology southwest, 14(1), 1-4.
Creel, D., & Anyon, R. (2003). New interpretations of Mimbres public architecture and space: implications for cultural change. American Antiquity, 68(1), 67-92.
Crothers, G. M. (2004). The Green River in comparison to the Lower Mississippi Valley during the Archaic: to build mounds or not to build mounds? In J. L. Gibson & P. J. Carr (Eds.), Signs of power: the rise of cultural complexity in the southeast (pp. 86-96). Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.
Crow Canyon Archaeological Center. (2011). Pueblo Indian History. Retrieved 22 October, 2011, from www.crowcanyon.org/education/pueblo_indian_history.asp
Crown, P. L., & Hurst, W. J. (2009). Evidence of cacao use in the Pre-Hispanic American Southwest. PNAS, 106(7), 2110-2113.
Crown, P. L., & Wills, W. H. (2003). Modifying pottery and kivas at Chaco: pentimento, restoration, or renewal? American Antiquity, 68(3), 511-532.
Davidson, I. (2013). Peopling the last new worlds: The first colonisation of Sahul and the Americas. Quaternary International, 285, 1-29. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2012.09.023
Dunnell, R. C., & Greenlee, D. M. (1999). Late Woodland Period “waste” reduction in the Ohio River Valley. Journal of anthropological archaeology, 18(3), 376-395.
Durand, K. R. (2003). Function of Chaco-Era Great Houses. Kiva, 69(2), 141-169.
Eberhart, H. (1961). The Cogged Stones of Southern California. American Antiquity, 26(3), 361-370.
Eiselt, B. S., & Hegmon, M. (2005). Introduction: conversations with an engaged anthropologist. In M. Hegmon & B. S. Eiselt (Eds.), Engaged anthropology: research essays on North American archaeology, ethnobotany, and museology (Vol. 94, pp. xiii-xxviii). Ann Arbor: Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan.
Ellerbe, J. & Greenlee, D.M. (2015) Poverty Point: revealing the forgotten city. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Gibson, J. L. (1991). Catahoula–an amphibious Poverty Point Period manifestation in eastern Louisiana. In K. M. Byrd (Ed.), The Poverty Point Culture: local manifestations, subsistence practices, and trade networks (Vol. 29, pp. 61-88). Baton Rouge, LA: Lousiana State University.
Gibson, J. L. (1996). Poverty Point: a terminal Archaic culture of the Lower Mississippi Valley Anthropological Study Series Retrieved 6 June, 2010, from http://www.crt.state.la.us/archaeology/virtualbooks/POVERPOI/Popo.htm
Gibson, J. L. (2001). The ancient mounds of Poverty Point: place of rings. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.
Gibson, J. L. (2004). The power of beneficent obligation in first mound-building societies. In J. L. Gibson & P. J. Carr (Eds.), Signs of Power: the rise of cultural complexity in the southeast (pp. 254-269). Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.
Gibson, J. L. (2006). Navels of the Earth: sedentism in early mound-building cultures in the Lower Mississippi Valley. World Archaeology, 38(2), 311-329.
Gibson, J. L. (2007). “Formed from the earth at that place”: the material side of community at Poverty Point. American Antiquity, 72(3), 509-524.
Gibson, J. L. (2010). Poverty Point redux. In M. A. Rees (Ed.), Archaeology of Louisiana (pp. 77-96). Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
Gibson, J. L., & Carr, P. J. (2004). Big mounds, big rings, big power. In J. L. Gibson & P. J. Carr (Eds.), Signs of Power: the rise of cultural complexity in the southeast (pp. 1-9). Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.
Greenlee, D. M. P. (2013). Monumental earthworks of Poverty Point: nomination to the World Heritage List by the United States of America. Washington: US Department of the Interior.
Hall, R. L. (1985). Medicine wheels, sun circles, and the magic of world center shrines Plains Anthropologist, 30(109), 181-193.
Hamilton, F. E. (1999). Southeastern Archaic mounds: examples of elaboration in a temporally fluctuating environment? Journal of anthropological archaeology, 18(3), 344-355.
Hargrave, M. L., Britt, T., & Reynolds, M. D. (2007). Magnetic evidence of ridge constructon and use at poverty point. American Antiquity, 72(4), 757(713).
Hegmon, M. (1989). Social integration and architecture. In W. D. Lipe & M. Hegmon (Eds.), The architecture of social integration in prehistoric pueblos (pp. 5-14). Cortez, Colorado: Crow Canyon Archaeological Center.
Holt, J. Z. (2009). Rethinking the Ramey State: Was Cahokia the Center of a Theater State? American Antiquity, 74(2), 231–254.
Holt, J. Z. (2013). Ritual objects and the Red Horn state: Decoding the theater state at Cahokia. Illinois Antiquity 48(3):17-19.
Hunt, William J. Jr.; Hartley, Ralph J.; McCune, Bruce; Ali, Nijmah; and Thornton, Thomas F., (2016) Maritime Alpine Cairns in Southeast Alaska: A Multidisciplinary Exploratory Study. Anthropology Faculty Publications. 129. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/anthropologyfacpub/129
Iseminger, W. R. (2010). Cahokia mounds: America’s first city. Charlston, SC: The History Press.
Jackson, H. E. (1991). The trade fair in hunter-gatherer interaction: the role of intersocietal trade in the evolution of Poverty Point culture. In S. A. Gregg (Ed.), Between bands and states (pp. 265-286). Carbondale: Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.
Jackson, H. E., & Scott, S. L. (2003). Patterns of elite faunal utilization at Moundville, Alabama. American Antiquity, 68(3), 552-572.
Jefferies, R. W. (2004). Regional-scale interaction networks and the emergence of cultural complexity along the northern margins of the Southeast. In J. L. Gibson & P. J. Carr (Eds.), Signs of Power: the rise of cultural complexity in the southeast (pp. 71-85). Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.
Judge, J. W. (1987). Archaeology and astronomy: a view from the southwest. In J. B. Carlson & J. W. Judge (Eds.), Astronomy and ceremony in the prehistoric Southwest (pp. 1-8). Albuquerque, N.M.: Maxwell Museum of Anthropology.
Judge, W. J. (2004). Chaco’s golden century. In D. G. Noble (Ed.), In search of Chaco: new approaches to an archaeological enigma (pp. 1-6). Santa Fe, New Mexico: School of American Research Press.
Kantner, J. (2003a). Preface: The Chaco World. Kiva, 69(2), 83-92.
Kantner, J. (2003b). Rethinking Chaco as a system. Kiva, 69(2), 207-227.
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Ortiz, A. (1969). The Tewa world: space, time, being, and becoming in a Pueblo society. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Ortiz, A. (1972). Ritual drama and the Pueblo world view. In A. Ortiz (Ed.), New perspectives on the Pueblos ([1st ed.]. ed., pp. 135-161). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Ortman, S. G. (2000). Conceptual metaphor in the archaeological record: methods and an example from the American Southwest. American Antiquity, 65(4), 613-645.
Parsons, E. C. (1923). The origin myth of Zuni. The Journal of American Folklore, 36(140), 135-162.
Parsons, E. C. (1929). Ritual parallels in Pueblo and Plains cultures, with a special reference to the Pawnee. American Anthropologist, 31(4), 642-654.
Radin, P. (1911). The ritual and significance of the Winnebago medicine dance. The Journal of American Folklore, 24(92), 149-208.
Roberts, D. L. (1972). The ethnomusicology of the Eastern Pueblos. In A. Ortiz (Ed.), New perspectives on the Pueblos (1st ed., pp. 243-255). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Rosman, A., & Rubel, P. G. (1990). Structural patterning in Kwakiutl art and ritual. Man, 25(4), 620-639.
Rundstrom, R. A. (1990). A cultural interpretation of Inuit map accuracy. Geographical Review, 80(2), 155-168.
Schupman, E., & O’Flahavan, L. (n.d.). Lone Dog’s Winter Count: keeping history alive. Washington: National Museum of the American Indian.
Sekaquaptewa, E., & Washburn, D. (2009). As a matter of practice … Hopi cosmology in Hopi life: some considerations for theory and method in Southwestern Archaeology. Time and mind: the journal of archaeology, consciousness and culture, 2(2), 195-214.
Sobel, E., & Bettles, G. (2000). Winter hunger, winter myths: subsistence risk and mythology among the Klamath and Modoc. Journal of anthropological archaeology, 19(3), 276-316.
Steward, J. H. (1931). Notes on Hopi ceremonies in their initiatory form in 1927-1928. American Anthropologist, 33, 56-79.
Swanton, J. R. (1905). Explanation of the Seattle Totem Pole. The Journal of American Folklore, 18(69), 108-110.
Swentzell, R. (2004). A Pueblo woman’s perspective on Chaco Canyon. In D. G. Noble (Ed.), In search of Chaco: new approaches to an archaeological enigma (pp. 48-53). Santa Fe, New Mexico: School of American Research Press.
Tanner, C. L. (1948). Sandpaintings of the Indians of the Southwest. Kiva, 13(3/4), 26-36.
Tedlock, D. (1972). Pueblo literature: style and verisimilitude. In A. Ortiz (Ed.), New perspectives on the Pueblos ([1st ed.]. ed., pp. 219-242). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Titiev, M. (1939). The story of Kokopele. American Anthropologist, 41(1), 91-98.
Titiev, M. (1972). The Hopi Indians of Old Oraibi: change and continuity. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Tyler, H. A. (1979). Pueblo birds and myths. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press.
Upham, S. (1982). Polities and power: an economic and political history of the western Pueblo. New York: Academic Press.
Varien, M. D., Naranjo, T., Connolly, M. R., & Lipe, W. D. (1999). Native American issues and perspectives. In W. D. Lipe, M. D. Varien & R. H. Wilshusen (Eds.), Colorado prehistory: a context for the Southern Colorado River Basin (pp. 370-404). Denver, CO: Colorado Council of Professional Archaeologists.
Victor-Howe, A-M., (2007) Feeding the Ancestors: Tlingit Carved Horn Spoons (Peabody Museum Collections Series), Peabody Museum Press.
Vennum, T., Jr. (1978). Ojibwa origin-migration songs of the mitewiwin. The Journal of American Folklore, 91(361), 753-791.
Wheatley, F., Walton, L., & Resources, O. M. o. N. (1987). The Teaching Rocks: Ontario, Ministry of Natural Resources, Creative Services.
Worley, J., (2008), Totem Poles of the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe: The Art of Dale Faulstich, Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe.
Wright, B. (1999 [1973]). Kachinas: a Hopi artist’s documentary. Lanham, Maryland: Northland Publishing.
Wright, R. K. (2008). Totem poles: heraldic columns of the North West Coast ( Essay). Retrieved 30 September 2008, from University of Washington Libraries http://content.lib.washington.edu/aipnw/wright.html
Wyman, L. C., & Bailey, F. l. (1964). Navaho Indian ethnoentomology. Albuquerque: The University of New Mexico Press.
Young, M. J. (1985). Images of power and the power of images: the significance of rock art for contemporary Zunis. The Journal of American Folklore, 98(387), 3-48.
Orality and literacy
Abram, D. (1997). The spell of the sensuous: perception and language in a more-than-human world (1st Vintage Books ed. ed.). New York: Vintage Books.
Akinnaso, F. N. (1981). The Consequences of Literacy in Pragmatic and Theoretical Perspectives. Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 12(3), 163-200.
Akinnaso, F. N. (1992). Schooling, Language, and Knowledge in Literate and Nonliterate Societies. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 34(1), 68-109.
Ashliman, D. L. (1987). A guide to folktales in the English language: based on the Aarne-Thompson classification system. New York: Greenwood Press.
Ashliman, D. L. (2004). Folk and fairy tales: a handbook. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
Barth, F. (2002). An anthropology of knowledge. Current Anthropology, 43(1), 1-18.
Beckett, J. (1994). Aboriginal histories, aboriginal myths: an introduction. Oceania, 65(2), 97- 116.
Biakolo, E. (1999). On the theoretical foundation of orality and literacy. Research in African Literatures, 30(2), 42-65.
Biesele, M. (1986). How Hunter-Gatherers’ Stories “Make Sense”: Semantics and Adaptation. Cultural Anthropology, 1(2), 157-170.
Chadwick, N. K. (1942). Poetry & prophecy. Cambridge: The University Press.
Chafe, W., & Tannen, D. (1987). The relation between written and spoken language. Annual Review of Anthropology, 16, 383-407.
Classen, C. (1999). Other ways to wisdom: learning through the senses across cultures. International Review of Education, 45(3/4), 269-280.
Connerton, P. (1990). How societies remember. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Couch, C. J. (1989). Oral Technologies: A cornerstone of ancient civilizations? The Sociological Quarterly, 30(4), 587-602.
Couch, C. J. (1990). Constructing civilizations Greenwich, Conn: JAI Press.
Couch, C. J. (1996). Information technologies and social orders. New York: Aldine de Gruyter.
Couch, C. J., & Chen, S.-l. (1988). Orality, literacy and social structure. In D. R. Maines & C. J. Couch (Eds.), Communication and social structure. Springfield, Il. : Charles C Thomas.
d’Errico, F. (1998). Palaeolithic origins of artificial memory systems: an evolutionary perspective. In C. Renfrew & C. E. Scarre (Eds.), Cognition and material culture: the archaeology of symbolic storage (pp. 19-50). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Denny, J. P. (1991). Rational thought in oral culture and literate decontextualization. In D. R. Olson & N. Torrance (Eds.), Literacy and orality (pp. 66-89). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Diringer, D. (1962). Writing. London: Thames and Hudson.
Douglas, P. (2000). Folklore from the grassroots. The Journal of American Folklore, 113(447), 83-86.
Eagleton, T. (1983). Literary theory: an introduction. Oxford: Blackwell.
Feldman, C. F. (1991). Oral metalanguage. In D. R. Olson & N. Torrance (Eds.), Literacy and orality (pp. 47-65). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Finnegan, R. (2006). Not by words alone: reclothing the “oral”. In D. R. Olson & M. Cole (Eds.), Technology, Literacy, and the Evolution of Society: implications of the Work of Jack Goody (pp. 265-187). Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Finnegan, R. H. (1970). Oral literature in Africa London: Clarendon P.
Finnegan, R. H. (1977). Oral poetry: its nature, significance and social context Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Finnegan, R. H. (1988). Literacy and orality: studies in the technology of communication. Oxford, UK: Blackwell.
Foley, J. M. (1992). Word-power, performance, and tradition. The Journal of American Folklore, 105(417), 275-301.
Gardiner, G. (1996). Orality, myth and performance in traditional indigenous cultures Clayton, Vic: Koorie Research Centre, Monash University.
Gee, J. P. (1986). Review: Orality and Literacy: from The Savage Mind to Ways With Words. TESOL Quarterly, 20(4), 719-746.
Gelb, I. J. (1952). A study of writing: the foundations of grammatology. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Gell, A. (1985). How to Read a Map: Remarks on the Practical Logic of Navigation. Man, 20(2), 271-286.
Goody, J. (1961). Religion and ritual: the definitional problem. The British Journal of Sociology, 12(2), 142-164.
Goody, J. (1968). Introduction. In J. Goody (Ed.), Literacy in traditional societies. Cambridge: University Press.
Goody, J. (1977). The domestication of the savage mind. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Goody, J. (1987). The interface between the written and the oral Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Goody, J. (2006). From oral to written: an anthropological breakthrough in storytelling. In F. Moretti (Ed.), The Novel, volume 1: history, geography and culture (Vol. 1, pp. 3-36). Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Goody, J. (2010). Myth, ritual and the oral. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Goody, J., & Watt, I. (1963). The consequences of literacy. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 5(3), 304-345.
Halverson, J. (1991). Olson on Literacy. Language in Society, 20(4), 619-640. doi: 10.2307/4168285
Halverson, J. (1992). Havelock on Greek Orality and Literacy. Journal of the History of Ideas, 53(1), 148-163. doi: 10.2307/2709915
Halverson, J. (1992). Goody and the Implosion of the Literacy Thesis. Man, 27(2), 301-317. doi: 10.2307/2804055
Havelock, E. A. (1963). Preface to Plato. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Havelock, E. A. (1978). The Greek concept of justice: from its shadow in Homer to its substance in Plato. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Havelock, E. A. (1986). The muse learns to write: reflections on orality and literacy from antiquity to the present. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Havelock, E. A. (1991). The oral-literate equation: a formula for the modern mind. In D. R. Olson & N. Torrance (Eds.), Literacy and orality (pp. 11-27). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Houston, S. D. (2004). The archaeology of communication technologies. Annual Review of Anthropology, 33, 223-250.
Hutton, P. H. (1987). The Art of Memory Reconceived: From Rhetoric to Psychoanalysis. Journal of the History of Ideas, 48(3), 371-392. doi: 10.2307/2709758
Innis, H. A. (1964). The bias of communication. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Kelly, L. (2015). Knowledge and power in prehistoric societies: orality, memory and the transmission of culture. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Kelly, L., & Kelly, D. (1987). Practical computing: a complete guide. Milton, Queensland: The Jacaranda Press.
Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, B. (1998). Folklore’s Crisis. The Journal of American Folklore, 111(441), 281-327.
Kroeber, T. (1959). The inland whale. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Krupat, A. (1998). America’s histories. American Literary History, 10(1), 124-146.
Lacy, D. M. (1996). From grunts to gigabytes. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
Lakoff, G., & Johnson, M. (1980). Conceptual metaphor in everyday language. The Journal of Philosophy, 77(8), 453-486.
Lévi-Strauss, C. (1966). The savage mind. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Lévi-Strauss, C. (1992 [1955]). Tristes tropiques [English] (J. Weightman & D. Weightman, Trans.). New York: Penguin Books.
Lord, A. B. (1960). The singer of tales. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
Lord, A. B. (1991). Epic singers and oral tradition. New York: Cornell University Press.
Lott, J. (2002). Keepers of history. Research/Penn State. Retrieved July 5, 2011, from http://www.rps.psu.edu/0205/keepers.html
Luria, A. R. (1968). The mind of a mnemonist: a little book about a vast memory. New York: Basic Books.
McLuhan, M. (1964). Understanding media: the extensions of man. London: Sphere Books.
McLuhan, M. (1967a). The Gutenberg galaxy: the making of typographic man. London: Routledge & K. Paul.
McLuhan, M., & Fiore, Q. (1967b). The medium is the massage: an inventory of effects. New York: Random House.
Meyer, M. (1995). Dance and the politics of orality: a study of the Irish “scoil rince”. Dance Research Journal, 27(1), 25-39.
Minc, L. D. (1986). Scarcity and survival: the role of oral tradition in mediating subsistence crises. Journal of anthropological archaeology, 5(1), 39-113.
Muana, P. K. (1998). Beyond frontiers: a review of analytical paradigms in folklore studies. Journal of African Cultural Studies, 11(1), 39-58.
Nichol, R. (2011). Growing up indigenous: developing effective pedagogy for education and development. Rotterdam: Sense Publishers.
Olson, D. R. (1991). Literacy and objectivity: the rise of modern science. In D. R. Olson & N. Torrance (Eds.), Literacy and orality (pp. 149-165). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Ong, W. J. (1977). African talking drums and oral noetics. New Literary History, 8(3), 411-429.
Ong, W. J. (1984). Orality, literacy, and medieval textualization. New Literary History, 16(1), 1-12.
Ong, W. J. (2002 [1982]). Orality and literacy: the technologizing of the word. London: Routledge.
Ortman, S. G. (2000). Conceptual metaphor in the archaeological record: methods and an example from the American Southwest. American Antiquity, 65(4), 613-645.
Plato. (1955 [380-360 BC]). The republic (H. D. Lee, Trans.). Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin Books.
Post, L. A. (1932). Ancient Memory Systems. The Classical Weekly, 25(14), 105-110. doi: 10.2307/4389681
Propp, V. (1968). Morphology of the folktale (2nd ed.). Austin: University of Texas Press.
Renfrew, C., & Scarre, C. (Eds.). (1998). Cognition and material culture: the archaeology of symbolic storage. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Roberts, J. W. (1993). African American diversity and the study of folklore. Western Folklore, 52(2/4), 157-171.
Robinson, A. (1995) The story of writing. London: Thames & Hudson.
Rowland, B. (1974). Animals with human faces: a guide to animal symbolism. London: Allen & Unwin.
Rowland, B. (1978). Birds with human souls: a guide to bird symbolism (1st ed.). Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
Tedlock, D. (1971). On the translation of style in oral narrative. The Journal of American Folklore, 84(331), 114-133.
Thompson, T. (2004). The Irish Sí tradition: connections between the disciplines, and what’s in a word? Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, 11(4), 335-368.
Turin, M. (2011). The World Oral Literature Project: voices of vanishing worlds. Retrieved 18 January, 2011, from www.oralliterature.org
Turnbull, D. (1989). Maps are territories, science is an atlas: a portfolio of exhibits. Geelong, Vic.: Deakin University.
Turnbull, D. (2000). Masons, tricksters and cartographers: comparative studies in the sociology of scientific and indigenous knowledge. Amsterdam: Harwood Academic.
Turnbull, D. (2002). Performance and narrative, bodies and movement in the construction of places and objects, spaces and knowledges: the case of the Maltese megaliths. Theory, culture & society, 19(5/6), 125-143.
Turnbull, D. (2007). Maps narratives and trails: performativity, hodology and distributed knowledges in complex adaptive systems – an approach to emergent mapping. Geographical Research, 45(2), 140-149.
Urban, G. (1986). Ceremonial dialogues in South America. American Anthropologist, 88(2), 371-386.
Vansina, J. (1971). Once upon a time: oral traditions as history in Africa. Daedalus., 100(2), 442-468.
Vansina, J. (1985). Oral tradition as history Madison, Wis.: University of Wisconsin Press.
Watson-Verran, H., & Turnbull, D. (1995). Science and other indigenous knowledge systems. In S. e. a. Jasanoff (Ed.), Handbook of science and technology studies. Thousand Oaks, Calif: Sage Publications.
Weiner, J. F. (2002). The work of inscription in Foi poetry. In B. David & M. Wilson (Eds.), Inscribed landscapes: marking and making place (pp. 270-283). Honolulu: University of HawaiÏ Press.
Yates, F. A. (1966). The art of memory. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Pacific Indigenous cultures
Attwood, B., & Magowan, F. (2003). Introduction. In B. Attwood & F. Magowan (Eds.), Telling stories: indigenous history and memory in Australia and New Zealand (pp. xi-xvii). Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.
Barth, F. (1975). Ritual and knowledge among the Baktaman of New Guinea. New Haven [Conn.]: Yale University Press.
Barth, F. (1987). Cosmologies in the making: a generative approach to cultural variation in inner New Guinea. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Barth, F. (1990). The Guru and the Conjurer: Transactions in Knowledge and the Shaping of Culture in Southeast Asia and Melanesia. Man, 25(4), 640-653.
Campbell, M. (2006). Memory and monumentality in the Rarotongan landscape. Antiquity, 80(307), 102(116).
Catton, P. (2008). Philosophy, Matauranga Maori, and the meaning of NZ biculturism. Paper presented at the Nga Kete a Rehua – Inaugural Maori Research Symposium, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Chinnery, S. J. (c. 1936). Five men each holding a carved totem pole, New Guinea, ca. 1936, nla.pic-vn4554737. Sarah Chinnery photographic collection of New Guinea, England and Australia [picture] 1900-2002. Retrieved 19 February 2014, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4554737
Farrall, L. (1984). Unwritten knowledge: case study of the navigators of Micronesia (rev ed. ed.). Waurn Ponds, Vic.: Deakin University.
Flenley, J., & Bahn, P. (2003). The enigmas of Easter Island: island on the edge ([2nd ed.] ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Gladwin, T. (1970). East is a big bird: navigation and logic on Puluwat atoll. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
Goldman, I. (1970). Ancient Polynesian society. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Golson, J. (1965). Thor Heyerdahl and the Prehistory of Easter Island. Oceania, 36(1), 38-83.
Goodenough, W. H., & Thomas, S. D. (1987). Traditional navigation in the Western Pacific: a search for pattern. Expedition, 26(3), 3-14.
Haami, B. (2006). Pūtea Whakairo: Māori and the Written Word. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.
Hage, P. (1978). Speculations on Puluwatese mnemonic structure. Oceania, XLIX(2), 81-95.
Hamilton, S. (2013). Rapa Nui (Easter Island)’s Stone Worlds. Archaeology International, 16(2012-2013), 96-109. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/ai.1613
Hamilton, S., Seager Thomas, M., & Whitehouse, R. (2011). Say it with stone: constructing with stones on Easter Island. World Archaeology, 43(2), 167-190. doi: 10.1080/00438243.2011.586273
Harwood, F. (1976). Myth, memory, and the oral tradition: Cicero in the Trobriands. American Anthropologist, 78(4), 783-796.
Hunt, T., & Lipo, C. (2011). The statues that walked: unraveling the mystery of Easter Island. New York: Free Press.
Kirch, P. V. (1990). Monumental architecture and power in Polynesian chiefdoms: a comparison of Tonga and Hawaii. World Archaeology, 22(2), 206-222.
Knappert, J. (1992). Pacific mythology: an encyclopedia of myth and legend. London: Aquarian Press.
Kuchler, S. (1987). Malangan: art and memory in a Melanesian society. Man, 22(2), 238-255.
Kuchler, S. (1988). Malangan: objects, sacrifice and the production of memory. American Ethnologist, 15(4), 625-637.
Ladefoged, T. N., & Graves, M. W. (Eds.). (2002). Pacific landscapes: archaeological approaches. Los Osos, CA.: Easter Island Foundation: Bearsville Press.
Lawrie, M. (1970). Myths and legends of Torres Strait. St. Lucia: University of Queensland Press.
Layard, J. W. (1942). Stone men of Malekula. London: Chatto & Windus.
Lewis, D. (1972). We, the navigators: the ancient art of landfinding in the Pacific. Canberra: Australian National University Press.
Lipo, C. P., Hunt, T. L., & Haoa, S. R. (2012). The “walking” megalithic statues (moai) of Easter Island. Journal of Archaeological Science: online.
Magowan, F. (2003). Crying to remember: reproducing personhood and community. In B. Attwood & F. Magowan (Eds.), Telling stories: indigenous history and memory in Australia and New Zealand (pp. 41-60). Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.
Majnep, I. S., & Bulmer, R. (1977). Birds of my Kalam country. Auckland, NZ: Auckland University Press.
Malinowski, B. (1965). Coral gardens and their magic. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Malinowski, B. (1979). The ethnography of Malinowski: the Trobriand Islands, 1915-18. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Rappaport, R. A. (1967). Pigs for the ancestors: ritual in the ecology of a New Guinea people. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Rappaport, R. A. (1971). Ritual, sanctity, and cybernetics. American Anthropologist, 73(1), 59-76.
Rappaport, R. A. (1979). Ecology, meaning and religion (2nd ed.). Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books.
Richards, C., Croucher, K., Paoa, T., Parish, T., Tucki, E., & Welham, K. (2011). Road my body goes: re-creating ancestors from stone at the great moai quarry of Rano Raraku, Rapa Nui (Easter Island). World Archaeology, 43(2), 191-210. doi: 10.1080/00438243.2011.579483
Routledge, K. P. (1919). The mystery of Easter Island: the story of an expedition / by Mrs. Scoresby Routledge. London: Hazell, Watson & Viney.
Sillitoe, P. (1998). The development of indigenous knowledge: a new applied anthropology. Current Anthropology, 39(2), 223-252.
Spennemann, D. R. (1992). Marshallese tattoos. Majuro Atoll: Republic of the Marshall Islands: Ministry of Internal Affairs, Historic Preservation Office.
Stevenson, C. M., & Cardinali, S. H. (2008). Prehistoric Rapa Nui: landscape and settlement archaeology at Hanga Ho’onu. Los Osos, CA: The Easter Island Foundation.
Thomas, W. H. (2010). Everyone loves birds: using indigenous knowledge of birds to facilitate conservation in New Guinea. In S. Tidemann & A. Gosler (Eds.), Ethno-ornithology: birds and indigenous people, culture and society (pp. 265-278). London: Earthscan.
Towle, C. C. (1932). Oval arrangement of stones, Endrick Mountain. Oceania, 3(1), 40-45.
Whitehouse, H. (1992). Memorable religions: transmission, codification and change in divergent Melanesian contexts. Man, 27(4), 777-797.
Wiessner, P., & Akii, T. (1998). Historical vines: Enga networks of exchange ritual warfare in Papua New Guinea. Washington, D. C.: Smithsonian Institution Press.
Plant Knowledge
Anderson, E. (1967). Plants, man, and life. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Beil, W., & Kilian, P. (2007). EPs 7630, an extract from Pelargonium sidoides roots inhibits adherence of Helicobacter pylori to gastric epithelial cells. Phytomedicine, 14, Supplement 1(0), 5-8.
Bladt, S., & Wagner, H. (2007). From the Zulu medicine to the European phytomedicine Umckaloabo®. Phytomedicine, 14, Supplement 1(0), 2-4.
Conrad, A., Jung, I., Tioua, D., Lallemand, C., Carrapatoso, F., Engels, I., . . . Frank, U. (2007). Extract of Pelargonium sidoides (EPs 7630) inhibits the interactions of group A-streptococci and host epithelia in vitro. Phytomedicine, 14, Supplement 1(0), 52-59.
Ford, R. I. (1972). An ecological perspective on the Eastern Pueblos. In A. Ortiz (Ed.), New perspectives on the Pueblos ([1st ed.]. ed., pp. 1-17). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Ford, R. I. (1976). Communication networks and information hierarchies in Native American Folk Medicine: Tewa Pueblos, New Mexico. In W. D. Hand (Ed.), American folk medicine: a symposium (pp. 143-157). Berkeley: University of California Press.
Ford, R. I. (1978a). Theoretical issues in ethnobotany: introduction. In R. I. Ford (Ed.), The nature and status of ethnobotany (pp. 29–32). Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology.
Ford, R. I. (1978b). Ethnobotany: historical diversity and synthesis. In R. I. Ford (Ed.), The nature and status of ethnobotany (pp. 33-49). Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology.
Ford, R. I. (1980). The color of survival. Discovery, 16-29.
Foucault, M. (1972). ArchÈologie du savoir [English] (A. M. S. Smith, Trans.). London: Tavistock Publications.
Fowler, C. S. (1999). Ecological / cosmological knowledge and land-management among hunter-gatherers. In R. B. Lee & R. Daly (Eds.), The Cambridge encyclopedia of hunters and gatherers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Goddard, C., & Kalotas, A. (2002). Punu: Yankunytjatjara plant use: traditional methods of preparing foods, medicines, utensils and weapons from native plants North Ryde, N.S.W.: Angus & Robertson.
Haidvogl, M., & Heger, M. (2007). Treatment effect and safety of EPs 7630-solution in acute bronchitis in childhood: report of a multicentre observational study. Phytomedicine, 14, Supplement 1(0), 60-64.
Kolodziej, H. (2007). Fascinating metabolic pools of Pelargonium sidoides and Pelargonium reniforme, traditional and phytomedicinal sources of the herbal medicine Umckaloabo. Phytomedicine, 14, Supplement 1(0), 9-17.
Levitt, D. (1981). Unwritten pharmacopoeia. In K. R. Henderson (Ed.), Hemisphere: an Aboriginal anthology 1981 (Vol. From Earlier Fleets – II, pp. 14-19). Dickson, ACT: Curriculum Development Centre.
Matthys, H., & Heger, M. (2007). EPs 7630-solution – an effective therapeutic option in acute and exacerbating bronchitis. Phytomedicine, 14, Supplement 1(0), 65-68.
Schulz, V. (2007). Liquid herbal drug preparation from the root of Pelargonium sidoides is effective against acute bronchitis: Results of a double-blind study with 124 patients. Phytomedicine, 14, Supplement 1(0), 74-75.
Rock art
Bahn, Paul G. (2016) Images of the Ice Age. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Bradley, R. (1997). Rock Art and the Prehistory of Atlantic Europe: Signing the Land. London: Routledge.
Casey, S. (1995). Examining Seasonality In Upper Paleolithic Art: methodology and research applications. MASCA research papers in science and archaeology, 12 SUPP, 3-22.
Chisena, S. & Delage, C. (2018), On the Attribution of Palaeolithic Artworks: The Case of La Marche (Lussac-les-Châteaux, Vienne), Open Archaeology; 4: pp. 239–261.
Conkey, M., Soffer, O., Stratmann, D., & Jacblonski, N. G. (Eds.). (1997). Beyond art: pleistocene image and symbol. San Francisco: California Academy of Sciences.
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